Saturday, April 11, 2020
The Way Youre Branding Yourself At Work Might Be Hurting Your Career - Work It Daily
The Way Youâre Branding Yourself At Work Might Be Hurting Your Career - Work It Daily Your personal brand follows you around like a loyal canine - in your job search, online, at home, and even at work. In fact, are you even aware of how youâre branding yourself at work? The wrong brand can hurt your career (it can even send you into a major career rut), so itâs important to know how people might be perceiving you in the workplace. Does any of this sound like you? Youâre the go-to (for everything). Are you the âyesâ man/woman at your office? Are you the person people go to when they need to unload work? If you say âyesâ to everything thatâs asked of you, thereâs a good chance youâre going to burn yourself out. Do you really have time to do Susanâs extra paperwork this weekend? Do you really have bandwidth to bake cookies for everyone on Friday? While thereâs some stuff youâre expected to do, especially when youâre an office newbie, be more conscious of what you say âyesâ to at the office. Youâre the âminimum requirements onlyâ person. Are you in right at 9am and out the door on the dot at 5pm? Do you avoid volunteering for projects because âitâs not your jobâ? While you donât want to necessarily accept everything people ask of you, if you donât make an effort once and awhile to go above and beyond, you risk looking lazy to your boss, colleagues, and clients. Branding yourself at work this way, even if you donât mean to do it, can hold you back from promotions and can even put you on the short list for layoffs. Youâre the one who âdoesnât have time for this s#!$%.â Are you always on your phone during meetings? Do you find yourself half-listening during conversations? You might have a lot going on, but not being present when people are speaking to you is disrespectful and rude. This can result in resentment and frustration from your co-workers. Also, if youâre not fully listening during meetings, you could miss important information you need to complete projects. Youâre the needy colleague. Are you always going to your co-workers for help without trying to figure it out on your own first? While itâs great to ask questions, itâs just as important to try and figure certain things out on your own. Otherwise, you risk irritating those around you and appearing incapable of doing your job. Youâre the office gossip. Do you constantly chat with your co-workers about office drama? Branding yourself at work as the office gossip will discourage people from confiding in you and you risk being left out of important conversations/decisions. Further, no one wants to be tied up in drama at work - itâs not a good look. Youâre the overly-apologetic-for-no-reason person. Are you always apologizing for things that arenât your fault? If youâre regularly saying âIâm sorryâ to people at work, youâre either doing something very wrong or youâre just overly apologetic. To be honest, someone who apologizes too often can be just annoying, if not more annoying, than someone who doesnât apologize at all. Most of us (including me) are guilty of doing this. Thereâs a fine line between taking responsibility when things go wrong and apologizing for things that arenât your fault (or just going overboard with your apology). Plus, if you do it too much, people will stop taking you seriously. Youâre the finger pointer. Now, letâs talk about the opposite side of the spectrum. Do you constantly make excuses when things donât go right? Do you blame others when things go wrong? This behavior, for obvious reasons, is going to get you in trouble at work. Youâre the cocky co-worker. Are you always bragging about your accomplishments? Are you the one who constantly boasts things like, âI can do everyoneâs job SO much betterâ? Confidence is important, but if youâre just being cocky for the sake of it, youâre going to aggravate your co-workers to no end. Having this attitude can cause unnecessary rifts in the office, hurting the team dynamic. Not only that, you just look like a jerk. Youâre the Debbie Downer. Do you find yourself constantly bringing people down with your negativity? No one likes a Debbie Downer, and people donât want to work with one either. Stop bringing your drama to work and try to be more positive. Donât kill good opportunities with bad vibes. Succeeding in the office requires you to balance all of these workplace personas. Sure, you donât want to take on too much, but you donât want to look lazy either. Take a minute to think about how youâre branding yourself at work, and if itâs how youâd like to be perceived. Feel like youâre in a rut at work? Register for our free webinar âHow 5,000+ Professionals Got Out Of Their Career Rutâ with J.T. OâDonnell. REGISTER NOW! Related Posts: 5 Tips For Building Your Personal Brand In The Workplace How To Build A Consistent Personal Brand 7 Key Ways To Promote Your Personal Brand Have you joined our career growth club?Join Us Today!
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