Preloader image

Mid – Careerist

Mid - Careerist

Chart Your Course, Know Yourself

  1. Update your personal strategic plan
    At this next stage of your career, it is important to assess and reset your career objectives as well as be prepared to take strategic risks.
    Unconscious bias and other factors can make career risks more difficult for diverse individuals, but having a career plan will keep you on course and help jumpstart the next step of your mid-career.  Chinue Uecker shares how her personal strategic plan is helping position her as she advances in her career.
  2. Remain open to relocation
    Once you determine your goals, keep moving towards them; this may require you to seek or accept different opportunities to achieve your goals. Look for an organization where you will be valued, and one that will provide opportunities for you to build a track record to move forward. Peggy Harris, FACHE expresses the importance of being open minded to new opportunities as they may not align with the “envisioned career path” but may develop into alternative healthcare careers.
  3. Consider different routes to your goals
    Every journey can take an unexpected detour. As you advance in your career, it may become necessary to explore alternative routes to your career destination. Anton J. Gunn describes his unusual path to the C-suite.

Master the Job

  1. Strengthen higher-level competencies
    After a few years in the profession, you want to focus on improving the more advanced competencies for your position. Begin the process by assessing your current level of competency. You can also continue improving your competencies by becoming actively involved in your professional membership organizations, as summarized by Executive Recruiter John E. Green, Jr.
  2. Expand cross-function proficiencies
    Sometimes you have to leave your niche in order to discover your potential. Learn at least basic proficiencies in several other departments or related areas.
  3. Hone team-building skills
    Relationships are a key component of creating a productive work environment. Effective teamwork takes interpersonal skills where, body language, facial expressions and conflict resolution are all valuable. Communication skills are crucial for dealing with your team. Gary E Williams Jr. shares how he to listened to his team, identified an issue, and ultimately solved the problem.
  4. Sharpen problem-solving skills
    By this point in your career, you will be honing your skills in managing staff—oftentimes a group of individuals who are diverse on several dimensions. An essential skill to master is team building. Check out this quick tip from Shanna Johnson on strengthening your team’s connections.
Tool:

The ACHE Healthcare Executive Competencies Assessment Tool is offered as an instrument to use in assessing your expertise and determining competency gaps in critical areas of healthcare management.

Leverage the Relationships

  1. Build collaboration skills
    One of your most critical relationships will be with those who report to you. Effective managers understand there will be times when it’s most effective to manage your direct report relationship as a collaborative effort. John E. Green, Jr. suggests one way to approach this collaborative connection.
  2. Use mentors for candid feedback
    It is not always easy speaking to others about your short-comings or opportunities for growth, but it is essential to have a source who will give you the “real-deal.” Develop a close network of people with whom you can be vulnerable and honest so that you receive feedback that will help you go to the next phase of your career. Denise Lew and Charles Henderson shares tips on leveraging your mentors to seize opportunities. Charles Henderson shares his experience of how working with a mentor has allowed him to progress his career forward.
  3. Establish stronger network with other recognized healthcare leaders
    One way to do this is to become involved in professional organizations, which will increase your network, enhance skills, develop leadership skills, and more. Establish stronger network with other recognized healthcare leaders. Be active and participate in various different diversity programs that will not only help further your leadership skills but allow reach to the next level of leadership, as shared here by Larry Chadwick. Carmen Kenrich offers another effective way to strengthen your network: connect with executive search firms.
  4. Learn how to talk with senior leaders
    Learning to communicate more effectively with senior leaders can begin by recognizing the barriers—internal or external to yourself—that impede your outreach to those in the highest ranks. Then proactively work to overcome those real or perceived obstacles. Experienced executive Anthony Ashby, FACHE, offers three tips to help you effectively communicate with senior leaders.

Gain Positive Visibility

  1. Develop executive presence
    You want to become known as exhibiting an authentic presence that represents you as having an ideal blend of leadership temperament, skills, competencies, and confidence. Good news: you can learn how to authentically have executive presence. Shanna Johnson offers a few tips for polishing your presence as a healthcare executive.
  2. Take lead positions in outside groups
    Expose yourself to projects that you are passionate about and committed to that may be out of your department or external to the organization. This experience is not only beneficial to your growth but opens the opportunity for others to see your potential as a leader. Check out the tips offered by Jonas Nguh, PhD, FACHE on how volunteering and participating in inter-department projects will promote positive visibility within the organization as well as in the community.