Teetolicious Blog.

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

PHEW!!! THAT WAS CLOSE.

My Best Mistake: Nearly Getting Fired

 
Most CEOs get to this job without once having been fired. They are so good at work, or maybe just impressing those who judge their work, that they have no idea how it even feels to be fired.
But I do.
When I was 28, running products for a company I’d co-founded, the CEO called to say that I had a problem with the board, that I probably couldn't overcome it, that I'd have to leave the company.
And that was it. Every firing happens differently except in this one respect: the person being fired can't believe how fast it happens.
I asked to meet the board’s chairman, whom I idolized for building a supercomputer, for speaking French, for founding a company, for dressing like James Bond. The meeting was set for the next day.
It was 8 p.m. Sunday, too late to call family back east. I cleaned my room. I called my ex-girlfriend. I realized how few friends I had. I thought about all the obvious mistakes I hadn't fixed because I would have first had to admit they were mistakes. Someone else would get to fix them now. I couldn't sleep.
The next day, the chairman explained why I was being fired. I listened to him like I had never listened to anyone in my life. In 45 seconds, he did what almost no one paid to be your manager usually has the guts to do: he explained what was wrong with me as plainly as if I were a dented car.
At the end of it, I said I wouldn't leave. I promised to change. I cried.
“Glenn,” the chairman said, looking away. “Please.”
Then he said, "We're going to give you one more chance." He never said why.
I went back to work. I changed. All the things I imagined my successor doing, I did. The company went public. The CEO and I became good friends. I was able to look on my eight years there as a success, not a failure.
I once read that what makes a tragedy so hard to bear is the feeling that it so easily could have gone the other way. This feeling is also what makes our triumphs so giddy.
You Don’t Have to Have the JobSince then, I've never stopped feeling lucky. It’s important for a CEO to feel lucky. When I was just starting out in my career, I’d heard Jim Barksdale say, “You don’t have to have the job.” I thought then that it meant you could leave whenever you wanted.
But now I realized it also meant you couldn't just take your job for granted. I've sometimes wondered if Bill Gates would still be burning to save Microsoft today if only he had earlier been fired from it, as Steve Jobs was fired from Apple.
Feeling lucky also fills you with love. Most CEOs walk around the office like we own the place, without realizing that the place itself isn't worth owning: a business's value comes from the people who walk out the door every night, who have to decide each morning whether to walk back in. One of the simplest things you can do as a leader is honor their choice, and appreciate their work.
Accepting the Gravity of What You've Done To Another Person
Nearly being fired changes you in other important ways. To this day, I can’t bear to hear that firing someone is best for the person being fired. That may occasionally turn out to be the case but everyone should be clear that the person is being fired only because it’s best for the company.
She is the one who will have to go home and explain to her family what happened. She will remember that day for the rest of her life, and may never completely come to terms with it.
So my role at Redfin isn't to meddle with whether a manager should fire someone, only with how it is to be done. The first sign of civilization among primitive societies was how we buried our dead; by the same token, one measure of a company’s culture is how it handles those who have to go.
Redfin hasn't always been as humane as we should. Firings are botched because no one on either side has much experience with it, and everyone gets erratic. But we try.
Demolishing the FortressThe most profound impact of my own experience with being fired came from what I said to my old chairman to save my skin: “I can change.” Even now, more than ten years on, at a different company, I'm still changing.
Most people spend nearly all their energy trying not to change. This is what the philosopher William James meant when he wrote the mind's main function was to be a fortress for protecting your ego from reality. When the mind has to accommodate a new fact, James argued, it doesn't settle on the change to its model of reality that is most likely to reflect reality. It protects the fortress, calculating the smallest possible modification to its bulwarks that can account for the new fact.
Nearly being fired demolishes your fortress. Instead of being invested in the way you've been and what you've done, you become invested in whom you’ll be.
This shift is the best possible thing that can happen to you. Have you ever noticed that the happiest people on the planet are born-again converts to a religion? It isn't the religion by itself that makes them happy, otherwise all religious people would be happy.
It’s the shift from loving yourself to loving your ability to change yourself. When I left my meeting with the chairman I finally knew how bad of an executive I was. But I told him that, more than any other executive in his portfolio of companies, I was the one most committed to getting better. I told everyone around me I was trying to get better, so everyone would help.
Sometimes nothing helps. I lie on the bed at the end of a bad day and tell my wife I am tired of myself, because I can never seem to change. She asks me if I think I will get any better in ten years. Face down, I shake my head. Then she asks me if I was much worse ten years ago. We both know I was horrendous back then. I sit up. I see what she means.
The greatest kindness my wife has shown me is to think of me as a work in progress, an unfinished symphony. Professionally, my symphony is to be the world’s best CEO. At my current rate of improvement, that will happen when I’m 94. But I'm trying to move that up.
Glenn Kelman is the CEO of Redfin, a technology-powered real estate brokerage. Follow him on Twitter @glennkelman.

