Thursday, November 14, 2019
Heres how to describe what you do when your relatives ask you this Thanksgiving
Here's how to describe what you do when your relatives ask you this Thanksgiving Here's how to describe what you do when your relatives ask you this Thanksgiving Ahhh, Thanksgiving. Itâs a time for turkey, stuffing - and loads of questions from family about what youâre actually doing with your life now, in between bites of all the fixings.But whether youâre a recent graduate or are gearing up for a big career change, queries like this can be especially challenging to handle on the spot.Use these these tips when itâs your turn to explain what you do at the dinner table.Donât beat around the bushWriting at Monster, career expert Vicki Salemi advises people to âbe blunt.ââAround the dinner table, proclaim, âI realize some of you have no idea what I do. And thatâs okay, I probably havenât taken time to fully explain it. In case youâre wondering, I work in the accounting department for a startup that creates apps for foodies.â ⦠Sure, it may not feel like the most organic conversation youâve ever had but, at least one of your relatives is bound to be grateful. (Youâve saved them from asking the question that the y probably hate as much as you do.),â Salemi writes.Lay off the jargon, pleaseItâs best to leave out all the corporate speak while under the watchful gazes of your closest relatives and friends, who have likely pursued different paths.Writer and marketer Rikki Rogers writes about how to tell âyour grandparents or an elderly relativeâ about what you do in The Muse.âWhen youâre speaking to folks who have been out of the workforce for a while, itâs important to avoid jargon and simplify your everyday responsibilities,â Robers writes. âInstead of focusing on your day-to-day tasks, explain the end result of your hard work. For example, a UI designer might say, âI make websites more organized so itâs easier for people to find what they need.â Highlight how your job contributes to the organizationâs overall mission, emphasize long-term stability, and downplay technical skills (to avoid becoming the ad hoc help desk).âPut the âpain pointsâ in contextAuthor an d speaker Maria Ross writes in HuffPost that you should âdescribe the pain points you removeâ during this discussion.âEverything we do is designed to increase pleasure or decrease pain. So instead of leading with benefits as stated above, you could share what pain your work takes away. Based on your audience, youâll have to decide which way is more compelling for people,â Ross writes.One of the sample lines Ross provided was, ââI coach corporate teams on how to end communication snafus, power grabs and bureaucratic red tape so they can be productive, motivated and energized at work.ââWhen things go off the rails, bridge the gapEveryone has their own definition of success. But with the inevitability of having a complicated position - or one that didnât exist a decade ago - youâre bound to lose someone during your explanation.After mentioning that you shouldnât âmisinterpret someoneâs confusion about what you to do for a living with disapproval,â Melody J. Wilding, writes in a Forbes article about how to answer a question about the idea that you should be raking in more cash.She says to think about the idea that they may really mean well.âThen carefully respond, acknowledging and empathizing, while standing up for a lifestyle youâve chosen,â she writes. âAn example of this would be, âEntrepreneurship comes with a lot of risks, and I certainly understand why that might be scary to you.â You could go on to explain how youâve accounted for financial uncertainties or even get vulnerable about your hopes, dreams and fears.â
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