Welcome to PR Internship - YOUR opportunity to put everything you have learned over the past years at university into practice and to get a thorough insight into what public relations is like "in the real world". This Blog allows you to reflect on your experiences, share insights with other students across campuses and to possibly give advice and support to fellow students. Please also see http://http://printernship-reflections2.blogspot.com.au/ for more reflections.
Monday, October 10, 2016
Which way is the right way.
Everyone has a different working style, some considered productive and others frowned upon. How can we know for sure if there is a right way? Some of the richest and smartest business people are not suited to the traditional definition of a team player or employer. Steve Jobs co-founder of Apple or Jared Vennett who predicted the US financial crash, considered geniuses, and both had unique practices and habits they brought to the workplace. Practices and habits that would not be accepted by any supervisor today.
At the start of my placement, I was self-conscious about which way to work was the right way, fitting in productive tasks whenever I could to impress my supervisor and ultimately be useful. However, sometimes I get stuck on what to do when my supervisor doesn't give me enough tasks to keep myself occupied throughout the day.
Supervisors often want you to work independently and as a team but they want to know if you have thoughts and ideas, the test is whether you have enough confidence to act on them, without someone behind your shoulder giving you step by step instructions.
The role of an assistant or intern is often to learn. This role often implies you are new to the work environment or industry and therefore don't know as much as everyone else. The common thing said to me is to learn from the best by watching. In PR you need to do. Not only to impress your supervisor but that's what PR is, to act for causes, to inform, and to engage.
This may be my supervisor's plan all along, a test to see what I do when it's not listed or handed to me. To see what I can do with that extra free time.
This is a valuable lesson to learn before you enter the workplace, because you will not be an intern forever. Eventually how your career will develop is not how well you can perform tasks asked by your supervisor but what you bring thats different to every other PR professional out there. This will be determined by how you use your time, while at work.
At a young age we a taught that speed is the best, a speedy brain must be the smartest. But its completely different once your in the real world. Speed may be considered impressive but its the creative thinking people with unique ideas, opinions, strategies who will get the job at the end of the day.
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1 comment:
Hello Joanne,
Remarkable post I must say ! You are definitely right, we should not wait for our employers to tell us what should be done, in fact the real challenge is to know what can be done and how it should be done. Those 3 years have been crucial in developing us for the real world, now that this is done, employers expect us to bring in our ideas as let's face it, we are the fresh blood entering those companies that have existed for quite a long time ! Everything needs change and evolution, I would say here PR can revolutionize an organization, make it more innovative and constructive and given the competitive environment in which we are thriving today, the expectations of employers have gone high.
I would say, when you get stuck on which way can be the right, take the moment you are gifted with, and make it the perfect opportunity to portray your skills !
All the best,
Katherina Canarapen
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