Monday, 12 August 2013

THE DEVIL WAS THE BOSS

My Best Mistake: The Devil Was My Boss


It’s hard to be engaged and love your job when you believe that your boss is a nightmare or you’re stuck in the middle of a toxic workplace.
The biggest mistake I made was going to work everyday feeling scared, fearful, and as a result not being prepared to try new things, take risks – or even do my best work. Trying to "get" your boss to like you can be very unproductive. The problem was I did not have confidence in my own skills.
Last century I worked for an Australian airline called Ansett (they are no longer in business). I was so excited when I got the job as a young marketer for such a prestigious brand. Yet within six months I would lie about where I worked so that people did not tell me their bad air travel experiences.
The general manager at the time would walk through an airport and never acknowledge anyone, never a smile – or even say a ‘how’s it going mate?’. Simply any employee who saw him thought he hated them. Including me.
This aggression flowed throughout the business. I’m sure my direct manager hated me too. I could never get a meeting with him to discuss my work. When I did finally meet with him, he would smoke in the office with the door closed – I did mention this was last century – and talkat me. I was never able to contribute. Ever.
The toxic relationship with my direct manager and other managers in the business meant that I did not do my best work. What we would call "a career-limiting move."
So what should I have done in this situation (rather than hide)? Is it a case of walking out with my tail between my legs and giving up the dream? Well, at the risk of appearing flaky, let’s cast our gaze to Hollywood for advice…
Remember poor Andrea Sachs (Anne Hathaway) in The Devil Wears Prada? She’d scored every woman’s dream job working for fabulous fashion magazine Runway. That was until she met her boss Miranda Priestley (Meryl Streep) and discovered that her fellow employees suffered from, let’s say, poor morale – not to mention being completely petrified of putting one foot out of place within eye or earshot of the boss. The office culture was downright toxic.
So what lessons do I wish I had learned back in my Ansett days from Andrea? 
#1 Stick at it in the beginning. No one can deny that Andrea didn’t dedicate herself to the job 100 percent. She gave up her personal life and her desire to be a journalist, neglected her friends and even missed her boyfriend’s birthday, all because she felt she had no choice but to put her job first. There’s nothing wrong with being committed to your job, but if your employer expects all this of you, it’s a pretty clear indication that your life outside the office is not of any significance to them. They certainly won’t care or remember the name of your husband/wife/child/dog. Yet all research indicates that to be productive, happy and engaged at work, people need to feel valued and appreciated as individuals. Not treated like slaves.
#2 Don’t step on the little people. Be nice on the way up, you never know who you’ll meet on the way back down. Think about the relationship between Andrea and her colleague Emily (Emily Blunt). No matter how many snide remarks or awful tasks were thrown Andrea’s way, she maintained her grace, integrity and positive attitude. Which leads to the third lesson…
#3 Be guided by your values. Don’t lose sight of who you are or why you’re there. But, if the job is leading you to question your own values or requires you to compromise them – as was the case when Andrea’s colleague was cheated out of a promotion – then maybe it’s time to just…
#4 Walk away. In the end, Andrea discovered this wasn’t in fact her “dream job”, and it wasn’t worth losing herself or what she stood for. If the job or the workplace is causing you to second-guess your judgement, your values or the way you live your life, then it’s not the place for you.
In the beginning I worked hard trying to impress the boss – because after all we do have to start somewhere, like Andrea – but in the end I did walk away. I made sure that it was a career move I wanted to make. My next job was as a marketing manager for Apple Australia – now you could not get two more different experiences.
So here’s a message to all employers: culture is the backbone of happy, productive workplaces. If you don’t have a good one – or at least make an effort to fix a poor one – your people will walk away in the end. Join us in our Employee Engagement Network on LInkedIn Groups and have your say.
Photo: Courtesy of 20th Century Fox

