The Development Exponent: A Leadership Perspective podcast show image

The Development Exponent: A Leadership Perspective

Bruce Holoubek

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Seeing the Opportunity to Reinvent Your Career

What looks like a career dead zone to the outside world is actually an opportunity to the driven leader. It happens all the time-- a person, most often a woman, takes a professional pause to have children. Once the children are ready for school, or once the person decides it’s time to go back, they step back into the professional world only to be confronted with questions like, “What have you been doing recently?” They encounter assumptions that they are too far out of the loop or may not be ready to adjust quickly enough to corporate life. They encounter negative biases. They encounter shut doors. A driven person will not stand in front of a shut door. They will anticipate the challenge and choose to act proactively.  People take professional pauses for a variety of reasons, and these pauses are the perfect time to reflect on where we want our career to go or what we want our new career to be. It is a time to reinvent and to self educate. What the world will see as a listless cocoon, the driven leader will see as the opportunity to become ready for flight. This is what Holly Lehman, a Program Manager at Microsoft, has done. For the past seven years, Holly has been living the Microsoft life, learning and advancing, driven by customer obsession she is now fully ingrained in the Azure Management engineering team. Holly is partnering with the most valued professional (MVP) in the customer community to provide education and receive live feedback between the customer and the engineering team. She manages the Azure Management Insiders program for customers, and engages with the Cloud Data Management MVP Community. Prior to Microsoft, Holly was a hotel manager. She took the opportunity of the professional pause of her maternity leave to reinvent her career. Bruce Holoubek, owner of Contracted Leadership, and Host of The Development Exponent Podcast talks to Holly about her journey into the leadership role she has today to gain insight on the transformation of an emerging leader and the lessons that come from that growth. Identify skills to carry over. A key skill that Holly took from her hotel management job is the ability to connect on a human to human level with people. “You cannot brand yourself as a leader if you are unable to connect on a human level, show understanding and find something in common.” Learn to respect your time-- not manage it. One of the first lessons Holly learned about being a new parent and back at work was on making the shift from being open to working around the clock to becoming a person who can work really hard on a strict schedule. Limiting working hours increased her productivity and tactical thinking. As a result, Holly learned to respect and value her time more. This also forced her to be more present at home in the shorter time she had with her children. By example, this shows her children that one can be a dedicated professional but also a dedicated family person. It shows that we have to respect our time and respect other people’s time by being mentally present-- right there in the moment. Looking at our work-life time as “respecting my time” versus “managing my time,” is a more thoughtful and meaningful way to achieve that balance for ourselves and others. For developing leaders, having a manager who asks about the ongoings of life outside of work can be meaningful and helpful in that it creates an understanding of the eb and flow of events and responsibilities that may be influencing work life. Knowing what our people are going through on a weekly basis helps us decide when it’s a good time to push someone through a project that will require them to grow, versus assigning something else. It helps us assess needs and strengths. Address the limiting beliefs of emerging leaders. Imposter syndrome is a common limiting belief among emerging leaders. Thinking they are the only one in the room who doesn’t know or understand something is limiting and untrue. Ano

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