JOBS PNG

JOBS PNG Welcome to the official page of Jobspg, Papua New Guinea's preferred jobs portal. Visit our site at www.jobspg.com

19/06/2024
Are you ready for an exciting career opportunity? We are actively seeking qualified candidates for immediate hiring.Vari...
28/07/2023

Are you ready for an exciting career opportunity? We are actively seeking qualified candidates for immediate hiring.
VariousPositions Available:
Project Engineers
Technical Supervisors
Operators
Technicians
Skilled Tradespeople
Support Staff
Requirements:
Relevant experience and qualifications in the respective field.
Enthusiastic and driven individuals.
How to Apply:
Send your CV with the Job Code Number to [email protected]/[email protected]
Don't miss out on this chance to be part of a dynamic team. Apply now!
Note: Please ensure to mention the job code number in your application email.
Location: Port Moresby
Submit your CVs before 02.August.2023

"Remember the words of Thomas Edison: 'Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they were to suc...
19/07/2023

"Remember the words of Thomas Edison: 'Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.' Climbing the corporate ladder is not an easy feat, it's a marathon, not a sprint. There will be challenges, obstacles, and moments of self-doubt. But it's those very challenges that shape and refine us, turning us into more than what we were yesterday.

Know that every step you take, no matter how small, brings you closer to your goals. As Robert Collier wisely said, 'Success is the sum of small efforts, repeated day in and day out.' Your consistent dedication, determination, and commitment are your ladders to the top.

It's also crucial to understand that your journey is uniquely yours. Don't compare your Chapter 1 to someone else's Chapter 20. Theodore Roosevelt once stated, 'Comparison is the thief of joy.' Focus on your path, your growth, your victories.

Remember, 'The only way to achieve the impossible is to believe it is possible,' as Charles Kingsleigh penned. Let your belief be your driving force, propelling you upward and onward. Stay hungry, stay humble, and never stop learning, for 'Success usually comes to those who are too busy to be looking for it,' as Henry David Thoreau rightly proclaimed.

Keep climbing, keep striving, and most importantly, keep believing in yourself. The top of the corporate ladder isn't beyond reach, it's merely a testament to your will and the journey that shapes you."

23/06/2023

Don’t Underestimate you-self

25/05/2023

Location: Kerema Gulf Provine, Papua New Guinea
Industry: Retail / Distribution / Supply
Job ID: #13523

Retail Cashier Job

For Female Applicants Only.

We are looking for full-time Cashiers who are proactive, enthusiastic, and have excellent customer service skills. The ideal candidates must have a minimum of 2 year experience as a Cashier or Checkout Operator and a quick learner who is passionate to build a career within the retail industry.

An effective Cashier will be responsible for the daily checking out of retail goods purchased, be a team player, and making sure cash transactions are handled accurately and efficiently in congruent with established policies and procedures. The successful candidate will play a fundamental role in achieving customer satisfaction and revenue growth objectives. Apply with us if you have the following skills:
Required Qualifications:

Candidates must have completed grade 12 or a diploma course.
Academically performing well during their studies.
Flexible with work hours - amenable to work overtime and on public holidays;

Must be willing to work in Kerema Town
Have great attention to details;
Exceptional written and oral communication skills;
Basic computing skills (MS Word, Excel or Spread Sheets etc).
Have passion working in Retail and Warehouse operations;
Mathematical Skills and ability to handle cash transactions accurately;
Must possess strong work ethic and must have a high regard for integrity;

Capable of delivering consistent accuracy at work;
Attentive to customer needs and committed in providing excellent service.
Please send your application to: [email protected]
Only applicants meeting the strict criteria outlined above will be contacted as part of the shortlisting process.

