Manage Your Life

Sunday, November 8, 2009

5 tips for making yourself more valuable to your company

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Getty Images

My company is talking layoffs, and I'd be lying if I said I wasn't stressed out about it. Who stays and who goes may come down to things we can't control -- seniority, for instance, or full-time vs. part-time status, or the number of people in a given job category. But there are a few variables that can be controlled, and they can make a big difference in how valuable you are as an employee: Dedication, visibility, and special skills.

Here are five tips for keeping up with the things you can still control.
 
1.) Designate one day per week when you will come in early. Get there before the boss does; if you can manage it, get there before everyone else does, too. It doesn't have to be the same day each week, and it doesn't have to be by much, but that little extra bit of facetime can go a long way toward keeping you on the office radar and reminding people that you are, indeed, dedicated to the company.

2.) Designate one day per week when you will stay late.
Later than your boss, later than everyone else, if you can, for the same reason stated above. Facetime, facetime, facetime.

3.) Look busy.
A New York Times article about looking busy struck a chord with me, not because I'm lacking in things to do around the office, but because I hadn't thought about it before. I work at a computer -- I'd have to try hard not to look busy -- but if you're not at a desk job, then make sure you look like you have plenty to do, even if that means refolding the shirt display eleventy billion times a week.
 
4.) Be busy. Take on extra work if you can. I've noticed that, over the past few months, my mindset has changed from "They don't pay me enough to deal with that" to "Well, they pay me." A friend of mine whose husband was just laid off explained it this way: We've gone from a sense of entitlement -- not "I deserve a bonus because I'm great" but "I've worked here for 15 years, I ought to be able to work part time if I need to" -- to having to buckle down and compete with everyone all over again. Your company is going to want to wring every last bit of effort out of you in exchange for that paycheck; it's a lot more palatable if you beat them to it.

5.) Expand your skill set.
Think of it this way: If you were just entering the workforce, you'd consider an unpaid internship, right, just to get the experience? Try to choose something you haven't done often before and, when the project is complete, add it to your resume, and show your boss that you have skills above and beyond the ones they hired you for.

Lylah M. Alphonse writes about juggling career and parenthood at The 36-Hour Day and Work It, Mom!, and blogs at Write. Edit. Repeat.

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From the Community…

Comments 1-8 of 8
  • Dena's Avatar
    Posted by Dena Tue Apr 28, 2009 11:11am PDT

    Well Said!

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  • SuzetteC's Avatar
    Posted by SuzetteC Tue Apr 28, 2009 1:27pm PDT

    I thought all the ideas were spoken from experience and worth trying. Every little bit of effort helps secure your position

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  • Mark's Avatar
    Posted by Mark Wed May 6, 2009 2:10pm PDT

    The advice is an absolute waste of time and effort. From one who did all of that and more, I still got laid off with everyone else. The only proven way to make yourself insulated from the laid off numbers is to display a business damaging profile. Make it known that your loss would cause more damage than your retention both in the public eye and the courtroom.

    Report Abuse
  • notwilber's Avatar
    Posted by notwilber Wed May 6, 2009 2:29pm PDT

    I would never take an UNpaid internship! What a scam! I thought we decided slavery was a bad thing...

    I have been reading articles and attending seminars about how I could be doing more for my employer. But at every turn, my employer does less for me (taking away vacation and health benefits, putting a freeze on raises.)

    Employers are using this economic situation to terrify and mistreat it's employees even more.

    Report Abuse
  • derick's Avatar
    Posted by derick Wed May 6, 2009 2:32pm PDT

    i think that Ming is wrong he sounds like the type of guy that would want praise for throwing his garbage away after lunch! all the ideas are great and i feel if someone puts forth the extra effort they will be rewarded in the end

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  • P.B's Avatar
    Posted by P.B Wed May 6, 2009 2:51pm PDT

    Fascinating. You just described me at work pretty well, except that you left out the part about being consistently competent and strongly customer-oriented (internal and external customers), to such a degree that supervisors continually offer you greater responsibilities, which you gladly accept. And the result of all this? Just today, my employer decided to take away 1/4 of our vacation time, permanently. For every employee--except the executives, of course. And I had to sit by and watch 300 human beings do absolutely nothing about it out of mortal fear, when it should have been second-nature for people with dignity to riot, en masse. Yes, I spoke up, and received nothing but terrified looks from my coworkers, not a hint of inspiration. So I have to wonder, do your suggestions really help anyone improve their lives, or do they merely transform people with initiative into the least beaten-down slaves, until they, too, finally lose their jobs? I can't believe anyone would even make suggestions like this in a world as fundamentally absurd, unjust and inhumane as the corporate world.

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  • rrsaks's Avatar
    Posted by rrsaks Wed May 6, 2009 3:00pm PDT

    I like the general topic of this article, but I think you are missing the mark a little. It is good to show that you are busy, work late, come in early, improve your skills, but that is expected of all employees. I find thinking outside the box a little helps as long as it can prove to be a money saving or making idea.

    Recently I was working in QA testing websites. There were so many people doing redundant testing steps that it was a drain on the company. I took it on myself to look into how I could automate the procedures. Once in motion, I was able to show a significant amount of testing hours (I'm talking 1500 hours down to 20 minutes). That translates to an enormous saving to the company. Ultimately, this also caused many of the testers to be let go since they were not needed as much anymore, but since I was recognized as the creator of this my job continued.

    The trouble was that it was too good of a money saver to the point that the company let me go. But, that was a good thing since now I have brought that knowledge with me to my next job - and with a little outside-the-box thinking, I have applied the same technique here.

    My point is, show the company you have good ideas that are inline with the company's and that it can save money (or make money). If this takes a little midnight oil, do it. It's worth the effort.

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  • Rozeline's Avatar
    Posted by Rozeline Wed May 6, 2009 5:41pm PDT

    All that midnight oil made it that much easier for them to squeeze you and others out of the door. It doesn't matter how selfless or dependable you are at work. If the company sees that firing you will save them thousands in the long run, they will do it without even batting an eyelash. These companies don't care and they're all full of it.

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Comments 1-8 of 8

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