5
Signs You’re Overqualified For Your Job
1.You
look for more work to do. If
you regularly finish your work and go ask your boss what else you can
do, or find something that needs doing but is not technically in your
job description and do it anyway, you might be overqualified, says
Dan Finnigan, Jobvite’s president and CEO. “If there’s some
sign that your boss doesn’t care or need for you to do more, no
ideas for you on what more you can do… this means you’ve already
done above and beyond what the job requires,” he says.
2.You’re
always bored. “Common
signs of being overqualified are being bored, feeling you’re not
being stretched, challenged or engaged in your work, but they could
also be signs that you’re in the wrong job,” says career coach Jo
Casey.
Try to figure out why you’re bored. “If you can do 100% of the
work with your eyes closed and one hand tied behind your back, you’re
probably overqualified,” Casey says. On the other hand, if you just
don’t like doing the work or find it dull, the job might be a bad
fit, but you’re probably not overqualified.
3.You
know more than your boss.“If
you’re being managed by people who know less than you do about your
department’s function and responsibilities, you’re
overqualified,” Rao says. “If you’re generating results above
and beyond what’s expected for someone in your job description to
the point that people turn to you instead of your boss for counsel,
expertise, and guidance, you’re probably overqualified.”
4.Your
performance consistently beats your peers’.“In
a job where it’s easy to measure how well you’re doing and you’re
outperforming everyone else in your peer group on the same objective
measures — you’re routinely driving most sales, producing most
leads in marketing, resolving most issues in customer service team —
you could be genuinely overqualified,” Finnigan says.
5.You’re
not learning anything new. “You
should be hired for a role because you have the potential to do well
in it, not because you already know everything you could know about
it,” Rao says. “If you require zero training or guidance to do
your job extremely well from the get-go, you’re overqualified for
it.” Also, if you have much more experience than the job
description requires, you could be overqualified, but Rao cautions
not to think that education is the same or better than experience.
“Just because you have an MBA and your boss doesn’t by no means
indicates that you could do his or her job better than they can,”
she says
Coutersy
of business.time.com
I liked it. :)
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