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Options Not Excuses

Something terrible has happened. A supplied fell through or maybe you just screwed something up. Either way, you need to tell your boss and deal with the consequences.

Most people do not like discussing their failures or the failures of others even if they know their boss will be OK with it. Our first impulse is to come up with an excuse to divert the blame. This is not the best course of action, even if it’s really not your fault. It focuses on the past and forces your boss to come up with a solution to yet another problem.

Rather than volunteering an excuse spend a few seconds analyzing the situation and devise some options for next steps that mitigate the damage. When you deliver the bad news propose these options for next steps. This accomplishes two things: It quickly focuses on the future, and is an opportunity to communicate relevant information that may be of use to your boss thereby making their decision easier.

For example, once upon a time I was working at a silicon company. Part of my job was to investigate a yield problem on a specific microchip. This involved loading a wafer of exposed microchips into a microscope, pulling a level to drive some probes into one chip on the wafer, and running some software on a special computer.

This went great for weeks. I had made some discoveries that helped us isolate the root cause of our problem. Then I screwed up. I needed to switch from one chip to another but I forgot to raise the lever before sliding the wafer! With the probes still lowered I damaged the delicate exposed microchips and more importantly I destroyed the probes.

Due to the importance of the yield problem it was imperative that my team recover from this set back quickly. There were still enough chips on the wafer to continue experimentation, but we had no back set of probes. The options were obvious immediately: We halt this line of research while the probes were repaired and continue our investigation using completely different methods, or we could attempt to rewrite our testing programs for a different testing computer which had a working set of probes, which would take about a week of effort.

I reported my screw up along with my proposal for next steps. My boss agreed that we would halt this line of research, while the probes were repaired, and switch to a completely different approach at solving the problem. In the end we after much gradual research we isolated the root cause and the yield crisis was resolved. My damage to the probes did not end up causing a delay.

Only weeks later everyone remembered that I had proposed a different direction in the research and no one seemed to care about the unfortunate circumstances that led me to make the proposal.

The Small Stuff

Every job has two kinds of tasks: hard stuff and easy stuff. This is true for every job that I’ve ever had and every role I haven’t had that I can think of. The hard stuff varies considerably from role to role while the easy stuff remains more constant. Many people focus on the hard stuff while overlooking or failing to complete the easy stuff.

This is one of the most important things you can do to get promoted. Here are a few examples from my experience.

As a software engineer, here are some examples of hard stuff.

  • Working 12 hours a day, every weekday
  • Fixing a hidden bug that saves the company millions of dollars per year
  • Working through the weekend to put out a release
  • Discovering a new framework or tool that saves the team hundreds of hours per month
  • Taking night school classes to gain new skills for your job
  • Discovering and working with the legal team to patent a new revolutionary algorithm

And here are some examples of the easy stuff.

  • Calling in to let your boss know when you’re sick
  • Shower regularly per your region’s custom. This means every day in the US
  • Not lying to anyone involved in your job about anything ever. No lie is too small to cause a chain reaction of problems. Bad news is far less troublesome than inaccurate information
  • Following the company dress code
  • Completing the tasks that you agreed to do, no matter how menial, or telling your boss right away when you realize that it is no longer possible due to new information
  • Showing up to work and meetings on time
  • Not making excuses. People want to hear options not excuses
  • Signing the documents that HR requests you to complete right away
  • Submitting your expense reports on time

If you’re not a software engineer then this entry should be even easier to understand. The top list may only make sense to a software engineer, but the bottom list is almost universal.

I’m not saying that you can ignore the big stuff and still be successful, but do not focus on the big stuff at expense of the small stuff. While being perfect at the small stuff many not compensate for being terrible at the big stuff, it will show your success on the big stuff in a much better light.

When the powers that be at your company chose who to promote and who to fire they evaluate your work as a collection of tasks. While you may have spent a solid month working unpaid overtime to complete that patent, it will almost be canceled out if you blow off calling in when you’re sick and this is an example of very poor value.

The thing to take away from this entry is to focus on value in your career. The stuff in the small list almost always requires a fraction of the effort of anything on the big list. This means that in terms of time invested in your career per payoff at the performance review it is an amazing value. So next time you’re thinking of blowing off a boring HR training, think again. It may be most costly than you think.

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