Career Resolutions for 2010
Our sometimes-turbulent 2009 makes
many health promoters hope for a calmer ’10. And while the worst of
the recession appears to be behind us, the events of the past 18 months
are not aberrations. Change is the only constant.
You can chart a steady course for
the future by staying focused on your own personal leadership. Here
are 10 ways to take control:
- Don’t sit back. Action,
even if it’s off course, at least gets you moving. If you wait for
the perfect time to move you’ll be left behind.
- Embrace risk. It’s the
only way to achieve a breakthrough.
- Volunteer. It doesn’t
matter what you give your time to – it’s one of the healthiest things
you can do for yourself.
- Seek satisfaction. If you
lay in bed dreading work each morning, it’s time to move on.
- Ask for help. With your
career, your marriage, your children, your boss. You’ll almost always
get the help you need.
- Be prepared for good luck.
Be open to opportunities. Expect the best.
- Don’t overstay your welcome.
It’s best to leave while everyone is still smiling.
- Make mid-course corrections.
No matter how well you plan, sometimes you’re wrong or things happen
outside your control to make your plan wrong. Admit it, cut your losses,
and start in a new direction.
- Try something new or drop
something unproductive. Write it on your daily to-do/to-don’t list.
Even small things – like a new book, a creative recipe, or boycotting
TV – can freshen your outlook.
- Enjoy the ride. Life should
be fun.
Management Resolutions…
Check your skills against this list
to see how well you’re progressing as a wellness leader:
- Manage people adversity.
Health promoters like to be liked. But as a leader you’re sometimes
required to make unpopular decisions about people and resources. A successful
health promotion manager can make the tough decisions and move forward
with self-esteem intact.
- See the big picture. Wellness
leaders spend a good deal of time on issues that affect the entire organization,
and leave the day-to-day operations to assistants best positioned to
sweat the details.
- Teach as well as lead.
Many of today’s top health promotion managers learned in the school
of hard knocks. Leaders make time to teach aspiring professionals the
shortcuts to success.
- Let go of the reins. Top
managers allow others to take over successful projects, then move on
to new activities that add more value to the organization.
- Champion talent. Confident
health promotion managers grab on to rising stars and help propel them
to even greater heights within the organization.
- Understand strengths and
weaknesses. The best managers strive to be surrounded by individuals
with complementary talents who can compensate for shortcomings.
As you prepare for the new year,
take time to make an honest appraisal of your management skills. Then
make plans to enhance your strengths and shore up your weaknesses.