Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Five Ways To Deal With a Mis-sold Job

“Exciting opportunity! Chance to work with a huge name in entertainment”, said the advertisement that lured fresh mass communications graduate Neha Verma to take up a job in a small company, which she was told was working with a leading channel for children. Barely a week into her job, Neha realised what she had landed into: her job involved ringing up people for feedback on the channel’s programmes. Clearly, Neha was mis-sold a job. Such instances mostly occur at junior or mid-management levels, due to gaps in probing further at a job interview, or desperation to accept an opportunity, says Sangeeta Lala, senior VP & co-founder, TeamLease Services. But for the conned employee, it can be a nightmare. Sreeradha D Basu suggests ways to deal with it. 

1 Find Out What Went Wrong 
There could be three possibilities: the hiring managers were incompetent and made a mistake, the job profile and specifications changed from the time you were offered the job or it’s a serious case of lack of integrity, says Yashwant Mahadik, VP HR, Indian subcontinent, Philips. If need be, he suggests, take the matter to the people above those who hired you. 

2 Talk to Senior Managers 
See what can be done to make the job richer or more interesting. “Fair managers in a good company will do something to correct their mistakes and there are chances that you will land up rectifying the situation,” says Mahadik. 

3 Explore an Internal Job Transfer “It’s better than showcasing a short stint on your CV, which can be costly to career momentum at later dates,” says Lala. 

4 Quit, if Need Be If you were deliberately misled, you should explore your legal options. “Try and go back to your earlier job or find some other job. No point in staying with such a company for a single day,” says Mahadik. 

5 Play it Safe 
Both Lala and Mahadik say it’s essential to be careful during the hiring process. Always discuss job responsibility, job title, salary and growth path with the reporting manager and the HR and when you get the offer, check that they match the job description. “It’s important to keep papers handy. In case of such a nightmare, if you don’t have the papers, you can’t prove anything,” says Mahadik.

(The Economic Times, Mumbai, 29-03-2014)

Five Ways To Deal With Pushy Peers



In an increasingly competitive work environment, one is bound to come across peers who want to stay ahead of the curve at all costs. It is great to be ambitious, but an excess of ambition could be troublesome for these professionals and others around them. ET finds out how to deal with such colleagues. 

Find out why
In 'How to win Friends and Influence People', Dale Carnegie wrote about how we can gain cooperation by seeing things from the other person's point of view.
"By understanding the reasons behind our colleagues' over-ambitiousness, we might be able to deal with them more harmoniously," says Pallavi Jha, chairperson and MD of Dale Carnegie Training India.
Focus on your work
As long as one's work is not going unnoticed, one does not have to deal with over-ambitious colleagues. By paying attention to them, one is giving them undue importance.
"Focus on one's own work and let that speak for success," says Jha. Sugandha Singhal, a VP in the investment banking division at RBS, always puts her personal development plan in place and runs that through the manager to avoid a clash of interests. "That shows how well prepared you are," she says. 

Rely on documentation
If your colleagues tend to take credit for all the work done, make sure you document task-related conversations to the extent of clarifying who has done what task.
"In order to maintain transparency, circulate these in the form of emails to all concerned. That would ensure no one takes undue credit," says Jha.
Volunteer to chip in
Singhal volunteers to work on projects with such colleagues. "This makes them realise that there are others of equal calibre," she says. Such professionals tend to act like they are superior to their peers, so she questions them often, and politely refuses their unreasonable demands.
"By sharing information with them and asking for additional information, one can convey that one treats them as equals," she says.
Go to the higher-ups
If your over-ambitious colleague is constantly stepping on your toes and getting away with it, try and have a one-on-one conversation stating your discomfort. "If they continue, discuss the issue with your boss or the HR department.
Inform your colleague that you're going to discuss this matter with the higher-ups and make the escalation sound like a concern rather than a complaint," says Jha.



(The Economic Times, Mumbai, 02-04-2013)