Author: moderncareers

  • 5 Ways To Be Assertive

    To be assertvie - let your eyes do the work
    To be assertive – let your eyes do the work

    I had to laugh a few days ago, when teaching ‘Assertiveness’ to a lovely group of delegates, because I needed to use my own techniques to assert myself and get through the material within time. Assertiveness doesn’t come from just being in the room; instead we have to choose how to use our energy to make ourselves heard.

    Here are 5 ways that I used to assert myself:

    1) Standing up. It’s much easier to project our voice and ‘be present’ when we have height to our advantage.

    2) Pause button. Holding your hand out flat and saying ‘can I just pause you’ is a great way of getting control over the ‘conversation space’.

    3) 3-beat eye contact. Holding someone’s gaze for a count of three is a powerful way to assert yourself as it projects confidence and sincerity, and the other person realises that what you’re saying is important to you.

    4) Asking questions. If in doubt ask a question, as it encourages thinking and enables us to discover new information…and because there’s a chance that we may have mis-understood the other person’s position.

    5) Holding the silence. Assertiveness can be about doing nothing, and in order to assert control; stillness has value. Simply ask for silence and stand with your arms out to one side, palms flat, and be still (a kind of double pause button). Your stillness will quieten others and give you control.

    Assertiveness is easier when you know a trick or two and my sneaky point 6 is this: practice at home with your partner, or on the kids. It’s free and a great way to increase confidence.

    And finally… A small flurry of excitement this week when Job Hunting 3.0 broke the 2,000 barrier on Amazon and reached a new high at number 1,860 in the charts, which is a fantastic result. Small sherries all round and big thank you’s to everyone who has bought a copy, or recommended it to friends.

    It’s almost certainly the most practical job hunting book in the UK today and is as relevant for school leavers as it is for seasoned workers.

  • It’s Ok To Be Happy And…

    Taken at Federal Palace Restaurant, Hong Kong
    Taken at Federal Palace Restaurant, Hong Kong

    Hello again and thank you to Crow for standing in for the last two weeks. He’s already grumbling about needing to rest his beak after all that typing, but he loves it really.

    It dawned on me over the last fortnight that I’m really happy at the moment, which is rather pleasing. I’ve made some sensible business decisions, have been playing lots with the children and have been enjoying just being in the flow of life.

    I’ve recently worked with people who have huge houses, vast salaries and globe-trotting jobs and none of them are happy. They’re all sweating under a self imposed burden that has a high degree of surface validity (it looks good), but which is paper thin. Their reality is that they’re stressed and tense and fighting hard to keep one step ahead of disaster.

    Comparing my own life with theirs has really helped me to see that, in contrast, I have a richer life – and that in order to fully enjoy it I need to stop grumbling and just choose to be happy.

    So, I’ve started to tell people that I’m happy. This hasn’t changed my bank balance, or the number of customers in my business. It hasn’t got the lawn mowed, or tidied up the house. But…it has meant that I’m celebrating the good stuff and enjoying life as it is. And it’s a great feeling to share your happiness.

    I’ll leave you with a question:

    If you’re working hard and are not happy, how can you shift your perception so that you’re working hard and are happy?

    Remember it’s ok to be happy AND still have concerns and worries…we all have those…happiness doesn’t rest on a foundation of perfection. It rests on an acceptance that we all have riches, we just need to see them.

    I would add that the sentiment in the picture is right – the more I help people, the happier I am.

    …And a small sherry at 6.00pm helps too!