13 great pieces of career advice you never hear

Valuable career advice that you haven't heard a million times before 

Emmie Martin
Monday 25 April 2016 12:24 EDT
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"Don't look too busy. I've seen smart and dedicated employees fail to get promoted, because they have taken on too much"
"Don't look too busy. I've seen smart and dedicated employees fail to get promoted, because they have taken on too much" (iStock)

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There's plenty of stale career advice out there: Go the extra mile. Do what you love. Always be the first one there and the last to leave.

But the Quora thread "What are a few pieces of unique career advice that nobody ever mentions?" provides something different: valuable career advice that we haven't heard a million times before.

We picked out 13 of the best responses for a fresh take on how to make the most out of your career.


Don't overload yourself.

"Don't look too busy. I've seen smart and dedicated employees fail to get promoted, because they have taken on too much, working too hard, and appeared too frazzled. If you appear stressed, people will think you aren't prepared to take on more, and you'll miss opportunities for new and innovative projects." — Mira Zaslove


Respect common spaces.

"Never, ever cook fish in the office microwave." — Ryan Harvey


Go to happy hour.

"In a new job, accept those first few invitations to lunch or happy hour. If you decline them, for whatever reason, they will stop, and you may find yourself an inadvertent outsider." — Laura Cooke


Seek out tasks that aren't directly assigned.

"As you move up, your future success depends on doing unassigned work and responsibilities. Anyone who made it past the hiring process can do the assigned job at the company, but it takes a lot more to deliver value to the company that wasn't assigned or even thought of." — Victor Wong


Show other people that they're a priority to you.

"Understand when people see you check your phone at every call, then don't answer when they call, they then know you put them on a low priority." — Mike Leary


Go out of your way to help others.

"Help others even if there is no direct benefit to yourself. It takes so little energy to answer questions, provide referrals, open doors, etc., for people who need your help, even if doing so offers you nothing immediate in return. Your efforts will be rewarded in the future in wholly unexpected ways." — Scott Wainner


Keep in touch with old colleagues.

"The network of people you know who leave your current company are often times more valuable to you than those with your company." — James Schek


Understand your weaknesses.

"The weaknesses that you're unaware of will hurt you the most. This is your blind spot. You must determine your hidden weaknesses and work to overcome them, and you're going to need help from others to do this." — David Osborne


Learn from those around you.

"When you want to learn some skill, look around for someone who is already good at it. Then just watch what they do, and copy it. Find what works for you, and modify it to your own abilities and style." — John Caprani


Take the pressure off your boss.

"Ask your boss what his biggest problem is, and make it go away." — Victoria Backaitis


Practice gratitude.

"Entitlement is a career killer. Focus on staying grateful and working hard rather than feeling that things are owed to you." — Scott Miker


Don't get caught up in getting ahead.

"Don't just look up — look laterally as well, because people with diverse experience usually progress faster than people with more experience." —Vikrant Vaidya


Find ways to improve workflow.

"Try to make the next person's job down the line easier. For example, if you are working on a project that goes through different hands, see what kinds of things you can do on your end that will make the process flow easier for the next person who performs the next step." — Richard Gary Butler

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Read the original article on Business Insider UK. © 2015. Follow Business Insider UK on Twitter.

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