Professional
Characteristics, Say What?!
Nowadays employers are no longer
looking for what people know. According
to Sundheim (2013), they are looking for professional characteristics in
employees. Everyone can gain knowledge
and skills, but learning professional characteristics is hard. Employers are starting to “heavily weigh personality when
determining the most apt employees” (Sundheim, 2013). Two great characteristics of a professional
employee are to be diversity sensitive and to be upbeat.
Diversity sensitivity is becoming easier
for some people but is still really hard for others. Great rapport can be built by understanding
one another and recognizing each other’s differences. This can really help someone become of great
value to an employer (For Dummies, 2014).
When I was in the military, being diversity sensitive was very
important. The mission was able to be
completed with efficiency when we were able to come together and put aside any
differences. This helped us to embrace
each other as a person and as a team.
This then leads to another great
professional characteristic, which is to be upbeat. Having beaming energy and a positive attitude
can really make or break the workday for everyone involved. An employer doesn’t want to promote someone
who is constantly negative or sad. Sundheim (2014) states “Employees who come into work fresh
and energetic everyday are going to outproduce workers who think negatively and
easily burn-out when they encounter defeat.”
The vibes are so much better around people who are positive and upbeat,
which makes it easier to develop new ideas.
Information on your product and
services can always be taught, but you can’t train someone to be diversity
sensitive and to be upbeat. A good
employee is one who puts in the effort to not only tolerate but also embrace
the different magnitudes of diversity. Having
a sunny outlook at work and never letting the rain get in the way is also a
vital attribute of a good employee (For Dummies). Knowing this can help any job search turn
into having that dream job.
References
For
Dummies. (2014). Skills and personal
qualities that employers want. Retrieved from For Dummies, Making
Everything Easier website: http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/skills-and-personal-qualities-that-employers-want.html
Sundheim,
K. (2013, April 2). 15 traits of the
ideal employee. Retrieved from http://www.forbes.com
/sites/kensundheim/2013/04/02/15-traits-of-the-ideal-employee/
/sites/kensundheim/2013/04/02/15-traits-of-the-ideal-employee/
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