Should
Administrative Professionals Pursue More Education?
By Karen Porter
The
Administrative Professional
Job Performance and Career Success Coach
Assisting Administrative Support Professionals Since 2004
If you read
The Effective Admin newsletter and resources I know that you already value ongoing
learning related to your job and career.
However, mention higher education in particular to some administrative
professionals and I don't doubt you'll get conflicting viewpoints on its
necessity to be a top administrative professional. You probably have a few
thoughts of your own on the subject.
But the way I see it in regard to continuing education opportunities is
this...
...whether you're specifically seeking a college degree, just taking
miscellaneous continuing education classes, attending a one-day workshop,
getting a certification or reading self-study materials from
TheEffectiveAdminStore.com, that's a good thing. It may not be necessary in
every admin's job/career but it can definitely be helpful and useful.
That's
any or all of the above. I view each learning method mentioned as valuable. I know
people with college degrees who are less productive or successful than those
who are self-taught and vice-versa. I favor all learning methods, not just
specifically higher education formats.
At the website and in The Effective Admin marketing materials I've started using the phrase
"The Best Administrative
Professionals Never Stop Learning." I truly believe this. But why do I say this? For several
reasons...
♦Learning enables you to find or create new processes to do current
procedures in your job well or even better than average. Educational
resources are a catalyst for creativity. You don't have to be born creative;
you just have to find resources that set your mind to work. One thing then
leads to another. A book discussed X. You
decide if you made this one change to method X you could actually use it to
do Y in your office quicker or with less errors. Sometimes you need that
outside element to spark creativity. (In fact, I use outside elements a lot
for inspiration.)
♦Career administrative professionals want to stay motivated and enthused
in their jobs, even after 10, 20, 30+ years on the job. One way to do this
is through learning new skills and ideas and applying them to new areas of
your job. Initiate those new areas or tasks. Let your manager know "I just
learned all about X, so I can help you with Y now." Watch your executive's
eyes light up when he hears you take initiative to continue learning in your
field.
♦Learning opportunities present ways to see how other administrative
professionals are doing
things today. That's why I frequently try to get responses to survey
questions in the newsletter from administrative professional readers and even admin/career
coaches. As a working administrative professional, you get to think: "Well,
yea I have been doing it the best way possible all these years" or "Ooooh...what
a great way to do that task. I had never thought of doing it that way."
♦Even if you know it all (or you think you know most everything you need
to know to do your job and then some), you can't possibly remember it all
24/7. Educational materials provide refresher courses. You think "Oh, that
is a great way to talk to Sally about that little conflict we've been
having. I've heard of that method before but had forgotten about it." Geez...many
of us can't remember where we left our car keys or eyeglasses, so how can
you possibly be expected to remember the best way to do every skill and task
in your office? How can you possibly remember the best way to handle every communication or other soft skill
scenario without a refresher course now and then?
Those are just some of the reasons I favor continuing education whether it's
reading trade magazines, TheEffectiveAdminStore.com self-study tip sheets or
attending live classes at colleges. All of it works. Just do some of it
year-round, every year.
That said, did I ever tell you about my former administrative professional
colleague who spent quite a few years working on a college degree in
computer information sciences? Not long before she walked down the
graduation aisle, her manager accompanied her to an official luncheon and
presentation at the company recognizing her 25 year status as an
administrative professional there. She was indeed a veteran administrative
professional with her company but not quite ready for retirement.
However, not long after she
walked down the college graduation aisle, her employer's department leaders
initiated layoffs of almost every admin in her department. Fortunately, she
took her new computer information skills in a lateral move to the IT area of
the department. Moral of this story: Continuing education can be helpful
(and you don't always know when and perhaps not always why until the moment
you need that particular knowledge).