Category: General

Horizon Point writes about dozens of leadership, career, workplace, and workforce topics. Sometimes we write whatever we want. Read this category for general blogs from the HPC team.

  • 2 Tips if you have Bored Employees

    Last week,  I talked about how boredom at work is one of the worst employment states and offered suggestions for how employees can improve bored working conditions.  I want to focus now on leaders who have bored workers.

    If you have people who are bored on the job, I believe there are two primary reasons and two primary tips for curing the boredom.

    1. They are bored because you don’t need them, or you don’t need them full-time. 

    Long gone are the days where every single position on the face of the planet needed to be a 40 hour a week job.  Nothing is a waste of money and talent more than paying people for time in a chair rather than time being productive.  Yet we are so enthralled with the 40 hour work week.

    If your people are sitting there with nothing to do 50% of the time, then you need to either delegate (see below) tasks to them, or find a modified way to employ them in the time that it takes them to complete the job, whether this is full-time or not.

    Tip 1: Consider Contract

    In an interesting article entitled The Forgotten 5th?, by Erik Pages, an emphasis is placed on 1/5th of the workforce that operates on a contract basis.  Maybe contracting is an option for you to maximize your money and maximize others’ talent.

    In addition, Charles Handy, a great British thinker who was way ahead of his time, talks about the usefulness of the nimble “flea”  in his book  The Elephant and the Flea instead of the cumbersome “elephant” as an organization and a workplace.  Maybe you need to employ more “fleas” or “free agents” and think creatively about how to design jobs and working hours to get work done as efficiently and effectively as possible.

    2.  They are bored because you have the I can do it better than everyone else syndrome. In other words, you have trouble delegating.

    I recently had someone tell me, “Well, I don’t just hand it over because it takes more time to hand it over than it takes for me to do it myself.”   I’ll admit, I’ve had these feelings before myself, but in actuality, if this thought is occurring to you more often than not, and you’re also overwhelmed with your workload (the person I am referencing definitely is overwhelmed with his workload), then why aren’t you handing things off to people you are paying to get work done for you?

    Tip 2: Delegate

    Map out what you have to do every day or every week.   Pinpoint is what is critical for you do to, then delegate the rest.  Oftentimes we have an emotional attachment to certain task(s) or clients.  Instead of considering who we employ that could learn and thrive on these tasks or client interactions, we take them for ourselves because we are emotionally attached. That emotional attachment is often, to be quite honest, tied to wanting to get the credit for the work.  But leaders make more leaders, and credit does not matter so much to leaders as developing people does.  Delegate to develop.

    Why are your employees bored on the job?
  • Bored as a Gourd? Not an ideal employment state

    I’ve been struck the last couple of weeks with the reiteration of one of the things that is extremely detrimental to both employers and employees: boredom at work.
    I’ve recently been working with an adult client wanting to make a career change.  She is an extremely talented individual, and In talking with her about her current employment  she says she is just a “warm body”.  One of the main reasons she wants a change is because she’s bored as a gourd at work!   She works for a government contractor (the waste of taxpayer money as she sits there bored is a topic for another day) and none of her talents and skills are being utilized in her role.
    g Gourd Mix
    Also consider a quote from a book I just finished reading, Tribes by Seth Godin:
    “Consider the receptionist at a publishing company I visited a week later. There she was, doing nothing. Sitting at a desk, minding her own business, bored out of her skull. She acknowledged that the front office is very slow and that she just sits there, reading romance novels and waiting. And she’s been doing it for two years.” 
    Two thoughts come to mind on boredom at work:
    1. What a waste of money! As a leader, why would you pay people to be bored?
    2. What a waste of talent!  This may even be more of a shame.  Leaders should be making more leaders, and leadership isn’t cultivated through boredom.

    What if you are an employee and bored?

    Two courses of action exist:

    1.  Change your work environment. You may want to check out these two posts to discover if there is a better fit for you in the workplace:
    2.  Proactively ask for challenging or varied tasks.  Does your boss seem overloaded and stressed, but your reading your romance novel?  Simply ask him/her if there is something you can help with.   If they don’t volunteer anything (why they aren’t volunteering, is again, a topic for another day) pay attention to what they are spending time on and see if you can help them without being asked.  Prove your worth and your talents by proactively getting things done without being asked to do so.

    What if you are a leader and your people are bored? Stay tuned for next week…

  • Marketing Yourself Must Go Beyond the Traditional Resume

    Marketing Yourself Must Go Beyond the Traditional Resume

    Considering a career change or actively looking for a job?  Just brushing up your resume isn’t going to get you where you want to be, most likely.  Even if you are not on an active job hunt, creating a personal brand for yourself that highlights your strengths and expertise can help you get to where you want to be. In addition, using a variety of mediums or avenues for marketing yourself is important. In the days of googling everyone and everything, you need to have a web presence.

    I have one client who TOTALLY gets this. While we spent time working on revising her resume to reflect the experience she had related to the career transition she wants to make (from technical writing to an HR or administrative role) she already had domain names purchased and spent time over the holidays honing her own website to highlight her strengths and create an avenue to showcase the work that she has done.   The website is her portfolio. She also focuses on blogging about issues related to the field she wants to be in because she has a passion for these topics.  Reading and writing about these issues is fun for her as it should be for anything a person has a passion for doing. You can check out her site here: stephaniewhitlow.com

    Her website also shows that she has the technical and creative ability to create and manage a website.  It also shows initiative. Although you can hire people to do a website for you without a whole lot of expense, I would recommend trying to create one on your own.  Its a learning experience and a skill that you can add to your resume.

    Not ready to create your own website or start blogging?  At least be sure that you have a LinkedIn profile and it reflects your brand.  For certain professions, having a hardcopy portfolio and an electronic copy of it saved on a jump drive is beneficial.

    Interested in reading more about this topic?  Here’s another good read from the Working Wisdom blog.

    What do you need to do to take your personal brand to the next level?