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You are here: Home / Career Advice / What You Need to Know About Getting Promoted

September 21, 2012 by Eric Butts 2 Comments

What You Need to Know About Getting Promoted

Regardless of your career, the question always comes up: “what should I do to get promoted?” My answer to that question is simple and is the same whether you have a traditional boss or spend all of your time working with clients: make yourself indispensable…and do it without completely sacrificing your personal life.

work life balance and promotion
It takes a superhero’s effort to balance personal and professional goals

How does one become indispensable?

  • Be the expert in your field – build highly desired skills that few other people in your organization have.
  • Clean the proverbial “toilet bowls” – don’t be afraid to get your hands dirty doing the tasks that nobody else wants to do. These are often the opportunities that get you the visibility you need to make the jump to the next level.
  • Make your boss’ life easier – what better way to show that you’re ready for promotion to the next level than to take on your boss’ work?
  • Make your boss look good in front of his boss – corollary to previous bullet point…when your boss looks good, he can get promoted and bring you along. As the old saying goes, “a rising tide lifts all boats.”

How does one become indispensable without completely sacrificing your personal life?

This question is a little trickier to answer but here are a few tips:

  • Work efficiently – you have to be disciplined, which means less “breaks” during the workday for office gossip, facebook stalking, checking your personal gmail and/or checking up on your 8 fantasy football teams. You have to remain focused on tasks that are going to help you achieve your goals.
  • Communicate constantly with your family – I often refer to my family as “the crew.” I view the crew as key “stakeholders” in my career. We have to be on the same page when it comes to demands of the job, financial expectations, etc. The more you communicate and the fewer surprise you have, the more likely it is for your career pursuits will be sustainable over the long-term.
  • Set boundaries and KEEP them – nobody knows what’s going to help you withstand the demands of your career better than YOU. If you need to make sure you are able to take 15 min to call home at 5pm every night then make it happen. Maintaining your boundaries that you set (for a reason) will make you a happier, more engaged worker, which ultimately increases your productivity.
  • Get creative – making your boss’ life easier requires much time but this can be done creatively. I went to business school part-time during a huge system implementation. I left the office at 5pm and went to class from 6-9pm, but every night during breaks and when I got home (and sometimes during class if things were slow…), I logged on to make sure my extracurricular endeavor was seamless to the people I worked for.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – you have to do what works for you and your “crew.” You do that and everything else will fall into place.

If there are other things you’ve found that have helped you on your career progression, leave me a note in the comments!

Filed Under: Career Advice, Corporate Ladder University Tagged With: career advice, parenting

About Eric Butts

I’m a management consultant, MBA and CPA who has a passion for helping others in their career pursuits. Grab my FREE cheatsheet on 12 simple habits of highly successful consultants.

Comments

  1. VoogDesigns says

    September 22, 2012 at 1:43 pm

    This is always a struggle for me- balancing personal and professional time. Now that I work out of my home studio, it can make it easier, but also harder with distractions. I wouldn’t change it though.

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  2. Eric Butts says

    September 23, 2012 at 4:00 am

    I have the same struggle trying to work from home on Fridays. My experience has been that they kids are so much happier just to know that I’m around that it’s worth things taking a little longer on Fridays. I’m not sure how it would work if I were in the home office everyday. Even when the kids are in school, as you said, there is plenty to distract. In my case it’s mainly the television…

    It’s a personal choice to decide what’s going to work best for our unique situations, but once we’ve done the analysis with our respective “crews,” we can’t let outside people guilt us into adopting their value systems. They are not the ones that have to live with our decisions. The fact that you wouldn’t change what you’re doing means you’re doing it right!

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