Welcome to the official page of Jobspg, Papua New Guinea's preferred jobs portal. Visit our site at www.jobspg.com

Be men, or be more than men. Be steady to your purposes and firm as a rock. This ice is not made of such stuff as your h...
28/04/2022

Be men, or be more than men. Be steady to your purposes and firm as a rock. This ice is not made of such stuff as your hearts may be; it is mutable and cannot withstand you if you say that it shall not.
1. Organize your workstation
Organize your workstation to stay focused at work
Our brain gets directly influenced by the things in front of us or immediately next to us. If your workstation looks like it just got struck by a storm and everything is all messed up, then guess what? That’s exactly how you would be feeling the entire day – distracted and lost.

They say that your desk is a reflection of your habits and personality. If it is piled up with files and other stuff, you might like to organize it a little. Keeping your workspace clean and organized takes little time but can have a huge impact on keeping your focus intact and taking your productivity a notch higher.

2. Create an hourly-work plan
One of the major reasons why most of us lose our focus is not having a proper plan. As a result, our monkey mind unchains itself and we lose our focus. To tame your monkey mind, try scheduling your tasks hour by hour. It is a great exercise that gives a structure to your workday. You know exactly what to do when and what needs to be accomplished at the end of the day.

Creating an hourly-plan is, in fact, a great way to enhance the process of prioritization. It allows you to plan in such a way that tasks requiring more attention or higher energy levels could be accomplished as the first thing in the morning.

3. Get in the ‘flow’
All of us are different. We have different habits and different styles of working. Some work best when they work in continuation while others bring out their A-game when they work in small intervals of time. Thus, it’s important for us to understand how our body and brain work. We can use this information to develop a technique that works best to increase our attention span.
To increase its effectiveness, you can set self-imposed deadlines. The sense of urgency would direct your mind to work in the most efficient manner and get more work done.

4. Take short breaks
Sometimes, when you can’t focus on a task anymore, the best thing you can do is to take a break. Our brains are not designed to retain attention for longer hours. Moreover, sitting at your desk looking at the screen for long could lead to lethargy, fatigue, and headache. That’s why it is advisable to take short breaks after every 60 minutes of continuous work.

An article published in the Journal Cognition says, “Deactivating and reactivating your goals allows you to stay focused. Also, when faced with long tasks such as studying before a final exam or working on a project, it is best to impose small breaks on yourself to stay focused on your task.”

5. Stop procrastinating things for tomorrow
We all procrastinate, don’t we? However, procrastination is like a credit card, it’s a lot of fun until you get the bill. The thing about procrastination is that it doesn’t have an endpoint, things keep getting postponed for tomorrow. Let’s say you’ve decided to do something the next day that was due for today. In the back of your mind, it is still bothering you and as a result, you find it hard to focus on the task at hand.

The easiest way to stop yourself from procrastinating is to start timeboxing tasks. To make it more interesting, you can reward yourself at the end when you accomplish those tasks. So, become a pro at doing things not procrastinating them.

6. Take up one thing at a time
Not all of us are born with great multitasking skills, yet most of us fall prey to it. The myriad activities crammed in our usual routine and constantly switching between them is likely to make you tired and distracted. And, it defeats the whole purpose why people tend to multitask.

As per a research by the American Psychological Association, constantly switching between numerous tasks reduces our chances to complete any one of them in due time. Instead of saving time, it ends up doing the exact opposite of it. Additionally, we end up losing focus and making more mistakes when we juggle more than two tasks at a single time.

7. Keep that phone in your drawer
Your phone could be your biggest enemy while working. Constant beeps, Whatsapp messages, Facebook notifications could distract you and result in wasting your precious time. Let’s admit whenever we see our phone on the table, there’s this urge to pick it up and check who updated what on their social networking accounts. According to a survey, an average office employee spends 56 minutes per day using their smartphones for non-work activity. It won’t be wrong to say that smartphones are sapping away all your energy and killing your productivity.

It’s understandable if employees are using their phones during business hours occasionally but if done more than that, it could become a big distraction.

8. Organize your mailbox
One of the other activities that is quite stressful and distracting is email. Every day you get numerous emails – both professional and personal. What’s interesting is that you get emails when you are working on the most important task of the day. Do you know that an average employee spends 1.5 hours a day sending out an approximate of 56 emails?

