Mar 01

Career Advice: Paying Your Dues

Published by Amybeth (@researchgoddess) at 7:30 am under Career Advice,College,Talent


A large chunk of my time right now with AT&T is spent doing proactive research for our Campus Recruiting efforts. I look for student profiles in a number of places, and some of the most important things I look for are good GPA, good experience working with groups of people, and some form of leadership, whether it be in athletics, clubs, or an after-school job. These are traits we look for in our future leaders. We put our Development Program participants through training in many areas, including ones that may not be directly related to their ultimate job function, as well as all levels of work within their career track. Why? Because to be an effective manager, you’ve got to pay your dues.

So often, I read student profiles who list amongst their objectives when coming out of college, “To find a management position…” While I applaud your moxie, there are certain steps one must take first in order to reach management, and this includes earning some experience. I’m sorry to say this, but you can’t come straight out of college and land a management position for your first job – not unless:

  1. You’re going to work for the same company you’ve been working for throughout school, or
  2. You gained corporate experience prior to earning your degree (in most cases, this applies to graduate degrees)

I’ve written about this in the past. You can’t just start off at the top unless you’re going to start your own company, and that’s a whole different ball of wax. Career paths have fairly well-defined start points and those typically aren’t halfway down the trail. I’m certainly not trying to kill your dream here. I’m simply asking you to be realistic about your expectations of yourself (and your future employer!) upon graduating. And if you think about it, starting off with an entry-level position, which is what typically happens, will help you to be a better manager in the long run.

Learning the various levels within a company firsthand helps you to understand how things work. When you start from the bottom and work your way up, you gain understanding along the way of how various departments and levels of the organization operate. This firsthand learning is valuable and earns you wisdom about the inner workings of a company that cannot be gained in other ways.

Managers need to be good leaders, but you don’t have to be a manager in order to be a leader! Leadership experience can be earned at all levels in your career, including entry-level. Leadership is shown through taking the initiative to learn about new products/processes, asking to participate in projects outside of your normal job duties, helping and encouraging your co-workers, and taking an overall proactive approach to your career. These things can all be done as soon as you enter the workforce and will help you to be a better manager when the time comes. Managing well should include leading, guiding, encouraging, and mentoring. If you’ve no experience in these areas, then you’re not ready to be a manager.

Don’t rush the natural progression – this is your opportunity to enjoy the journey! When we were little kids, we whined and complained to our parents about how we wanted to hurry up and be a grown-up, and our parents almost always told us to be patient and enjoy being a kid because they knew we were building solid foundations for our adulthood during these years. Same goes with your career – don’t speed through the foundational times because they will provide a more solid ground for you to stand on for your future. Pay your dues, earn your experience, and you’ll have a more fulfilling and successful career in the long run.

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View Comments to “Career Advice: Paying Your Dues”

  1. Tac Andersonon 01 Mar 2010 at 7:44 am

    You lost me at good GPA :) That aside I agree that you need to be able to work your way up. Starbucks makes all of it’s corporate managers work a week as a barista as part of their training. And I would argue that if you’re starting your own company you’re definitely starting at the bottom.

    Leaders are found at all levels of an organization. A good leader is more valuable than a good manager any day.

  2. Chuck Clevengeron 01 Mar 2010 at 1:11 pm

    Well said.

    I contend that one should always be willing to pay one’s dues. We should always be looking to learn more, help others and earn our keep.

    The day you reach the point where you no longer feel an obligation to “pay your dues” – watch out! Such a feeling is a big warning sign that your attitude isn’t in the right place.

    I always want to pay my dues b/c it will make it easier to make a withdrawl in the future.

  3. Steven Rothberg CollegeRecruiter.comon 01 Mar 2010 at 5:34 pm

    It is amazing how the more things change, the more they stay the same. I’m a Gen X’er and I remember quite well employers tell our graduating class that our short-term aspirations were unrealistic. None of us truly believed that we would own the world within a year — that was the Stanford class of 1999 — but we all thought we were going to be at least middle management on our first day. After all, we had management degrees, so we should be managers, right? Wrong.

    We knew how to attend classes, study, take tests, and goof around. We had temporary jobs, part-time gigs, and more free time than we realized. We didn’t have experience. Now we do. Now we’re managers.

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