In honor of his 5 12 months anniversary with Microsoft, Josh wrote a surprisingly coherent blog entry entitled 5 Points for Being Successful at Microsoft (Hey,
Office Home And Business 2010 X64, Josh is my husband. I can talk that way about him; you can’t.) The reason that resonated most with me is #4: "Do something great that no one asked you to do." I’m the first to admit that my first few years here at Microsoft were really hard. I’ve always prided myself on being an overachiever, and until I got to Microsoft, the way I did that was by accepting a hard job and kicking butt at that job. And that’s what I did at Microsoft. Any task a manager or co-worker threw my way, I eagerly accepted. Need another person on your committee? Here I am! Need a volunteer on this project? Look, it’s already done! For some reason, that line of reasoning didn’t work so smoothly here at Microsoft. I found myself working hard, exceeding goals, getting good review scores . . . but not *really* getting recognized for doing anything special. The few times I did think of interesting, new tips, I pitched them to management . . . and usually walked away feeling shot down. And then one day, I woke up with my new motto. “Do it.” Not like the Nike ad. More like Ben Stiller from Starsky and Hutch. Do it. And so, I did. This blog is a great example of my doing it. Now, I’m not necessarily advocating the motto of “It’s better to ask for forgiveness than ask for permission” (but I do happen to believe that one, too), but what I’m saying is that I realized you can’t always sit around and wait for something great to happen to you. If you’re a smart person with sound judgment,
Office 2010 Professional Plus Activation Key, use that judgment to make the call, and if your idea is truly great,
Office Home And Business 2010 Aktivierung Key, you’ll be that much further toward achieving your goals. So I guess that’s the biggest lesson I’ve learned in my 5 years here. There’s a lot to be said for becoming a great employee and doing your darnest to produce the highest quality of work, but it’s also ok to take risks (calculated,
Microsoft Office Pro 2010, if you want) on occasion. And through those risks, great things happen. For me,
Microsoft Office 2010 Home And Student, Microsoft has been (and still is) a wonderful place to play some risky business. If you don’t have the desire to shake things up and take some leaps of faith from time to time, then honestly Microsoft probably isn’t the best place for you. What’s the advice you always hear? Do something today that scares you. I like that. Do it. gretchen P.S. This weblog entry started out as something else (my five silly suggestions for being profitable at Microsoft), but I’ll put those in another entry to save you the reading.