Shortcuts to success

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“There is no shortcut to hard work.” How many times have we heard that? It has been engrained in our brains since childhood, when we saw our fathers returning day after day after hard day’s work in our school years, when we cram in book after book to get top accolades. We move on in life with the same aspirations, ‘I will work hard and get to the top, my superiors will adorn me, my friends will look up to me – money will shower from the heavens into my lap, mothers all over Pakistan will line up to get their daughters married to me.’ . The reality, however, is a swift kick where it hurts.
Whilst we sit in our lonely cubicles, working through lunch, staying in till 9pm only to take our papers with us for some light reading before bed (face it, what else are you going to take home to bed) we find ourselves overlooked for promotions. What’s a bigger surprise is that our team leader now is the same duffer in school who could barely pass the ninth grade.
To put a stop on my rant and to get on with the point (seriously it’s worth the wait), everyone with a pen/keyboard/email address can become a writer. Hell, with six English dailies in Pakistan (two of which will take anyone whose willing to write- I wont tell you the names but they are the newest ones – one of them is all colour, the other one shares a name with a popular detergent – seriously if you still don’t get it , maybe you shouldn’t be worried about the future of your career and should worry about your future in general – maybe donate your brain to science – get some use out of it) you can even write gibberish and still get it printed. Which brings us here (to the point) – anyone with half a brain and the ability to work smart has the ability to rise to the top – provided he is shown the way.
So the question is, do you want to be invited to the bosses dinners (seriously not as boring as you think – take your superiors out of the office, give them a couple of drinks and see how every conversation turns into vulgar talk). Have drinks with the team and get promoted (new Altis or Reborn sir?) Or do you want to work hard, see your hair thin, pants fade and continue reading self help books in your cubicle (I’d tell you your wife will run off, your kids will resent you but that’s too gory for my taste).
So, my fellow chums, assuming that the answer is yes (for those who said no, I bid you a happy future! With hard work I’m sure you’ll get promoted to senior assistant manager one day) I bring to you (on news print nonetheless) a weekly rant of wisdom I’ve gained not only from my vast experience and success but from the misfortunes and mistakes of my co-workers (most of whom have been promoted to senior assistant manager.)
So ladies, (not that I expect women to gain anything from this much. Women get promoted because they are – women. Look it’s a long topic – I could write a book on this but this paper has no guts and it would censor half of what I’d write – not to mention the grief I’d get by bored –to-death-by-their-husbands women activists) and gentlemen, I bring to you “office dynamics”.
Choosing this week’s lesson was the easiest task, the most important thing one should learn is how to “get your boss and his immediate boss to like you.” Look, I said like, not need. Face it all our bosses are duffers who need us to do everything for them. We know it and they probably even know it and all of us, with the exception of a certain few (white socks with black shoes, wear pleated office pants and loafer s to the beach – you know the type) don’t like our bosses (I, at our discussions in his office, wanted to punch my bosses nose in. I fixed this problem by going to my happy place – really simple – just nod and think about what you will smoke when you get home whilst you drown out his cynical comments. The man now thinks I am more attentive) but what we have got to realise is that no matter what a duffer our boss is – he is at a place where we want to be and if he likes us he can help us get to the top.
The first thing is to always make those above you feel comfortably superior. In your whim to impress them or the cute brand manager across the conference table don’t go so far as to do the opposite – raise fear and insecurity. How do you do this, by doing the most obvious thing in the book – flatter them –maybe not in that obvious manner. (Think Najam Sethi and the Sharifs not Mushahid Hussain and the Chaudhrys). Make them feel superior by acting naïve , asking questions to answers you already know – getting his guidance and hence his approval. Attribute your creative ideas to him (my boss used to say “I was just about to say that” every time I said something creative – now I just start off with the idea being his) and overall learn to interpret his mood and timings.
Listen, the key isn’t to bend to his will and loose all backbone – its to learn which battles to pick – loose a couple of battles and win the war. The key is rising to the top and if gaining your bosses trust and favour means having to rub him right –do it. You will probably be running the show in any case.

The writer is a very successful businessman who has worked in the top multinationals of the world. He is a firm believer of working smart over working hard and is an office wolf!

6 COMMENTS

  1. It is a pity that such a despicable article has been allowed to be published in this newspaper. Not only is it derogatory to certain segments of society and I quote, "So ladies, (not that I expect women to gain anything from this much. Women get promoted because they are – women." but the writer does not make an effort to support his argument with any substantial empirical data. It was a pathetic attempt at humour. Instead of providing inspiration to the youth of this country, we have now taken upon ourself to lead them in the wrong direction. Just another dilemma of our country.

  2. Dear Mr. Anonymous. First of all, let me congratulate you on your tact – staying anonymous was clearly the way to go about this write up. Now the good part.. True, that at times one requires to suck up rather than taking the bull by the horn but seeing as you look to target an intellectual audience by indirectly naming newspapers and letting their sharp minds decipher the code, I would have also expected a counter argument. See, all the good articles that I've had the pleasure of reading seek to tackle both sides. They identify how the grass could be greener on the other side but also seek to describe the glass half full. I found this a rather pessimistic piece. I feel that it in real life, it doesn't take balls the size of watermelons to write such openly but merely having the comfort of having other people fight your battles for you – Please tell me that you're a self-made man that has never seen the inside of a 1600cc car and has worked his entire life being the man of the house after completing his education through a scholarship program or a sub-standard government institution – Now had you been the latter that has struggled all his life and has finally reached a position where you 'qualified' to write for this respectable paper, I would've understood your venom. Coming back to your text-based mona lisa here.. Now please tell me, if this article seems to target the working class of today, would you still advise me to learn to pick my battles if I were a young captain fighting in Sawat with death in front of me with a chance to save an innocent family or should I wait for my superior (aka bossES according to you) to merely 'see' that I mean well and should get back to polishing his shoes?

    P.S. You also highlighted taht

  3. Dear Mr. Anonymous. First of all, let me congratulate you on your tact – staying anonymous was clearly the way to go about this write up. Now the good part.. True, that at times one requires to suck up rather than taking the bull by the horn but seeing as you look to target an intellectual audience by indirectly naming newspapers and letting their sharp minds decipher the code, I would have also expected a counter argument. See, all the good articles that I've had the pleasure of reading seek to tackle both sides. They identify how the grass could be greener on the other side but also seek to describe the glass half full. I found this a rather pessimistic piece. I feel that it in real life, it doesn't take balls the size of watermelons to write such openly but merely having the comfort of having other people fight your battles for you – Please tell me that you're a self-made man that has never seen the inside of a 1600cc car and has worked his entire life being the man of the house after completing his education through a scholarship program or a sub-standard government institution – Now had you been the latter that has struggled all his life and has finally reached a position where you 'qualified' to write for this respectable paper, I would've understood your venom. Coming back to your text-based mona lisa here.. Now please tell me, if this article seems to target the working class of today, would you still advise me to learn to pick my battles if I were a young captain fighting in Sawat with death in front of me with a chance to save an innocent family or should I wait for my superior (aka bossES according to you) to merely 'see' that I mean well and should get back to polishing his shoes?

    P.S. If hardworking people that merely look to struggle by not having the boss-ass-sucking formula right and have no one to bring home but a newspaper, I'd say the ones that do suck up shouldn't have a family to begin with; sad to say, such double-standard people would make terrible fathers…

  4. Hilarious how the author managed to produce exactly the kind of article he criticized. i think he was in his 'happy place' when writing it. No offence, man (at least not more than you've dispensed generally).

  5. @ fizza … i think the author was trying to be ironic… the articles just funny …

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