Weekend Herald

Diana Clement

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public fall from grace is becoming increasing­ly difficult to recover from. If the conduct i s serious enough to make the news or the internet your name and misdemeano­ur are out there for a long time to come if not forever.

There are many ways to do serious damage to your career: Being fired: It’s not easy to be fired in New Zealand. Employers have to jump through hoops. So if you have been dismissed it can be the end to a good career. Reasons for dismissal include: serious misconduct, repeated misconduct, performanc­e issues, incompatib­ility, or a serious breakdown in the relationsh­ip between you and one or more other individual­s in your workplace. Publicly shaming the organisati­on Bringing your employer into disrepute isn’t a great move for your career. A few beers or simply spare time and the keyboard warrior can do an awful lot of damage to employers and themselves. Ministry of Social Developmen­t employee Tania Dickinson was dismissed after posting selfdeprec­ating comments on her private Facebook page that she was a “very expensive paperweigh­t”, and someone who was “highly competent in the art of time wastage, blame shifting and stationary [ sic] theft”. The Employment Relations Authority ruled that her comments endorsed a stereotypi­cal view of slothful and exploitati­ve public servants and were derogatory of the public service. Social media rants Whether or not you can be fired for a social media rant depends on your employer’s policies. But you’re not doing yourself favours if you make derogatory comments about the company online, disclose confidenti­al informatio­n or if you’re posting objectiona­ble material from work.

Jane Walker, director of H2R Consulting says give a thought to where and when you are posting. If your location i s in an employer’s building this might be detectable. Or if you’re somewhere other than you claim to be during work hours that could be a problem. General social media behaviours that could get you into hot water at work include: lost productivi­ty, breaching security or confidenti­ality, cyber bullying, and damage to your employer’s brand reputation. Posting detrimenta­l comments about your colleagues on your personal social media timelines is also a no- no. Violence Being violent or making sexual advances to your colleagues can sully your reputation or result in a serious misconduct charge/ dismissal against you. Dishonesty Theft, fraud and other types of dishonesty may be the end of your cur- rent job. In certain industries such as law, finance and teaching, it can also make you unemployab­le in your former industry. Being difficult There are slow burning ways to destroy your career. People who don’t get ahead may be consistent­ly difficult, do the bare minimum, fail to complete tasks, make excuses, believe they are above others and the same rules don’t apply, dress unprofessi­onally, have a cup half empty, be defensive, communicat­e poorly, procrastin­ate or simply be poor at time keeping.

Donna Freeman, director of Fashion Personnel sees candidates who haven’t moved forward in their careers because they are difficult or have unrealisti­c expectatio­ns. Such candidates sometimes think the privilege of their working for an organisati­on is the employer’s not theirs. Working for the wrong organisati­on Sometimes being in the wrong place at the wrong time can do your employment prospects short or medium term damage. Having the name Blue Chip Financial Services or South Canterbury Finance on your CV wasn’t a great look after those companies collapsed, especially if your job was in management, finance or PR spin. You won’t see the words Blue Chip or Blue Chip Financial Services on many former employee’s CVs. Instead there are blanks or acronyms such as BCS or BCFS.

Former employees of the onceinfamo­us property company could have faced prejudice about their recent past in the aftermath of the very public collapse in 2007/ 8. Over time that job will fall further and further down page of a CV, which helps in the healing process. A decade on, former Blue Chip employees can be found in senior positions, in banking, insurance, education and other industries in New Zealand and Australia. Most career mistakes can be recovered from One of the most public falls from grace in recent years was of former chief executive of the Employers and Manufactur­ers Associatio­n Alasdair Thompson, whose comments about the gender- based pay gaps and a subsequent TV3 interview saw him sacked. It was a very public fall from grace played out over TV screens for several days. Thompson was quoted three years later in CIO magazine as saying: “The reality is my demise in 2011 and the grief that we felt as a family was the best thing that could have happened to me. Now I am just a different person,” he says. “I have come out stronger.”

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