Professionalism #1: The Standard You Carry

Everyday Is an Interview

Professionalism isn’t a job title; it’s a daily decision. It’s how you speak when frustrated, how you prepare when no one reminds you, and how you follow through when no one’s watching. It’s the consistency behind your name.

Good habits are the quiet engines of professionalism. They provide the reps that make composure automatic and excellence repeatable. You don’t rise to the occasion, you rise to your level of consistent habits.

Professionalism shows up in the small things: being on time, finishing what you start, preparing for meetings, double-checking your work, and showing respect even when you disagree. Those small things build big reputations.

When people trust your consistency, they stop checking your work and start depending on you. That’s when opportunity grows because professionalism breeds credibility, and credibility breeds leadership.

Carry your standard like it’s part of your uniform. When your habits align with your values, professionalism becomes effortless.

“Your habits write your reputation. Professionalism is how you prepare when no one’s looking.”

#EverydayIsAnInterview #WWKDD #Professionalism #HabitsForSuccess #Leadership #Consistency #Discipline #JustBeBetter #IOwnTheMorning #StayStrongStayHealthy

#7 – Meetings

I am not a fan of unproductive meetings. The main culprits are unprepared participants. Attending or leading a meeting you did not prepare for is disrespectful to yourself and others. It is even worse when an unprepared attendee wastes everyone’s time participating in the meeting.

Don’t waste my time, don’t waste others time, don’t waste your time. Be prepared.

#Just Be Better

#Stay Healthy, Stay Strong

#Be Prepared

#iownthemorning

Be Prepared #3

Do not waste other’s productivity (or allow them to waste yours!).

It goes without saying that you should always be punctual. If you will be late, you must communicate it as soon as you realize it. Be prepared. Prepare your schedule and stick to it. Prepare by knowing who to contact if you are running late. Do not make it a habit. Do not waste other people’s time or productivity.

In meetings, stay on point. I have been in too many meetings where someone feels extra special and decides to take a tangent because they are feeling “smart” for the moment. They are wasting everyone else’s productivity. They are not smart; they are selfish. Don’t be that person, and don’t accept that person’s distraction. Be prepared for what to say and how to say it so the meeting gets back on track. Otherwise, you allow them to have power over your productivity (and future). Do not allow anyone to have power over either, ever.

#Be Prepared

#Just Be Better

#Stay Healthy, Stay Strong

 The point

I hate meetings that have no point. There are too many people who, by holding a meeting, are powerful. It is true that when someone calls a meeting that I am compelled to attend, the person has power over my time. However, I will only give them the power to use my time effectively. 

Meetings should be on-point and concise. The leaders should encourage discussion and debate but be focused enough to keep the discussions on point. I’ve seen too many meetings devolve because the leader is either reluctant to or fails to recognize this issue. It takes a creative participant to redirect the conversation.

Do not waste other people’s time. Come to a meeting prepared and ready to work. Expect your colleagues to do the same.

Just Be Better

Stay Healthy, Stay Strong.