How To Navigate A New Job
LatestStarting a new job can be like the first day of school all over again, only scarier because you’re a grownup and you have to worry about getting fired. Luckily, we have some tips for settling in.
It’s hard enough to find a job these days, and once you do, you want to make a good first impression. But just like on the playground, this isn’t always simple. In addition to getting all your stuff done on time, you want to fit in, earn the boss’s respect, and maybe even enjoy yourself. Here’s how to make that happen:
Say yes.
I talked to Hannah Seligson, journalist and author of New Girl On the Job: Advice from the Trenches, who says that in a new position,
The number one thing is to be the “no-problem” kind of person — someone asks you to do something and you say “no problem,” and you figure out how to not make it a problem. Sort of demonstrate that you’re someone who doesn’t need a lot of hand-holding.
This isn’t a revolutionary idea, but it’s worth reiterating — being willing to take on new tasks will signal not just that you’re useful, but that you’re confident. And having the attitude that you can and will figure out how to do things will make you more confident too.
But ask questions.
Obviously, you’re not going to know how to do everything at the beginning. This is normal. And while you should make an effort to figure things out on your own before asking for help — this will be just as good for your actual skills as it is for your image — you don’t have to act like you’re completely alone. Seligson says you can feel okay about asking for help with something once you can show “that you’ve taken the steps to figure it out on your own.” And Thuy Sindell, co-author of Sink or Swim!: New Job. New Boss. 12 Weeks to Get It Right, says,
Ask a lot of questions, and ask good questions. Ask questions that are followups to the question you posed. That demonstrates a level of interest and curiosity, as well as your ability to follow a logic and a line of thinking. People like being able to impart their wisdom on others, so when you ask questions you’re engaging the other person, and they’re feeling better about themselves.
Sindell points out that there’s a difference between good questions and pestering ones. Some examples of smart things to ask:
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