“I worked all those years, coming to work every day, doing a great job. Each year there was a raise and eventually more responsibility.

I went home at the end of the day and came back the following day. I repeated that cycle all those years until one day, I came in and was let go.

During all those years I had received numerous inquiries from outside headhunters, but at each call was kindly rebuffed because I loved what I was doing. My resume had never been updated in all those years, and I had not interviewed in 24 years.  And I was let go, just like that

Being negligent: Career Malpractice

As I listened to this call a few weeks back, I felt sad and angry at the same time.

I was sad because this had happened, and I was also livid as to how people can become so blinded. This was a C-level person, sitting on numerous boards with major players throughout the industry. He knew everyone in his field but never had even a cup of coffee with them, let alone lunch or dinner.

Now he was out of a job with no clue like a deer in the headlights.

Resume coach, checked. Interview coach, checked. Mindset, well, that is another story. That will stay unchecked for a while, and to be honest, it may never be checked.

How could you?

If there is one thing that I want to pass on to anyone working today, it will be that you can never be lulled into a sense of security.

These times are so different that you never want to be “ambushed.” That is my term for walking into work one day and being called in and let go. If that happens to you and you are surprised, don’t get mad with the company, get mad with yourself for allowing it to happen.

You should always be aware of what is going on around you. You can not afford not to. Eye contact is always a giveaway.

When your boss looks away and will not connect, and this continues over time, be aware. When your comments and recommendations are passed over as not important, be aware.

We all have that inner sense when we know something is not right. My friend now noticed that a few months before being let go, things just did not seem right. He just kind of brushed it off, and he paid the price.

My code phrase is “Always be Looking” [ABC]. This may seem strange, especially coming from an HR person, but one thing I have always advised people is that one should never allow their sense of self to be lulled into a mindset that you never keep your antennae up to see what is out there.

Only you are in charge of your career

If someone calls, take the interview because you never know where it will lead. If you have not interviewed in a while, by all means, go. Think of the interview as a career workout.

The more you take, the better you will become. It is like working out in a gym and getting in shape. My buddy has not interviewed in over 20 years, and I hate to think about the first one that he will walk into the gym.

Here’s the bottom line: You are the one that is in charge of your career. Not the company you work for, not your friends or family because, in the end, you are in charge. Your master plan, if you have one, should constantly be reviewed and update.

Many people don’t have career investment plans because they rely on the organization they serve to provide them. A select few recognize that the investments your employer makes in your career are no longer enough.

In today’s global market, you can no longer afford to wait for your employers to invest in your professional growth, development, and career. You must know yourself and your career ambitions well enough to recognize the necessary career investments you must make and determine your wisest career investment path.

Riding it out is not an option

Some may say, I will just want to ride this out, but my friend thought the same. He figured as long as he had been there, all those years, that this would be it. It was the end of his career as he knew it.

You can’t wait till you are fired or laid off to try to revitalize your career. At this point of the ambush, you are not in the right mental shape to put a plan together. The process must be ongoing, especially when things are going well. The juices flow better when you are in that state of mind.

You have to use every business encounter and conversation as an interview. Make the connection mean something. My friend had access to numerous boards and their influential members, but never once did he have a career conversation. Never once did he do coffee, lunch, or dinner.

Being aware of all going on around you

Self-awareness and self-management are all part of career awareness. We must all be “on point” at all times.

It is said that when snakes flick their tongues, they get a sense of what is going on around them. We should all adopt this mindset and always try to keep in focus of where we are headed. This could be the same job but in a different location. It does not matter.

Ongoing career management is going to be the new normal, whether you are just out of college, mid-career, or whatever.

This morning I read about another friend who got a big job six months ago for a major brand. But with a new strategic focus at my friend’s company, she would be out soon. Yes, only six months in her post, and she will be out. Add the 20 plus years of my friend in the other scenario, and you can now see that you have to be in charge.

Nobody knows you like you, so manage you before the ambush.