SOURCE:NAIJ JOBS- IT EXECUTIVES

IT Support Executives

Today
Main Duties include:
  • Manage and maintain organisation’s IT infrastructure, including hardware, software, operating systems, networks, applications etc.
  • Maintain and enhance the company’s web presence, ensuring that only up- to –date and accurate information are contained on the website.
  • Provide first hand user support e.g. setting up new user accounts and user profiles and dealing with password changes, resolving day to day staff IT complaints and issues using standard troubleshooting techniques.
  • Liaise with external IT consultants in the roll- out of new applications as well as provision of second level of IT support for staff.
  • Develop graphic designs for various company documents and write ups e.g. Periodic Newsletters and magazines.
  • Create and maintain company’s knowledge repository and database to guarantee effective methods of storing and managing information and corporate knowledge assets.
  • Provide support, including procedural documentation for computer system operation and development.
  • Install work stations and set up hardware. Maintain current accurate inventory of hardware, software and resources.
  • Assist the Knowledge Management Coordinator in spooling relevant website data on the organisation’s website.
  • Monitor compliance with company’s policies and procedures covering network access, internet and email usage, IT Tools of Trade, etc.
Qualified candidates should possess the following:
  • Minimum of HND in Engineering, Computer Science or other related courses
  • Relevant years of working experience.
  • Excellent communication and interpersonal skills.
APPLY

WHAT INSPIRES NAOMI SIMSON!!!

What Inspires Me: Please Tell Me I Can't

 
Tell me I "cannot" do, be or have something – and that is the surest way to inspire me into action.
What inspires me is simply when the ‘impossible becomes possible’ – to tackle a problem and never give up, no matter how challenging.
The pet name my peers gave me at university was ‘Num’ – because it rhymed with dumb... I had an idea that I was not the smartest academic in class – and that there were definitely cleverer students on campus. In fact my own father said to me as I was finishing my degree, “Just in case your university education does not get you a job – let me send you on a touch-typing course, at least you will have that to fall back on.”
At some point I said to myself "you just wait – I will show you, I will be a 'success.'"
I have never thought that people took me seriously. It is as if my need to ‘prove’ myself has fueled my relentless pursuit to create a best work place, for growth and for being "world-famous" for what we do. To show all those people that said to me “you can’t” – that in fact I can.
After leaving corporate life, I became a marketing consultant, and even in doing that somehow my clients would look at the marketing plans I created... and pick and choose which elements they would do – as if it was a shopping list. I thought as an ‘expensive’ consultant surely I would be listened to. Still no.
As a start-up, I put into practice at RedBalloon the things that I had been advising my clients to do. I wondered if I could build a brand based on listening to customers and responding. If having a work place that people loved to be at, was to also to create a highly profitable business. Somehow I still needed to "show them." (Whoever "them" is).
Even now when I hear business leaders say “oh it is easy for you, you only have a team of 60”, I want to stamp my feet. "No!" I yell inside. "When will I be taken seriously?" Then I am inspired to do more, work harder – to prove that it is possible.
And I am equally inspired by other people’s stories of creating the possible from the impossible.
If I hear a story of someone who has overcome the odds, worked hard, focused, fulfilled on his or her word – and has been relentless in changing the world to make it a better place – I feel unbelievably inspired and uplifted.
My motto is “if it is meant to be, it is up to me” – but to change the world, first it takes a dream... these words have always inspired me:
To dream ... the impossible dream ...
To fight ... the unbeatable foe ...
To bear ... with unbearable sorrow ...
To run ... where the brave dare not go ...
To right ... the unrightable wrong ...
To love ... pure and chaste from afar ...
To try ... when your arms are too weary ...
To reach ... the unreachable star ... 

This is my quest, to follow that star ... 
No matter how hopeless, no matter how far ... 
To fight for the right, without question or pause ... 
To be willing to march into Hell, for a Heavenly cause ...
The Impossible Dream by Musical "Man of La Mancha"
Lyrics by Joe Darion
When the impossible becomes possible, the world is a better space.
(Thanks to my father for the touch-typing – it takes me more time to choose the headline and the picture for my posts than it does to type. Picture: my Dad and I, in my last year of university. He was always challenging me... and he still does)
Photo: Naomi Simson

SOURCE:NAIJ JOBS-SCIENCE TEACHER

Private Science Tutor

Today
Responsibilities:
  • The teacher works with students of various abilities to prepare them for SSCE/GCE exams. 
Qualifications:
  • Candidates with a good Basic Science (Chemistry, Physics and Maths) background must hold a minimum of Bachelor degree in the discipline or related fields from a recognized institution.
  • Minimum of 1-3 years experience in a similar teaching environment will be an added advantage.
APPLY