Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Career sweeteners to look for in next job

Old metrics no longer enough following these pandemic times

- Arianne Cohen Rate.com (TNS) Rate.com/research/news covers the worlds of personal finance and residentia­l real estate.

These are dramatic times to be navigating a career: Managers are myopically focused on getting workers back on site, organizati­onal finances are either fine or disastrous, and everyone’s running on fumes. Yet despite the choppy waters, this is a golden moment to look for a new role, either within your organizati­on or elsewhere. According to a new survey from Ladders Inc., more sixfigure jobs are available now than before the pandemic, as companies are catching up on hiring.

If you’re among the 41 percent to 46 percent of global employees considerin­g a career pivot or jump to a new employer, know that the old metrics like salary, benefits and title are not enough in these pandemic times. You need to look for these supports to sanely get you through the grind.

Location flexibilit­y. Is working from home three days a week ideal for your lifestyle? Or attending the 8:30 a.m. meeting via Zoom? Or flextime? Or winters in Montana? Prepare to ask. “You need to be really clear on what it is that you want, and come in and make a business case for it,” said corporate parenting consultant Daisy Dowling, author of “Workparent: The Complete Guide to Succeeding on the

Job, Staying True to Yourself, and Raising Happy Kids.” Explain why the flexibilit­y makes you more productive, and also works for your role and team. “There’s no conceivabl­e time in your career that will be a better time to ask. Everything has been thrown up in the air, and the proof of concept that people can work on their own time has never been more loudly on display,” she said.

Expansive child care options.

Parents are not only exhausted, but are also dragging a year’s worth of house projects and car registrati­on renewals behind them. (This writer’s tags expired in May 2020.) Both subsidized workday and off-hours options are reasonable — parents love a weekday afternoon off. Rue Dooley, the longtime knowledge adviser for the Society for Human Resources Management, said that child care can come in many forms, including contracts with external centers, nanny services, backup providers or learning pod companies, as well as on-site.

Vacation time. Ask how many days employees at your level actually use per year. It’s a red flag if the answer for 2020 is low. “In the most intense, isolating time of most people’s lives, many people took, say, 11 vacation days when they could have had 20. That’s really concerning, because it means that people are more burned out than they need to be,” Dowling said. You want to work for leaders who talk about the importance of pacing and selfcare, and, critically, take all allotted vacation days themselves. Otherwise you’ll be working as many days as they do.

A reason to be in-house. Organizati­ons are scrambling to lure work-from-homers back on site. “There has to be a hook to keep people, and I think organizati­ons have to figure out both broad-scale and individual­ly what that is,” Dowling said. “If the reward is to return to an office that people might not want to be in and keep on working and working, that’s not compelling.” You’re valuable; make them work to keep you.

Money in your pocket.

Cash talks. Verbosely. “We all need a pat on the back once in a while, and money does that in our society. It helps people feel appreciate­d,” Dooley said. Creative organizati­ons put extra greenbacks in your wallet in many ways beyond bonuses, such as paying for perks that they know employees use, like Netflix or pet insurance, as well as WFH gear stipends or meals delivered to doorsteps. If it’s a potential new job, you can ask what sorts of pandemic supports and perks have been aimed at workers like you.

Clear milestones. What will you be working on for the next six months or year? Right now life is a treadmill, and you’ll be happier and more productive with clear waypoints. “Managers and leaders need to create a sense of momentum and achievemen­t,” Dowling said. You want to work in a place where managers celebrate successful quotas, applaud milestones and show teams how their work bolsters larger successes.

 ?? Juststock / Getty Images / istockphot­o ??
Juststock / Getty Images / istockphot­o

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