Selling yourself

I am in the process of applying for some scholarships and job opportunities that require third-party recommendations or references.

When I approached my current employer for a professional reference, she gave me an unexpected response: ‘write a draft and send it to me and I’ll work from that’. She said that I would know the criteria for the role better than her and described it as a useful exercise that her former employers and mentors used to ask her to do as a method for identifying her own strengths, weaknesses and areas to improve upon.

Initially, I thought this might be unethical – but I was assured she wouldn’t submit anything I had written that she was unhappy with and wouldn’t consult me prior to submitting.

I really struggled to freely write about my own strengths. I am usually not particularly shy, and certainly know where my strengths lie perhaps better than my weaknesses. Yet I found it really difficult to outline my strengths to then be read by someone who I can only assume has their own opinions and judgements about myself.

Eventually, I just had to write, guided by two simple premises: what was actually, defensibly, true about my capabilities and performance, and the ways in which that matched up with the assessment criteria.

Often, I find it easy to be somewhat crippled by fear of what people might think of me. Ultimately though, I guess you just have to bite the bullet and do your best.

My boss once gave me a wise piece of advice along the lines of: think of how much time you spend worrying about yourself and assume everyone else is doing the same. That doesn’t leave much time to be worrying and judging others.

Tagged in Student life, What messes with your head