CareerTeen
CareerTeen Workshop 6 / IWP 11
Repeat Process: Part or All
1) Foster Curiosity
2) Initiate Activity
3) Find Relevant Information
4) Discover Possibilities
5) Strategize
6) Commit to a Project
7) Create Ideas
8) Realize Ideas
9) Test Ideas: Succeed or Fail
10) Use Failure: Rethink Ideas
11) Repeat Process: Part or All
12) Reach Achievement
Bonus) Gain Mastery
Work experience refers to the skills gained by actually doing work, measured over one’s entire career.
Work-journey is the human experience behind the work being performed; measured from a day-to-day perspective.
Work-journey – the human experience behind work
Humans like nice things. Especially in the 1980s, purchasing and possessing shiny, new, trendy, fashionable, desirable consumer goods became more than common practice, it was an integral part of a booming economy. People spent their hard earned money on high-end consumer goods; not only to enjoy, but to show off. Today, people still enjoy nice things and just about everything manufactured comes in a high-end version that is differentiated in a way that shows off its value.
A more recent trend, is the focus on the human experience. A vacation package, for example, can include themes and activities that stimulate sights, sounds, tastes and feelings. The human experience also translates to consumer goods. Car commercials made today are more apt to focus on an off-road experience, for example, than the Corinthian leather of a past era. Prioritizing the human experience does not exclude showing off. The status symbols of today include social media posts documenting experiences.
Enjoying one’s work is nothing new, however, in an age when human experiences often have a higher value than personal possessions, it only makes sense to put a high priority on one’s human experience as it related to a career. Most companies are well aware of this and frequently sponsor corporate culture initiatives designed to improvement job satisfaction. This is the key purpose behind company events.
Work-journey is different than job satisfaction. It is the part of job satisfaction that pertains to the actual work being performed. Unlike job satisfaction, one’s individual work-journey filters out the physical work environment, the co-workers, the quality of tools available, the boss, the corporate culture and the company events. Work-journey asks one simple question; what is the human experience behind the work one performs? Is the work Intriguing? Is there exploration? Are there discoveries? Are obstacles satisfactorily hurtled? Is it rewarding? Or, was the work laborious? Was it tedious? Was there clock watching? Was it frustrating? Was it boring?
Unconventional Expert have the opportunity to create for themselves a fulfilling work-journey. Their work-journey is their individual work-process in motion. It is their mission, path, exploration, rabbit hole, experimentation. It is a real-life drama, telling a story of ambitions, activities, plots, understandings, misunderstandings, challenges, success, failure, overcoming failure and accomplishments.
Because the work experience is associated with one’s work history and accumulation of skills,
we use the term work-journey to describe one’s work, within the context of human experience.
Work-journey is different than job satisfaction, as it only pertains to the work being performed.
Repeatable work habits
Whether it be work or play, good habits play an important part of our lives. Repeating daily routines and scheduling repetitive activities creates stability and efficiencies. One way to advance ourselves is to continually develop our positive habits for incremental improvements. If the person who walks one mile every day increases their distance by one half mile, they will cover an additional 182.5 miles in one year.
In an often unstructured world, good habits bring us good structure. From a psychological point of view, good habits bring us comfort. There are few surprises and the activity involved is anticipated. The results of good habits are generally cumulative and cumulative results reinforce good habits.
Staying true to good habits will always be a challenge. It is important to respect the latitude we give to good habits. We can adopt them fairly easily, but they can also go away as quickly as they start. As automatic as habits become, there is no excuse for falling asleep at the wheel.
Know thy habits, good and bad.
• Note realistic and positive results that might be expected from new habits.
• Start small.
• Commit to habits with a strong commitment.
• Monitor the results of habits and compare to expectations.
• Consider small and realistic improvements, once habits are automatic and results are positive.
• Consider subtractive habits for the elimination or reduction of bad habits.
From a process perspective
Here, we can see what a repeatable work habit looks like in comparison to an Unconventional Expert’s individual work-process:
Unconventional Expert Individual work-process
1) Foster curiosity
2) Initiate activity
3) Gain relevant information
4) Discover possibilities
5) Strategize
6) Commit to a project
7) Create ideas
8) Test ideas
9) Fail
10) Use failure as a platform for new and better ideas
11) Repeat part or all of the process
12) Eventually, find achievement
Bonus – Ultimately, gain some level of mastery
Repeatable work habit as a process
1) Commit to realistic and positive work habit
2) Initiate activity
3) Repeat
4) Make incremental improvements
5) repeat (eventually … find improvements)
Unconventional Experts thrive in environments that are unstructured, however, all workers need to perform structured work and structured work benefits from repeatable work habits. Everyone needs to develop repeatable work habits to work through necessary tasks.
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