Career skills to increase your marketability
The three purposes of this article are to:
- Make you aware of these seven basic skill categories.
- Help you identify the specific skills within each of these categories.
- Provide you with career-development advice about how to use both the curricular and extracurricular components of your undergraduate education to develop and/or strengthen these skills.
1. Communication skills
Writing, speaking, listening, reading
People employed in the positions to which most college graduates
aspire must not only write and speak clearly, coherently and
persuasively, but must also attend to, remember, understand and act upon
the information they read and hear. All students take basic
communication courses such as English composition and speech.
Unfortunately, many students do not understand the relevance of the
skills taught in these courses to their professional futures and,
therefore, take them to simply “get them out of the way” rather than to
learn from them. Please take these courses seriously; without the skills
they teach, you will put yourself at risk not only in the process of
acquiring a job, but also in your ability to succeed in that job and to
keep it once you are hired.Take advanced classes in these areas (e.g., interpersonal communication and technical writing) and seek out experiences that will provide you with opportunities to practice your ability to read, listen, write and speak (i.e., classes that require extensive reading assignments, information-rich lectures, demanding written assignments and formal oral presentations).
2. Collaboration skills
Working well in groups
Dealing sensitively and effectively with diverse populations
Exhibiting various forms of leadership, including supervising, influencing and motivating others
Your employer will require you to perform complex tasks that
require teamwork. No one works alone, and almost all teams are composed
of people who differ in terms of gender, race, culture, ethnicity,
religion, marital status, education, socioeconomic status, sexual
orientation, age and physical or mental ability.The skills necessary to be a productive member of a diverse team can only be acquired through practice, and the best place to practice these skills is in course-based group projects or extracurricular activities that involve working with groups composed of diverse members. The worst possible thing you can do in college is isolate yourself from diversity by deliberately deciding to live, study, work and spend your leisure time with only those students who are similar to you.
3. Critical thinking and research skills
Applying information to solve organizational problems
Using statistical skills to summarize, organize and analyze data
Finding, gathering and organizing information from a variety of sources
Creating new knowledge by integrating existing information
Employers seek out people who can solve problems, analyze data
and create new ideas. One way to develop the critical thinking and
research skills employers value is to participate in research projects
that require the following critical thinking skills:- Retention and comprehension of information about the subject of the research.
- Analysis and evaluation of the body of research upon which the research is based.
- Creation and testing of new hypotheses and the application of research findings to advance knowledge and/or improve the quality of human life.
4. Self-management skills
Being flexible and adaptable
Learning new skills and information
Managing time, stress and conflict successfully
Employers avoid hiring people whose inability to manage time,
stress or conflicts causes them to perform poorly on the job by missing
deadlines, exhibiting stress-related problems or lowering workplace
morale. Strengthen your self-management skills in college by seeking out
courses whose instructors expect you to perform in the same
responsible, conscientious and mature ways your future employers will
demand.Avoid classes taught by instructors:
- Whose classes are perceived as non-stressful because their subject matter is easy or they do not require you to learn new skills.
- Who reinforce procrastination and irresponsible behavior by accepting late assignments or allowing you to make up missed tests.
- Who do not seem to care if you come to class late, leave class early or miss class entirely.
5. Professional skills
Organizing, planning and carrying out projects
Managing resources
Acting and dressing in a professional manner
Employers want to hire employees who can carry out tasks in a
professional manner. Therefore, you should choose classes taught by
instructors who have the same high expectations as employers, such as
those who:- Help students develop a strong work ethic by providing them with opportunities to work hard and receive high grades only for excellent work.
- Do not allow students to make up for low performance on assignments or tests with extra credit.
- Require students to plan, organize and carry out complex projects.
- Do not tolerate behaviors in their classrooms that are unacceptable on the job (e.g., texting, surfing the web or receiving cell phone calls; coming to class unprepared to participate; falling asleep; or behaving and dressing in a distracting manner that disrupts the learning process).
6. Technological skills
Computer literacy, word processing, email
You must realize that texting your friends, checking social
media and shopping online are not skills valued by employers. In fact,
the presence of these actions on the job can lead to highly undesirable
outcomes. Employers expect their employees to select and use appropriate
technological tools to identify, locate, acquire, store, organize,
display, analyze and evaluate verbal, numerical and visual information.Therefore, students should enroll in classes that require:
- Papers written with word-processing programs.
- Organization of information with databases.
- Manipulation of numbers with spreadsheets.
- Analysis of data with statistical programs.
- Location of information with search engines.
- Enhancement of speeches with presentation software.
- Communication with their instructors and fellow students via the Internet.
7. Ethical reasoning skills
The ability to make ethical decisions based on appropriate ethical knowledge
The willingness to act on these decisions
Although this was the least often mentioned skill by employers
during the hiring process, it is crucially important for job-seeking
college students to possess because of the dire consequences for new
hires who fail to demonstrate it on the job. You should be aware that
job interviews can include questions designed to evaluate your ability
to think and act in an ethical manner, such as “Tell me about a project
that required you to be aware of and act in accordance with a set of
ethical principles.” The only way to answer this question in a credible
manner is to have actually participated in such a project.Therefore, you should engage in:
- Research projects that require the creation of institutional review board protocols.
- Writing assignments that conform to guidelines prohibiting plagiarism.
- Internships that require you to be aware of, understand and act according to ethical guidelines such as those you would need to follow when you would work with clients whose confidentiality must be protected or who may be exposed to risks

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