You can avoid this chaos by having a separate email address for work and personal purposes. Set filters as per your preference and designate a specific time to check your emails and address them. Limiting your email time is a great way to spend time doing things that actually matter and keep your focus intact.

9. Choose suitable music
This could be a shocker for many readers out there. Though, it might not bring the same results for one as it would produce for many. Listening to a certain kind of music could increase your concentration at work. A recently published article stated that background music has actually the power to alter the listener’s mood.

To be a little specific, it was mentioned that listening to music that is positive and has slow tempos could actually improve your performance. It won’t be wrong to say that listening to background music helps to improve focus, blocks out distractions, and even makes a tedious task more enjoyable. Try it out to see if it works for you or not.

10. Use apps to train your brain to focus
Sometimes, it is almost impossible to focus when numerous other things are pulling out our energy. You would be surprised to know that there are many tools, mobile apps, and work management software that can actually help you focus better. These apps are designed in such a way that help you reclaim your brain and get busy working on the things that matter the most. One of the most popular and liked apps include Brain.fm, Concentrate, Headspace 2.0 to name a few.

A career goal is a well-defined statement explaining the profession that an individual intends to pursue throughout his ...
11/07/2021

A career goal is a well-defined statement explaining the profession that an individual intends to pursue throughout his career. It is important for every employee or job seeker to define their career goals clearly. It helps them to come up with effective action plans. DO YOU HAVE YOUR CAREER GOAL. A man 👨 or woman 👩 without a Career Goal is like a Ship sailing without a Destination. Don't wait for Tomorrow. Your time is now.

Why Time is not on Your Side?We all want it to pass so quickly. When I was  kid back in Lenki, Wabage Enga Province, I g...
22/06/2021

