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I don’t understand the corporate world

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  • #388039
    Emma
    Participant

    I am struggling to find confidence in my abilities, to get a corporate job.

    I have always been a very hard worker — too hard — and I always work hard at the wrong things. I worked “pink collar” care jobs for the past 5 years. I stayed in many stressful, difficult work situations where I was underpaid, and thought if I tried harder and harder and tried to stay positive I would be recognized. I also cared deeply about the work I was doing. Instead I just became passive aggressive, and I was still underpaid and not sleeping enough.

    I have been in so many bad work situations that I really have lost hope altogether that I will find a job I am happy in. It has affected my ability to make effort towards my goals, because in the past the hard work I did never paid off.  I made plans to switch careers during the pandemic for job stability and higher pay. But I find myself struggling to even comprehend what’s written in a job description.  Corporate language doesn’t make sense to me, after years of working in small businesses and speaking vernacular. I’m told I should apply for jobs even if I don’t have all the experience they ask for, but it makes me anxious. I don’t know how to market myself well and doing what people tell me to – puffing up a resume or lying about experience – feels slimy.

    Also, after working in healthcare it’s incredibly difficult for me to buy in to the panic and BS around arbitrary deadlines – especially when there is an unfair amount of work – an atmosphere of forced panic for everyone. I have watched people die and have medical emergencies so I know what is a life threatening emergency and what is not.

    I would appreciate any advice for me. I have a lot of technical skills, but I worry I am not good enough. But more than that I worry I don’t have the right sort of personality I need to get a good job. I know many people barely work yet make hundreds of thousands, meanwhile the hardest workers I know are making $9 an hour. It’s some kind of game I was never taught to play.

    Has anyone else been in this situation?

    #388050
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Emma:

    I don’t have experience working in the corporate world or in the health care industry, but referring to your sentence: “I.. thought if I tried harder and harder and tried to stay positive I would be recognized“- I do have experience.

    It is wonderful to be recognized, but to be recognized, someone has to do the recognizing: someone has to pay attention, someone has to care, someone has to want to reward those who are working hard- in personal relationship and in professional relationships, in private contexts and in public contexts. It happens, but not commonly.

    It’s been very slow here on the forums, but I hope that other members reply to you as well.

    anita

    #388103
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Emma

     I find myself struggling to even comprehend what’s written in a job description.  Corporate language doesn’t make sense to me, after years of working in small businesses and speaking vernacular. I’m told I should apply for jobs even if I don’t have all the experience they ask for, but it makes me anxious. I don’t know how to market myself well and doing what people tell me to – puffing up a resume or lying about experience – feels slimy.

    Corporate language can difficult especially as each company may use similar words differently. Doing some research on a company your applying to will help

    Yes apply for jobs your interested in even if if  don’t have all the experience they ask for. This does not mean falsifying your resume which would be slimy.

    Focus and highlight the experience that does match as well as a ability to learn.  Things change so quickly today that what most employers really want is someone that can learn and adapt quickly even if they don’t mention it in the job description. The ability to learn is a major skill to have and be able to communicate.

    You are not wasting the companies time by applying to positions you don’t have all the qualifications for. Most likely a computer will be used to parse your resume looking for key words before a human will look at it.

    Learning to sell yourself in a cover letter and resume is important and their is a lot of online help available. I liked to use the personality tests like myers briggs to help find creative wording for specific qualities. Even the astrology, numerology, what color am I… can be helpful in thinking out side the box in describing abilities. You don’t have to believe in such things to find the way they word things helpful especially if your not great at such things.

    Writing a effective cover letter and resume is a skill which can be developed. Every job you apply for is a opportunity to practice. I ended up creating a spread sheet of my skills and abilities with multiple ways to describe and communicate them. This way I could pick which ones fit the job description the best – words I used to describe my skills matched words the job description.  Again this is not lying or padding a resume. It is about selling the skills you do have.

    I hope some of the above helps.

    but I worry I am not good enough

    No buts allowed! You are good enough and have every right to apply for positions that interest you and that you can see yourself succeeding in putting you best foot forward. If the company doesn’t respond or say no that is not about you it wasn’t the right job for you.  It really isn’t personal. They have no idea what a wonderful person they passed on.

    A healthy detachment from outcomes is a key skill to develop when job hunting. Believe in yourself, be kind, be honest, be flexible, be creative, imaginative, open and go for it.  No but’s

    I truly believe the following

    “If you do follow your bliss you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought to be living is the one you are living. Follow your bliss and don’t be afraid, and doors will open where you didn’t know they were going to be.”
    ― Joseph Campbell

    Be open to opportunities you never imagined

     

    #388247
    Tee
    Participant

    Dear Emma,

    I think the greatest problem is your insecurity and lack of faith in yourself. I can relate because I was similar. You say:

    I have a lot of technical skills, but I worry I am not good enough. But more than that I worry I don’t have the right sort of personality I need to get a good job.

    You also say you worked too hard and stayed in difficult work situations where you were overworked, underpaid, and your hard work wasn’t recognized:

    I stayed in many stressful, difficult work situations where I was underpaid, and thought if I tried harder and harder and tried to stay positive I would be recognized.

    In your other thread, you say:

    I don’t know how to stand up for myself or remove myself [from the situation with your boyfriend].

    It’s hard for me to stand up for myself when standing up for myself kindly doesn’t work, or people won’t admit to the things they’ve done.

    I believe that your inability to stand up for yourself and demand a higher pay and better work conditions is related to your inability to stand up for yourself in your romantic relationship. If you agree, and would like to share some more about the conditions that led to your lack of self-confidence (perhaps in your childhood?), please do so…

     

    • This reply was modified 3 years, 1 month ago by Tee.
    #388249
    Tee
    Participant

    P.S. You don’t necessarily need to look for a job in the corporate world, if this is something very foreign to you (it is to me too!) But you’d need to work on improving your self-confidence, so you can find a better job – a job that you’ll care about but where you’ll also be properly rewarded!

    • This reply was modified 3 years, 1 month ago by Tee.
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