Advice About The World Of Work For High School Students

I am participating in a Super Success Skills Seminar (S4) with a local school district next week. The week long program provides direct interaction with a professional in the business world and high school students from the local area through a series of preset email questions, mock interviews, and a capstone lunch.

The email questions start off with a description of the career and education required, best things/worst things about the job, and the importance of math and communication skills. The final two two questions are: what are three pieces of advice you can give someone preparing for future employment and what do you wish you would have known about the world of work when you were in high school?

My quick answers are below and I'd love to hear what advice you have for these high school students.

What are three pieces of advice you can give someone preparing for future employment?

  • Take time to discover what types of things you like to do – solve problems, build things, work with children, work outside, work in an office, sell things – and then seek out opportunities that let you do that.
  • Don’t be afraid – or opposed – to entry level positions, starting at the bottom and working your way up. There is gold in knowing exactly how things work and giving people the opportunity to see you in action. You are applying for your next job every day so be professional, no matter how menial a task seems to be to you.
  • Volunteer and network with others and be prepared to let them know who you are and what you have to offer – friends, family, neighbors, hiring managers, school officials, etc.

What do you wish you would have known about the world of work when you were in high school?

  • It’s tough to get a job and companies are generally not there to help you find a job with them – they are looking for the candidates that can do the job.
  • It is your responsibility to be prepared to interview, to come to work when expected and to be professional at all times. Your career is your responsibility  - no one else’s – and sometimes it’s just not fair when someone gets hired and you don’t. Get over it quickly, figure out what you can do better next time and get back out there.

What do you think? What would you tell these very interested and eager high school students? 

Meanderings

Here are a few things bouncing through my mind right now.  

Time away. I don't do it often enough. The Black Hills/Badlands area is a wonderful spot for a family vacation. I tried to figure out how I could make a living drinking coffee and watching the sun rise but failed miserably. Back to work I went on Tuesday.

Internet connections were skitterish in the Hills so I was going through Women of HR withdrawal and am so looking forward to quality time this weekend to get back into and onto the site and read the wonderful words of our contributors.

John Sumser published his Top 25 Online Influencers in Leadership.  Way to go all!

The 2010 Top Women In Business Blog Awards, sponsored by Online MBAAwarding the Web, are out. This award highlights the very best blogs about women in business on the internet as selected by their judges. Many thanks to the panel for including Simply Lisa on this list. 

I am reading the Twilight series. My mind is so chaotic this week, I need some fluff. Fluff ends at the end of the series and then next on the coffee table is The Lovers.

Delta is having a fare sale. Do I even dare fly Delta these days? Are the low fares worth the hassle?

Yoga hurts so good. Ice cream tastes so good. And Caribou new flavored iced teas are so good.

My HR Staff is my ace-in-hole when it comes to recruiting. When I find the right person for my department, I know that if there is ever any doubt in the candidate's mind whether or not this was the place for her, a few minutes with my staff would seal the deal. It does every time. 

I used to be about pollyanna workplaces but got over that real quick. Now I am about respectful human-ness.

I owe no less than 5 people calls. One is a podiatrist to help me with my chronic shin pain, the others are friends and future friends.

Now, where the heck are the husband and kid. I'm hungry and who's going to cook me dinner?

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