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Be a Better You

Be a Better You

This is a guest blog for Engineering Management Institute by Pamela A. Scott, published April 19, 2021

 

The people who read this blog are educated, experienced problem-solving professionals, and, I’m assuming, really smart. That is what my 15+ years of working with engineers has taught me.  However, for many of those engineers, their confidence wanes when it comes to non-technical knowledge, skills, and abilities.  

 

Does the idea of public speaking give you the shakes? Do you dread having to go to network events, even virtual ones? How much do you enjoy managing people, especially the difficult ones? Are you excited about business development and finding new work? If you aren’t as confident about those skills as you are about technical knowledge and skills, read on. Here are two steps you can take to conquer your fears and become a better you.

Get a Coach

You can only get so far by yourself. To truly become the best you, you need to learn from others. One of the best steps to a better you is to get a coach to help build your confidence and knowledge about the non-technical aspects of your life. These are areas such as people skills, business development, critical thinking, communication, decision-making, leadership development, and more. 

Better You

A coach will help you set goals and achieve those goals. A good coach is:

– An accountability partner

– An experienced guide

– A cheerleader

– A resource

A good coach will challenge your beliefs and assumptions, such as “I’ve never been good at public speaking” or “I don’t know where I want to go in my career.” A good coach will bring resources and experience that you aren’t aware of now. When someone tells me “I’ve never been good at public speaking,” my response is, “Go to Toastmasters. Now!” It changed my life.

 

How do you find a good coach? Ask friends for recommendations and check out these sites: 

One-on-One Career Coaching for Engineers with Anthony Fasano,
– MentorLoft with Pam Scott,
– Actions Prove with Pete Atherton,
– a coaching site

 

Having a coach — an accountability partner — makes you focus on what’s important. Your coach’s time is too valuable, as is yours, to waste on mediocre goals. Having a coach helps you set priorities. “Do I want to do X or Y? I’d rather do Y, but I bet my coach will challenge me to do X.” An accountability partner can give you a different perspective on whatever you’re dealing with. Your coach may even suggest that your real goal be Z, instead of X or Y. Learning to hold yourself accountable is a skill that will benefit throughout your life. 

Be a Coach

The other step to becoming a better you is to be a coach for someone else. Did you play soccer or some other sport when you were a kid? If so, you had a coach. It was that coach’s job to teach you how to play soccer. It was also that coach’s job to teach you how to get along with your teammates, how to deal with conflict, how to learn from failures, and so much more. That coach was shaping you to become a better you.

 

One thing about being a coach is that you have to know more than the person you’re coaching. If you’re coaching someone on presentation skills, you have to have done presentations yourself. You’ll know how to structure a talk, how to deal with anxiety, and how to speak confidently. You’ll have your success stories and stories about your flubs. Become a better you. Get a coach. Be a coach. 

 

Article originally published by Engineering Management Institute: 

https://engineeringmanagementinstitute.org/be-a-better-you/