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Do Your Employability Skills Need Work?


Do Your Employability Skills Need Work?
  • AuthorBonnie Johnson
  • DateDecember 02, 2020
  • MediumNewsletter Article
Employability skills have a strong correlation to your success on-the-job. These skills are personal attributes that allow you to interact effectively with other people, especially in the workplace. Sometimes referred to as soft skills, they’re transferable skills, which means you can take them with you wherever you go. Transferable skills are vital as the average person changes jobs 12 times during their career!

 

Employability skills have a strong correlation to your success on-the-job. These skills are personal attributes that allow you to interact effectively with other people, especially in the workplace. Sometimes referred to as soft skills, they’re transferable skills, which means you can take them with you wherever you go. Transferable skills are vital as the average person changes jobs 12 times during their career! 

 

Employability skills required for success are often subjective and difficult to measure or prove. It’s frequently said and proven that technical skills may land you an interview, but you need employability skills to get and keep the job. Maybe it’s time to tap into your self-awareness skill and ask yourself, “How employable am I?” 

 

So, what do you need to work on? Here’s two skills that everyone, no matter their age, experience, or education level, should work on:  

  • Interpersonal Skills 

    In children, we often hear the descriptor of “Plays well with others.” In fact, this has become the subject of many memes and t-shirts for adults as well. But, all jokes aside, do you work well with others? No matter what your position, organization or industry, we all deal with people. You rarely get to choose your coworkers or your boss. What tactics do you use to interact effectively with others?  

     

    When AgCareers.com surveyed agricultural employers about what skills they were looking for in new hires, Teamwork was at the top of the list. From entry-level to executive, every job requires teamwork at some point. Can you accept constructive feedback (think about this carefully if it’s time for your annual review)? Check your attitude - positive or negative? Working with team members requires abilities to manage conflict, listen, negotiate, empathize, motivate, solve problems, and build trust. Communication is also vital in interpersonal relationships, but is so important that it deserves its own section! 


  • Communication Skills 

    Decades of research has consistently ranked communication skills as critical for workers with the desire for promotion. Phone, email, text, IM, social media, in-person meetings, presentations, web conferences, and even our body language and good old letters or handwritten notes, make up our days of communicating. Leaders spend about 80% of their workdays communicating.  

     

    So much of today’s communication happens digitally, so work on making your communications more personal. We’ve all become so accustomed to picking up our mobile device to send a quick email or text. Maybe it’s time to pick up the phone, or ring a coworker on a video call. Employers surveyed by AgCareers.com rated Verbal Communication the second most-needed skill for new hires behind Teamwork.  

Employers often say they hire for “attitude” rather than hard skills. That’s because many technical, product, company specific skills are taught on the job. Develop your employability skills, or if you already have them, think about how you can effectively portray them in your resume, application materials, or in the interview. 

 

Discover more on critical employability skills and how to show that you have them here. 

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