Ghandi once remarked that there are two kinds of people: Those that do the work and those that worry about getting the credit, and he advised that one should try to be in the first group. A noble sentiment, but in the real world I find such a person does not exist. I include myself in this analysis.
For each of us, there is a lifetime work-credit graph similar to a supply-demand market equilibrium graph in economics; ideally, we want to be working at equilibrium with the credit we receive. But, there are times where we work harder than we get credit for, and times where we get credit we don’t necessarily deserve. Human nature being what it is, we often put our efforts into those things that will maximize the credit we receive, regardless of the actual amount of work (or value!) we bring to our jobs.
Additionally, I’ve often complained that there is a reason that people who are good crisis managers got that way. In my experience, they experience an abnormally high number of crises, and then are congratulated for solving their own problems. I don’t appreciate these people the way others might. I believe a professional works to minimize their problems and variability, and understands their issues without needing to “go get their arms around it”.
So, I spend time every week developing tools at work that I hope will increase the value I bring to my job. It is an iterative process, always looking for that perfect tool that gives me perfect visibility. I’ll never find perfection, but the search gets me closer with every iteration.
I use most of these tools to analyze MY own performance and those things under MY control. I work in an extremely complex, dynamic environment, but the optimal work model in my industry is to minimize variation and maximize repeatability. As a Master Scheduler, I control much of the front-end of the manufacturing process – any variation on my part bullwhips through the organization. Variation isn’t something that can be avoided, however, but as a professional I need to be diligent about controlling those factors under my control.
Primarily, I use pivot tables in MSExcel in this process. I track demands over time, supply exceptions over time, excess/obsolete over time… well, you notice “over time” is the critical factor. After each MRP run (we run weekly), I export all of my data and review several critical factors: has my backlog changed, is my planned order report correct, has my excess/obsolete moved unexpectedly in either direction, and has the exception report changed positively or negatively. There are many other items I track, but I start with these and use them to uncover issues and troubleshoot them prior to someone else asking me that dreaded question, “What happened?”
I paste the data into spreadsheets and add a column for the date, then run a pivot table with the date across the top and the data being measured in the vertical column(s). Now I have a neat, easily-built, easily-understood trend analysis showing how the data changes over time. From here, I look for exceptions, troubleshoot, pareto, and start working to resolve as quickly as possible.
At this point, I am out in front of the rest of organization. No one is coming to me with a problem, asking how it occurred, and wanting to know how it will be fixed. The problem didn’t cascade or mushroom through the rest of the organization; most people never know the problem exists unless they’re involved in the resolution or I choose to tell them. The discipline with which I maintain and work this data provides me the opportunity to show my work in it’s best light. Ghandi was half right; There are two kinds of people, but I try to be in both groups.
When my first child was born in 1999, my wife and I made the decision that she would stay home from work, at least for a while. My wife worked for a major bank of America (ahem), working in human resources. When the layoff notices associated with a merger came out, she volunteered to go on the list. With almost 15 years service, her severance package was really nice. At the same time, she had a network of consultants that hired her to do a couple projects that kept a nice side income running.
But life being what it is, the side jobs petered out and the lion’s share of our income soon came from my job. In the intervening years, a second child was born and my wife has decided to work a variety of work-from-home jobs for a little extra money. We’ve also experienced a nice run in my career that was followed by a dramatic layoff and career-renassaince (you can’t keep a good man down!).
So, we’ve EXPERIENCED life on a single-income and I thought you might be interested to hear a few thoughts aboout it if you’re considering the same:
Pro: My wife is always there for anything the kids need.
Con: There is no money for extras, most of the time.
Pro: I never have to take time off for things like taking the car to the mechanic or meeting the cable guy.
Con: There is no money for extras, most of the time.
Pro: When my daughters are sick, they stay home and go the doctor rather than go to school and day care where they will infect everyone else because there was no adult in the house ablt to take time off from work.
Con: There is no money for extras, most of the time.
Pro: My kids are able to participate in any and all after-school activities that we can afford.
Con: There is no money for extras, most of the time.
Pro: I have had the opportunity to explore a variety of ways to earn a side income and enriched my life in more ways than just monetary.
Con: There is no money for extras, most of the time.
Pro: I’m the guy that people at work can count on to stay late and do the work that needs to be done because someone I love is taking care of other people I love, freeing me to do what I need to do to get ahead.
Con: There is NO MONEY for extras, MOST OF THE TIME!
The tradeoffs are different for every family. What is right for mine may not be right for yours. But, as hard as it is (and it is HARD!), I sleep well at night knowing that my wife and I prioritized our children over money and material items.
Click here to go to my resume page.
Like I said previously, it is time for a resume refresh. On the resume page, you can read the full page in standard web format (there mostly for SEO purposes), you can download a nicely formatted PDF version, or you can click through to my linkedin.com profile.
Am I looking to switch jobs?
Obviously, it is a big world out there and I am always listening for new opportunities. With the economic developments of the last few weeks, I can’t ignore any opportunity. However, I am happy in my current position with Sanmina-SCI and I am not actively scouring the job boards. Job security is very important to me these days, and I have not been given any reason to believe I need to be worried.
But, it never hurts to prepare and plan.
