9 skills that would make any hiring manager happy
If you’ve considered changing careers, you've probably grappled with
the fear that you might not have the right skills for a new line of
work. But give yourself a little credit. You’ve got skills. Plenty of
‘em in fact. And just the type employers in all industries are looking
for.
Remember the time you condensed that incomprehensible pile of data
into a few key slides for a presentation? That’s data management. Or
when you nailed it in that brainstorming session on how you were going
to position a few new hires on your team? That’s critical thinking. Even
that time you organized the company softball game? That counts as
communication.
So if you’re looking for a new line of work, highlight these nine skills
that cross most industries—and therefore would make a boss in any field
very happy.
Collaboration
Collaboration is the ability to work effectively with others despite
differences and opposing points of view. Teams today can be very
diverse—split by politics, work styles and personalities, notes Amanda
Gerrie, a career consultant in the San Francisco Bay area. So the
ability to work together toward a common goal is a critical skill.
Example: You were in charge of managing
your team’s intern last summer, which involved in coordination with
your co-workers over the person’s workload and priorities.
Leadership
This includes teaching, motivating, coaching and supervising. Even in
non-management jobs, the ability to motivate fellow employees toward a
common goal, gauge priorities and manage resources is highly desirable.
Example: You helped coordinate your
office's softball team—recruiting people to the team, keeping them
informed about games and overall creating an atmosphere of camaraderie.
Creativity
This word can really do a lot for a candidate’s profile. Creativity,
as it pertains to the working world, means having a knack for coming up
with imaginative and original ways to solve problems or create new
value. This is about more than just innovation. This is about seeing
something that isn’t there then making it appear.
Example: It feels like everyone at your
company is always asking for a copy of that one report that comes out
every month. You dig on the Internet and find a free tool that would
disseminate this report internally to only those people who opt in.
After getting the necessary approvals, you implement the tool, saving
everyone lots of time.
Written communication
Being able to effectively convey ideas in writing is valuable. This
involves first synthesizing data and situations and then translating
them in a way that helps other people understand and act. Even without
data, if you can concisely and smartly communicate your ideas you’re
pretty much golden in the eyes of a new manager.
Example: You know the vice president of
your company likes to be prepared with times, dates and themes of
important industry events. Anticipating this, you do a little homework
and punch up a bulleted list with this info for your boss to review.
Coding
So what if you’re not yet capable of developing for Facebook yet. If
you’re able to clean up a web page using your sparse knowledge of HTML
or able to make a suggestion based on your limited experience with CSS,
you’re in great shape in terms of this highly-transferable skill.
Example: You’re asked to contribute to a
blog your company is publishing to promote the company. You provide a
500-word post, and using your knowledge of HTML, you’re able to advise
the publishing team on the format and style you want your blog post to
have.
Time management
This one is pretty simple: When your boss gives you an assignment,
are you able to complete it—to his or her liking—in the timeframe
allotted? If you answered yes, you can probably include this in your
arsenal of skills.
Example: Your manager asks you deliver a
three-bullet point summary on a project you’re working on by the end of
the next business day, and you do it. No problem.
Data management
Understanding, researching, translating and compiling data are
increasingly valued abilities in many industries. The amount of data
companies collect and manage has exploded in recent years and employees
need to be comfortable working with all that information. Data can be
any type of information that has meaning and needs context: A study your
company commissions on a specific area of industry analysis, a
spreadsheet containing your company’s lapsed customers, or even a
report on how a single post on a single social media platform performed.
Example: You receive six spreadsheets
in your inbox, each containing a different data set to describe how a
different segment of your team’s business is doing. You take this
information and consolidate it for a presentation you’ll give in two
weeks.
Customer service
Customers and clients keep the lights on at your business, so if you
can show an employer you know how to deal with them when the going gets
tough, you have a major leg up on your competition who can’t. “Whether
we like it or not we are all in sales now,” says Gerrie, the San
Francisco career consultant. “This includes the ability to listen,
speak, persuade and collaboratively negotiate.”
Example: For some reason, you’re
forwarded a thread with the subject line “concerned customer.” You read
the thread and feel like you have a handle on what that concern might
be. You reach out directly to the customer, offer a solution to the
problem and offer to be free for that customer at any time to help him
solve the problem so that it doesn’t happen again.
source: www.monster.com
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