Why Time is not on Your Side?
We all want it to pass so quickly. When I was kid back in Lenki, Wabage Enga Province, I grew up there but I’m from Pakate Mand, Murip, Kandep, Enga Province. all we want to do is be grownups; and dream of owning my own Laptop, Sports car, Travel all over the world. Now I’m in my 30s and realise time I have grown up to fast I have achieved few of personal goals and more yet to achieve, adding new goals in to my bucket list. My day always say time is very important I though he was crazy now I realise that I was crazy to realise how important time is.
I always sleep 2am to 3am and wake up at 6 am. Now I come to realise that time chase down the minutes, hours and years until we’re old enough to get our license, graduate, drink, move out and move on.
Then in my twenties and I just can’t wait to be taken seriously. Can’t wait to buy our first Car, laptop, smart, Phone, Dates, throw away money on red ropes and bottle service and I got so many Depts without realising my own downfall, Now I’m in slavery of my own decision making and it will take me pay for the next 5 years and more depts of my depts and I’m still living under depts. I thought me a very good lesion and now I fully understand what is time.
We envision our future selves, successful, secure and rich, always rich. But when we’re finally there, finally rich, successful and established, we’ll only be wondering where all the time went.
Your wealth won’t seem as good now that you can’t enjoy it the way you once imagined in your twenties. Your apartment seems empty without all the minutes, hours and years to fill it with. Those trips you waited to take don’t seem as great with grey hair and a speeding clock by your side. Suddenly, you’re not so sure you should have wasted all that time asking it to speed up.
Our parents always tell us that life goes by in the blink of an eye. Our grandparents tell us it’s over before we know it. They tell us to cherish our youth, enjoy it while it lasts, because it will be gone before you realize the scarcity of it.
Many of us have yet to hit that critical moment when we look back and realize there’s more time behind us than there will ever be in front of us. We have yet to lament over it, wishing we had slowed down. We have yet to find out too late that time is worth more than money. Time is worth more than VIP lounges, corner offices and 18-hour work days. And your time is worth more than anything. It’s worth more than days spent stressing and agonizing, it’s worth more than bad nights in and worse nights out. It’s worth more than sleeping the day away or refusing to acknowledge another sunrise.
The older you get, the more you realize time isn’t on your side. It’s the boy you chased away only to realize he’s the only one who matters and now it’s too late. It’s the girl you ignored until you realized her beauty and it was too late. It’s the deceiving, silent enemy in our lives that you can either learn to control or give in to. However you decide to treat it, just know it’s never on your side:
It Won’t Slow Down So You Can Catch Up
Time has no patience for the weak or the slow. It doesn’t care if you want to spend a week watching Netflix and eating Lays, it just won’t come back for you. It doesn’t have patience, tolerance or sympathy for those who can’t keep up or don’t know how to use it without regrets.
There’s Never More When You Need It
There are no extras, no hand outs and definitely no bonuses. Time is like that strict teacher who will never round you up a point, even a half point. It will never help you find the answers or let you cheat off it, because it’s really just cheating you.
It Doesn’t Care If You’re Running Out
Time has no remorse. It doesn’t care if you’re young, old, lived a full life or hardly lived at all. It will cut you short whenever it pleases and has no shame in giving you little warning.
It Doesn’t Care How Much Money You Have
It doesn’t matter how rich you are or how much money you make, you can never get the time back you wasted. Time has no preference for the rich, beautiful or the intelligent. It has an odd way of reminding you that it doesn’t care if you’re rich or poor, it will get you either way.
It Sneaks Up On You When You Least Expect It
Like that stalker in high school you couldn’t get rid of, time is always lurking around. It seems to just hang there, never leaving the corner of your mind. And when you’re not thinking about it, not realizing it’s there anymore, it comes up behind you and you realize it’s never going to leave you alone.
It Never Warns You When You’re Running Low
Your time could stop at any moment. Time doesn’t slow down because you’re running out. It doesn’t stop so you can appreciate the moment or give you more time to do everything you wanted to do, but it especially doesn’t give you warning when it’s about to be too late.
It Makes You Think You Have An Unlimited Amount
When you’re young, time seems infinite. It feels like you can waste days on end and it won’t even make a dent. It makes you believe that old age is a fate that will never happen and will forever be on the side of the young.
It Likes To Play Games With You
It loves to slow down at work and speed up at play. It hides when you need it and stabs you in the back when you think you’re ahead of it. It doesn’t give hints, clues or warnings, and always makes sure you know it’s around when you’d rather not be aware.
It Won’t Give You A Break Because You’re Sick
There is never enough time to get over the flu and when you have to use your sick days to cover your aching joints, time seems to be the most unaccountable friend you have. You’ll never understand why 24 hours isn’t enough time to heal yourself, but is always enough time to just about ruin your life.
It Always Goes Faster On Vacation
Why is it that a week on vacation never feels like a week? It’s like the second you get on the plane, there’s a warp and days become minutes as you find yourself wishing for one of the few times in your over-worked life that it would just slow the f*ck down.
It Always Has A Price
You can’t pay to get more, but it always feels like you’re giving up something for it. You can’t be in two places at once, can’t stay up all night long, can’t spend a year traveling and that same year working. Time always demands a sacrifice, and it’s the things you give it and the things you refuse to pay that determine the worth of your time.
https://pngeans.com/why-time-is-not-on-your-side/

It’s good to be the boss. People in charge of an organization not only make more money, but they also have happier famil...
29/04/2021

It’s good to be the boss. People in charge of an organization not only make more money, but they also have happier family lives, are more satisfied with their work, and worry less about their financial futures. Those in the top levels consider their employment a “career,” not just a job that pays the bills.

So what can you do to get a promotion to those top levels? There are a number of steps you can take to improve your chances of advancing your career, whether with your existing employer or a new one. Your long-term success depends on having as many options as possible and being prepared when an opportunity arises.

11 Ways to Advance in Your Career

Getting to the top of the corporate food chain becomes increasingly more difficult in the higher tiers of management. In many organizations, average performers in the lower ranks can expect some promotions by merely being competent and building tenure. Attaining more senior positions or advancing at a faster rate, however, requires the following strategies, at the very least.

