Getting a Second Chance in Your Career
By Andrew Jensen, published Aug 30, 2007
Published Content: 188 Total Views: 32,444 Favorited By: 6 CPs
But what if you're not ready to leave yet? Is it over forever? Not necessarily. Although a reputation is one of the hardest things to rebuild, almost anybody can have a second chance, if they make the right moves. Follow these steps for finding your way back into the fold.
Assess what happened
Look at what went wrong, and then assess what you have to do to rectify the faults that led you to that place. And be honest - you're judgmental colleagues will be brutally so. This will become the foundation of your rebuilding plan.
Find your strengths
Your confidence has surely taken a beating from all of this. So it's a good time to write down your strengths and successes, so you can review them on a regular basis. At the same time, these pluses will become selling points in your comeback campaign.
Sit out a few rounds
People's memories are strong, but not necessarily persistent. Let them forget you and the things you did. Find a way to get out of the profession for a while until things cool down. Or, at the very least, find a very quiet, private corner of the field to hide in. How long you need to lay low depends on the nature of the sin. If it involved time in a white collar prison, you'll probably want to be out of the glaring eye of your colleagues for eight, maybe ten years or so. If it was a more minor transgression, such as botching up an important account, 18 to 24 months should be enough for things to cool off.
Start your campaign
After an appropriate amount of time has passed, start your campaign back into the field. Do this by first finding out what the general opinion of you is among your colleagues. Buy some lunches and humbly find out what your personal brand stands for at this point. Then sell those folks on how you've changed and what's still great about you.
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