Saltar a navegação
The Young Professional's Guide to the Working World
Book

The Young Professional's Guide to the Working World

Savvy Strategies to Get In, Get Ahead, and Rise to the Top

Career Press, 2012 mais...


Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Applicable

Recommendation

In the first chapter of this career-skills book for Gen Yers – people born between the early 1980s and the early 2000s – AT&T corporate manager and Gen Yer Aaron McDaniel recalls what his first boss told him during his first performance review: “I’m just not sure that you really ‘get it’...I am not sure you really even understand how to do your job.” This may not inspire your confidence in McDaniel as a career expert, but his honesty is refreshing. This dubious episode illustrates why his take on career growth can help its targeted readers. As McDaniel explains, like him, many Gen Yers enter the workplace hugely misinformed. Yet he quickly figured things out. Today McDaniel is a high achiever. He describes best practices young people can use to build their careers and points out pitfalls to avoid. Though McDaniel occasionally demonstrates some lingering youthful callowness – like crowing about winning a corner office – getAbstract recommends his smart book to Gen Yers and anyone else working to build a career.

Take-Aways

  • College does not teach Gen Yers what they need to know to develop business careers.
  • Build your career as you’d erect a house: with a strong foundation, a solid frame and a polished exterior. Rely on good planning, the right tools and high-quality materials.
  • Assume full ownership of your career plan and path.

About the Author

AT&T corporate manager Aaron McDaniel was one of its youngest regional vice presidents. He founded The Spark Source, an online community for young professionals.


Comment on this summary or Iniciar a Discussão

  • Avatar
  • Avatar
    J. P. 7 years ago
    I agree that Gen Y employees such as myself may have different motivations than people of previous generations. This advice will help us succeed in business today. However, as we evolve the company's culture, these differing motivations will actually likely work in the company's favor compared to previous strategies. For instance, although Gen Y people may feel entitled to recognition for simply doing their job, recognition is extremely low cost to the company vs. the pensions and health care packages required to recruit talent from the Baby Boomer generation. Gen Y employees have no long term expectations of support from a company. We don't even really have the expectation of ever being to retire. Because of this, our generation of employees will have an extremely low legacy cost for companies compared to Baby Boomers.
  • Avatar
    I. A. 1 decade ago
    All Gen Yers should read this abstract. It's really helpfull in bridging the gap with the older generations.
  • Avatar
    G. S. getAbstract 1 decade ago
    A valuable self help guide for anyone entering the corporate world. Important for L&D professionals to have an understanding of expectations (for learning resources), that people starting out in their careers have.