1. Evaluate Corporate Opportunities

The more opportunities available to you, the better. For example, a rapidly growing company depends on numerous managers to implement its strategies, whether that’s introducing new products, expanding into new geographic territories, or capturing a larger market share. At the same time, a growing company typically takes risks to meet profit targets or expand into new markets.

Successful small companies can become acquisition targets for larger competitors. If their efforts are successful, the acquirer typically cuts redundant staff and replaces poor and average performers with their own people. In other words, the choice to work for a small growing company is a high-risk, high-reward proposition for an ambitious employee.

On the other hand, mature companies that already dominate an industry may have slower career paths but provide valuable experience and security for those willing to wait for their turn in corporate leadership. If the company chooses to blend acquisitions and internal growth to achieve profit targets, the opportunities for advancement can exceed those of a smaller company, with less risk.

That said, many mature companies have policies aimed at inducing turnover at the top levels. They may offer early retirements, buyouts, and titles with higher compensation but no authority or responsibility – a kind of in-place retirement – to retain younger, aggressive managers who might otherwise leave the company. Your selection of an employer is a critical element in how fast you climb the ranks.

Identify the most important aspects of an employer for you. For example, do you seek financial security or the opportunity for rapid advancement? Are you willing to sacrifice leisure time for a promotion? Are you competitive or more passive? Do you work best as an individual or part of a team? Where does work fit into your priorities?

Gather as much information about potential employers as possible. Public companies’ required disclosures are easy to access, newspapers and magazines often run articles on local companies and businessmen, and most companies have websites with information on various facets of the company. Review comments about potential employers on sites like Glassdoor, Vault, and PayScale, remembering that some reviews may be negatively biased. If possible, talk to current and former employees. If you find anything that concerns you, ask the company’s recruiter for an explanation. After all, you’re making one of the most important decisions of your life.

2. Get the Lay of the Land

Every company has a culture, whether intentionally or informally developed. It’s the company’s personality and includes shared values, ethics, and expectations that govern employee behavior. Ignoring an established culture is one of the worst errors a new employee can make; it’s effectively inviting battles without knowing your foes or having a battle plan.

A company’s public statements and recruitment conversations can vary significantly from acceptable day-to-day behavior. As a consequence, new employees eager to make a significant impression may be admonished with the comment “That’s not the way we do things around here.” Before implementing your plan to get ahead, take the time to understand the rules of the game you’re playing.

3. Avoid Company Politics

Company politics are a fact of life in any organization, especially businesses. The desire to climb the corporate hierarchy stems from an innate need for power and control found in all humans. As a consequence, cliques and factions arise, especially around those contending for the corner office. Participating in company politics is always a risk since being associated with the wrong side invariably leads to career setbacks.

If you want to get ahead, avoid unhealthy alliances and personal conflicts with other employees. Treat all people with respect and courtesy.

4. Get Noticed by Those Who Matter

It doesn’t matter if you’re an expert in a particular field if no one knows who you are. Companies are filled with nameless employees who spend years toiling in the trenches without recognition. To ensure you get the recognition you deserve:

•Seek Employer Feedback. Many employees passively wait for their annual or semiannual employee reviews. Unfortunately, these reviews are often merely attempts to justify terminations or avoid lawsuits. Develop the habit of seeking feedback from your direct supervisor regularly, especially after every project. Take note of compliments and criticisms, modify your performance where necessary, and involve your boss in those efforts; your achievement reflects well on them.

•Volunteer for Extra Work. Look for ways to make your superior’s job easier. Employees who help their bosses stand out become visible to other supervisors who may have opportunities as well. When you take on extra work, be sure you complete the assignment on time and as expected.

•Participate in Company Activities. Being active in company social events, sports teams, and sponsored charities exposes you to more people who can help you on your climb to the top. Whenever possible, do favors for other employees without any expectation of a quid pro quo. Over the course of your career, you never know who might help you with a recommendation, introduction, or valuable advice.

