Great news! You landed the job ― perhaps your first or second job out of school ― and you’re excited to start your career. But in a turbulent time when many companies are still remote, and even your managers may be experiencing burnout ― how do you stand out as a top performer?
Focus on your strengths
As a negotiation trainer who works with thousands of professionals every year, I often encounter women who introduce themselves by apologizing for what they don’t have. “I’m new here, and I don’t have experience, but…”
Short on experience? Perhaps. But that doesn’t mean you’re short on value. Even at the beginning of our careers, part of our success is learning to tell the story of who we are and what kinds of problems we solve in the world.
When I interviewed for the job I hold now, as a Columbia Law School clinical professor, I was one of the youngest people in the candidate pool. So I didn’t focus on my experience; instead, I talked about my long-term vision for the program. I told the committee that as someone who had very recently been in the students’ position, I would know best what they needed and how to deliver it. And I sold them on my energy.
So instead of apologizing for a lack of experience, focus on what you do have. You bring fresh eyes to a problem. You may have leadership or management experience from leading student organizations. Your education is more recent in certain areas. You may have sharp technology skills.
Build from your strengths, and you’ll set the stage to bring value from day one.
Be curious
As a junior person in the workforce, you may be given a smaller piece of the puzzle to work on: for example, instead of setting company strategy for a product, you’re walking into individual stores and seeing how it looks on the shelf. But that doesn’t mean you can’t learn about the bigger picture. It all comes down to asking good questions.
As a junior food and beverage employee, Sherri didn’t spend a lot of time in the boardroom – instead, she was in the car and in local stores talking to managers. She didn’t just look at her product on the shelf. She also asked a lot of open questions. How did stores make decisions about which products went where? What did they like and not like in a product? What was performing for them, and what suggestions did they have? Every single one of these interactions helped Sherri learn data points that she fed back to senior management. And now, as a VP of Business Development, she uses what she learned in those stores every day to make deals and set strategy.
Be curious and ask questions. You never know where it will take you.
Make yourself visible and offer value
Remote work can be hard on junior employees. It’s challenging to build meaningful connections ― and in some cases, even to get the work we need to advance.
Ayisha had been working at her company a year. She started remotely, and wasn’t being fully utilized. There were days when she didn’t have much to do. But she kept reaching out and offering her help. Every week, she would send her manager a note saying, “I have time; please let me know what I can do for you!”
One day, she changed her strategy. She emailed the manager and said, “I see this piece of business just came in. You’ll probably need someone to write the background memo. Why don’t I do that this week?” This time, she got an immediate positive response. She got specific about the value she could offer and made it easy for her manager to say yes.









