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6 KEY MISTAKES THAT HOLD YOU BACK 

MISTAKE 1: MAJOR BLIND SPOTS THAT HINDER YOUR CAREER PROGRESSION.

You’re too passive in taking control of your career. This is the #1 mistake that prevents you from setting yourself apart from your peers. Learning how to proactively capitalize on the right moments, with the right people, at the right times is key!

MISTAKE 2: LACKING CLARITY ON HOW TO CLOSE THE GAP TO YOUR NEXT ROLE.

You’re too focused on the short-term without realizing what you do today directly impacts where you want to go. This leads you to miss out on getting the guidance needed to concretely help achieve your next promotion as fast as possible.

MISTAKE 3: DOUBTING THE VALUE THAT YOU BRING IN YOUR ROLE.

You equate being young or junior in your role with not having enough value to bring forward. This is exactly what will keep you from creating a strong personal brand and allow self-doubt to get in the way of your impact. 

MISTAKE 4: NOT MAKING YOUR VOICE HEARD DUE TO LACK OF CONFIDENCE.

You feel like what you say will be judged, ridiculed or discounted, so instead of speaking up, you choose to remain silent. This is a huge watch-out as becoming a confident speaker in all work settings is key for your career progression. 

MISTAKE 5: LACKING THE SUPPORT SYSTEM TO HELP PROPEL YOU FURTHER.

In these early years of your career, you’re more focused on delivering good work vs. getting on the radar of those who can directly influence your future promotions and help get you ahead faster.

MISTAKE 6: A «NEED TO PROVE MYSELF» MINDSET COMPROMISES YOUR WELLBEING.

Achieving work life balance isn’t something that feels realistic for you, so being overworked and overwhelmed is your «normal». You’re lacking the skills to help prioritize yourself, which is essential for sustainable success.

4 TIPS: How to ace your performance review✔️

Crushing your next performance review starts way before the meeting is on your schedule. It’s an ongoing process that will empower your career growth.

You need to understand that a performance review is something that is happening for you, not to you. It’s an opportunity to grow and shine, not something to worry about and try to avoid.

If you play your cards right a performance review can be the ticket to your next promotion

Here is 4 tips how to use performance review to your advantage:

1. Have a clear strategy 

Acing your performance review means exceeding expectations. To do that you need to know what is expected of you. Whether it is your job description, your managers’ priorities or your own growth agenda, you need to have a plan you can follow in order to make progress and grow.

Especially if you are aiming for a promotion, you need to know what is required at the next level, and start demonstrating you have what it takes. 

2. Track your success

This is one of the biggest mistakes people make. They wait till the last minute to put together a brag list that demonstrates their achievements. There are two problems with this approach. First, you need to share your wins all the time, not just during performance review. People form opinions as they interact with you, if you want to influence their perception of you, you need to do it on an ongoing basis. Second, who remembers what you worked on 8 months ago? I bet you don’t. Capturing wins as they happen is the best way to make sure you get all the credit you deserve.

3. Get feedback in advance and align with your manager

It makes no sense to wait for a yearly performance review to know how you are doing. You could use the time to grow and improve. You should be getting meaningful feedback all the time, or at least on a quarterly basis if your manager isn’t forthcoming with their feedback. You can use this guide to solicit constructive feedback.

Not to mention, when you have regular feedback check points you won’t be surprised during performance review.

4. Enlist advocates early on

Your manager is getting feedback about you all the time, not just during performance reviews. They talk to peers, managers, they see comments or/ and feedbacks, they talk to your team and they form an opinion. You need to make sure what they hear is what you want them to think about you. If they form an opinion during the year, the people you call on to vouch for you on your evaluation won’t matter. You need to shape your reputation all the time, not just 2 weeks out of the year. 

What to do during performance review:

This is where you can turn fruits into juice🥤

Use this time to listen and learn, not push back. This is where you finally get concrete actionable feedback that you can turn into a promotion accelerator. Instead of being busy defending yourself and making excuses, use the feedback you get to create an action plan for growth.

Ask questions like:

What Would it take to score higher? How Could I have outperformed?

If my goal is to be promoted into [role], what are a few things I can work on?

Are there any projects, training or resources I should look into? 

And then build an improvement plan like this one to start taking action and improving.

How you approach your performance review is a choice.

You can see it as a necessary evil or use it to your advantage. Either way, you’ll have to go through an evaluation, so why not make the most of the experience?

Instead of focusing on what you don’t want, focus on what you can get out of the situation to get what you do want.

Small change in perspective, massive impact on the result👆🏻