When employing these strategies, be sure to proceed thoughtfully. They can easily be misunderstood by your superiors and resented by your fellow workers if done inappropriately. Remember, it’s important that your efforts be sincere and not viewed as attempts to fool colleagues or ingratiate yourself with a boss. To impress your superiors, seek to convey an attitude of selflessness, not selfishness.

5. Find Mentors

Less Brown said that mentoring is the missing link between a promising businessperson and a successful one. He advises that success takes “hard work, hard work, and more hard work. But it also takes a little help along the way.” Even geniuses need help now and then; in a letter to fellow scientist Robert Hooke in 1675, Sir Isaac Newton wrote, “If I have seen further

[than other scientists of the time]

, it is by standing upon the shoulders of giants.”

A mentor is someone who has traveled the path before you, knows the ins and outs of an industry or organization and its people, and is willing to give you authentic, unvarnished assessments and advice. Mentors may be within or outside your own company. A good mentoring relationship can speed up your progress, smooth bumps in the road, and help you avoid the obstacles that can derail or destroy a career.

Finding a mentor is more than identifying someone you can exploit for their contacts and sponsorship. Mentoring is a two-way relationship, much like that between a pupil and teacher. Find mentors who recognize your talent, genuinely care for you, and expose you to other successful people. Don’t be afraid to ask for assistance and advice; the most successful people had help along their journeys, and many of them are willing to give back.

Consider having several mentors at once, much as a CEO works with a board of directors. In my career, I’ve been fortunate to have the advice of many wiser and more-experienced businesspeople. In most cases, our relationships spanned a lifetime – hopefully, a mutual pleasure, but certainly to my great advantage.

6. Nourish Your Network

As you progress in your career, spending time at different management levels and possibly other companies, there are ample opportunities to make valuable business and personal contacts that may be helpful as time goes by. Unfortunately, most people jump from one position to another, eventually forsaking comrades of the past to embrace those of the present.

Apart from the lost emotional benefits of sustained personal and business relationships, career nomads squander the opportunity of their former colleagues’ advice and experience. President George H.W. Bush was well-known for the thickness of his Rolodex, a collection of acquaintances, friends, and business associates accumulated over a lifetime. He maintained his network through occasional favors, letters, cards, and phone calls. A significant factor in the elder Bush’s success was his ability to reach out for advice and assistance when needed.

Maintaining a network can be tedious and tiring at times, but the benefits more than justify the effort to stay in touch. Friendship is reciprocal. When it is possible to help someone, do so gladly, with no strings attached. Never burn bridges, and keep your relationships in good shape.

The value of a network grows as it expands and is nourished with thoughtful effort. The young woman sitting in the adjacent cubicle may be the CEO of a Fortune 500 company one day, while a golfing buddy may rise through the ranks of executives at your biggest supplier.

7. Put Your Best Foot Forward

Attracting attention for the right reasons is critical because promotions are not just the outcome of visibility, luck, or mentorship. If your work habits, capabilities, and track record are not exceptional, you’re unlikely to get the rewards you seek. A mediocre performance usually results in a mediocre career, so if you want to get ahead, you must bring something extra to the table.

Some people are extraordinary because they achieve an unlikely and unexpected result in a single instance – for example, the super-salesman who breaks a long-standing sales record, the engineer who designs a new product, or the production manager who significantly improves quality without cost increases. Other folks stand out from the crowd because they consistently deliver the goods every time without excessive supervision, delay, or histrionics; they’re the “no muss, no fuss” people supervisors can always rely on. Anyone willing to put in the work can stand out as extraordinary; it’s more a matter of attitude and effort than skill or knowledge.

8. Maintain an Optimum Skill Set

If you lack the minimum requirements to practice your profession, no mentor, connections, or experience can enable you to do your job. Depending on your field, there are likely to be minimum technical capabilities and educational benchmarks you must master to perform at any level, much less advance.

