Three deadly career traps, and how to avoid them

One minute a business leader is master of the universe, and the next no one returns his or her calls. How can you avoid this sort of nightmare?

While there are no guarantees in life, there are classic errors that cause smart people to self-destruct. If you avoid these traps, you can protect your career and preserve your ability to be effective.

These principles don't just apply to CEOs. If you are hiring others, you have some degree of power over them. If you purchase goods from other businesses, you have a degree of influence over those vendors. But, yes, the more responsibilities you take on, the more these traps need to concern you.

1.The "ego-driven blind spot" trap: Like the rest of us, you are not perfect. One of the biggest challenges to acquiring power is that fewer and fewer people are willing to give you objective feedback.

If you suddenly are praised as a genius, your internal alarms should sound. You're not smarter than ever, you're just surrounded by people who dare not point out weak points in your reasoning. Everyone has flaws, and it is crucial that you both understand and monitor your own weaknesses.

Set up systems that enable you to detect potential dangers along the paths you are pursuing:

  • Encourage employees to submit anonymous feedback.
  • From time to time, hold meetings at which the sole purpose of all gathered is to play devil's advocate with regards to your existing strategies.
  • Foster a culture in which it is a badge of pride to "beat the control," which means putting forth a strategy that can be proven better than the existing one.
  • Engage objective and independent observers whose role is to second guess you. Even if 90% of the time they can't convince you to change course, those occasions on which they prevent you from veering off the road will be invaluable.

2. The "repeat past successes" trap: Successful people tend to repeat the strategies that made them successful. While this often makes sense for a time, the only constant in our world is change. It is difficult to name a company that has had the same level of success for ten years' running. Likewise, over a five to ten year period, your access to information and the sophistication of your technology changes radically; you have to adapt as these fundamentals shift.

I'm not suggesting you follow every fad. Hype and overblown promises abound. But never stop testing your own skills and strategies, even in ways that may seem silly to you. For example, I'd encourage even top executives to invest a little time in learning to code. You are not going to become a programmer, but you won't be able to understand the detail that underlies most businesses unless you understand the details involved in programming.


3. The "use power too personally" trap:
It would be futile to count the number of leaders who fell from grace because they crossed a line and used power to have an affair or otherwise feed their own desire for pleasure. This may be the biggest trap of all.

If you want to not only maintain a successful career, but also help lead your company in the right direction, then use power for the benefit of others:

  • Empower your employees, so that they can delight your customers.
  • Enrich your investors, by viewing their faith in you as a solemn responsibility.
  • Enhance the communities in which your organization operates, by understanding that your success is only sustainable if theirs is, too.

Putting things in perspective

The harsh reality is that career traps are just as common as career opportunities. Remain confident but humble, and don't step into an obvious trap.

_____________________________________________________

Bruce Kasanoff is the author of How to Self-Promote without Being a Jerk. He offers you a free PDF of the entire book, on this condition: if you find it valuable, you agree to buy a copy on Amazon as a gift for someone else. This "pay it forward" approach honors the spirit of the book.

Find Bruce at Kasanoff.com or on Twitter @BruceKasanoff.

Image credit: Flickr member Niklas

Steve Ingaglia

Founder and Owner at i2i Video Solutions

10y

Excellent Bruce Quality as Always ... Thanks

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Great article, my brother and I could have used this a few years ago when we, separately, lost fantastic jobs because of these faults. Thanks for the reminder to constantly monitor my attitude and keep my job. Hopefully the future (my job) will be more stable.

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Claudia Perry-Beltrame

Transformation | Change | Technology | Governance |

11y

Great article. I am always amazed how people are recruited based on past 'successes' and experience. With the changing landscape in business past success is no longer an indicator for future success and current experience may be irrelevant in the near future. Psylutions recently ran a webinar discussing how people are recruited by performance rather than potential and that this did not provide a foundation for the person to do the job of the future.

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Mkhuseli Setuse

Founder and Chairman: Setuse Holdings (Pty) at Ltd

11y

Thought provoking article indeed.

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Great article and advice.

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