How do you change?

How do you change?

Change is an overused word. Google it and see. Too simple (you do or you don't) and too complex (a long list of variables). It means whatever you want it to. I read an article by Torben Rick this week that said managing change is outdated. We should be "riding the waves" of change. I last heard that phrase in the 1990s in relation to culture. How do you change in today's world?

Torben Rick says

Organizations don't change, people do.

CEO, Ray Stata, argued that change is synonymous with learning:

The rate at which organizations and individuals learn may well become the only sustainable competitive advantage left.

That implies the people must change if you want the organization to change. The trouble is the lingering 20th Century hierarchical and patriarchal culture is pissing people off (and not just Millennials). Compliance does not engender commitment.

I've written before that people in organizations are crying out for firelighting rather than firefighting, a bonfire lit from below enabled by a different kind of leadership:

The job of leaders is to show passion for purpose and release it in others to create the energy that builds something new or changes something old. People will always be the fan and the bellows of change.

The word 'change' gives the impression that you are being asked to move to somewhere you don't want to go or become something you are not. Or you fear the unknown if you initiate personal change. Yet, we never shed everything. We take our experiences, values, skills, knowledge, and core self with us. The context changes and we still have the power of choice over our mindsets, attitudes, and behaviours.

Career navigating

Metaphors sometimes struggle to fully reflect what personal change feels like today. Evolution can sound too slow, revolution too fast. Dances and spirals also get used. A nautical one is as good as any to help with riding the waves of change.

Become a robust boat that can cope beyond the next wave and sail whatever the sea conditions. How you navigate change in your job and career is a continuous process of learning, relearning and unlearning at a variable windspeed that meets your dreams and ambitions at different life stages. We all need to learn to leap by developing new skills and knowledge while adapting our mindset and behaviours for changing personal and business circumstances. In a nutshell: lifelong and lifewide learning.

Improve | Explore | Experiment | Share | Serve

Ensure you are up-to-date and what you have to offer is relevant and needed. Identify your transferrable skills and experiences.What could you learn that would enhance your capability and improve your chances of getting the job you want or furthering your career?

A personal example. Seven years ago I hadn’t a clue about social media. I got some one-to-one training on how to use Twitter and took to it like a duck to water. Social media has since played a significant role in developing my personal brand, enhancing my professional reputation and credibility, and in developing business through relationships.

Take an online course or an evening class. Get a mentor. Learn out loud by experimenting or doing something new on the job. Shadow someone for a day. Apply your skills and experience in a different context or environment. You fire up your employability by taking charge of your learning. Small change, high value.

Personal change is a reflection of our inner growth and empowerment. Robert E Quinn

Empower yourself with MARIA – you need the Motivation (it’s your life), the Authority (it’s your decision), the Resources (it’s your talent), the Information (it’s your interests), and the Accountability (it’s down to you). 

By learning to leap you will have a greater chance of multiple and diverse careers that align with your talents, who you are, who you want to be and who you become. Ready, steady....

How do you change?

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David (@David_Shindler) is an independent career coach, blogger, speaker, associate with several consultancies. He has an online school, Career Navigating for Young Professionals. He is the author of Learning to Leap: a guide to being more employable, and co-author with Mark Babbitt of 21st Century Internships (over 200,000 downloads worldwide). His commitment and energy are in promoting lifelong personal and professional development and in tackling youth unemployment. He works with young people and professionals in education and business.

Visit the Learning to Leap blog to read more of his work and check out his other published articles on LinkedIn:

Does a Job Have to Be Useful?

Character: Be the Hero of Your Story

How to Be a Vulcan in a VUCA World

Early Career Dilemma: How to Manage Expectations

Let's Ditch the 'What do you want to do?' Career Advice

Father's Day: Learning From The Pleasure And The Pain

Employability: Do You Know How To Dance In The Digital Age?

New Career Opportunities In The Sharing And Gig Economies

New Graduate Hires: Why Managing Up Is Important 

Work Readiness: Are You Lost in Translation?

Job Seekers: Test And Learn To Be A Game Changer

 Career Adventures: Take A Walk On The Wild Side

Accountability, Productivity And Saving Lives

 Being Human In The Artificial Age

 The Unwritten Rules Of Graduate Employment

 3 Soft Skills Paradoxes

 Healthy Job And Career Transitions

 Solutions For Closing The Gap From Classroom To Career

 The Multiplier Opportunity In The Generation Game

 Culture: The Quantified Self And The Qualitative Self

 Purposeful Leadership To Create The Life Of Meaning

 The Uber Effect: Opportunities For Job Seekers And Employers

 Hierarchies are tumbling as Social soars

 The Emergence of the Holistic Student

 New Graduates: Following Is A Rehearsal For Leading

 How Redefining Success Helps You Succeed

 Why Developing Yourself Is A Matter Of Life And Death

 Generation Now: The Imperative Of Intercultural Skills

 #If I Were 22: Choose Insight Before Hindsight

 How To Align Talent, Careers, and Performance

 Liberating The Talents Of All Your Employees

 6 Professional Practices for Job And Career Searching


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