Also, specific management and personal skills are always in demand. Those who master these skills are the formal and informal leaders who can influence others and promote exceptional results. Examples of highly sought-after skills include:

• Strong Communication Skills. As you progress up the management ladder, the ability to educate, persuade, manage, and motivate subordinates and peers is essential. Similarly, you must communicate expertly to superiors.

• Social Competence. As you ascend in an organization, reliance upon and rapport with direct reports and superiors is essential. Those most likely to promote you are the ones whose careers depend upon your performance. Develop and practice the traits of steadiness, consistency, truthfulness, dependability, and charm.

• Problem-Solving. Critical thinking – the ability to dissect a problem, identify root causes, understand relationships, and rationally assess likely outcomes – is a highly valued skill in every level of an organization. Critical thinkers can minimize the consequence of potential disasters and recognize overlooked opportunities. And like many skills, critical thinking is something you can learn and practice. For example, the University of Massachusetts’ decision-making process can teach you how to better control your emotions under stress. Through time and practice, these skills will become second-nature.

9. Recover From Setbacks

Unless you’re the boss’s son or daughter, your career path is likely to be uneven, with periods of apparent stagnation and occasional failure. Setbacks can be self-inflicted or out of the blue, such as not getting a promotion or raise you expected, receiving a poor performance review, or the failure of a project you’re working on. Whatever the nature or cause, learning how to react to disappointment is critical to getting back on the right track.

One in five employees who experience a setback take no personal responsibility and blame others for the failure. They also take too much credit for their successes. In their anger and disappointment, these employees are most likely to quit either on the job or formally, compounding the severity of the consequences.

Chafing under the previous criticism, I did not consult with my manager but sent my report over his head to the plant manager. I then waited for the accolades that were sure to come, perhaps an immediate raise or promotion. Much to my surprise, the reaction was an official black mark on my company record and a profanity-filled lecture from my boss. Like the 20% in the Harvard poll, I was sure my analysis was correct and that I had been treated unfairly. I left the company three months later.

After considerable self-analysis and feedback from friends and family, I realized that my actions had triggered the event and my inflated ego was the cause. Accepting that I didn’t know everything and regularly made mistakes was difficult to acknowledge but enabled me to become a better employee and manager in later years. From that early experience, I learned to limit my self-pity and disappointment and instead conduct a thoughtful analysis of disappointing situations: What went wrong? What were the causes? What had I done right? What had I done wrong? What steps could I take to avoid a repeat incident?

I apply a similar attitude to success, relying on the wisdom attributed to Winston Churchill: “Success is not final; failure is not fatal; it is the courage to continue that counts.”

10. Know When to Change Course

Unfortunately, there may be times when circumstances dictate a new beginning or company. The trigger might be an unexpected call from a headhunter offering a promotion and a substantial raise, or when those most familiar with your work overlook your capabilities or achievements. You may be in a situation where corporate history dictates promotion policies that aren’t to your benefit. In such cases, your best alternative may be to seek opportunity elsewhere.

11. Be Patient

Ambition is a double-edged sword. Brandished with reason and restraint, it can spur you to efforts and achievements you never dreamed possible. However, when unfulfilled, it can leave you feeling bitter, empty, and alone.

Career progression rarely occurs as quickly as we would like, and big companies have big bureaucracies that sometimes react slowly. However, the best-managed organizations, regardless of size, do ultimately correct their course. Exhibiting patience early in your career can pay off significantly later on.

Final Word

While several skills are necessary to climb the corporate ranks, the best thing you can do is to take responsibility for your own career success. You have a significant number of competitors, many of whom are just as – if not more – qualified for a promotion. If you want success, you have to go after it. Be patient when patience is justified, but don’t be afraid to seek greener pastures when necessary.

Critical turning points occur throughout a person’s life and career. The decisions you make – or don’t make – can have lifelong impacts on your career, happiness, and fulfillment. Fortunately, few decisions are irreversible, so a single mistake doesn’t define your life or limit your future opportunities. Be bold in setting your goals and resilient when setbacks appear.

How do you intend to climb the corporate ladder? What have you done to get to the point you’re at currently?

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