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How to Attract and
Keep a Personal Assistant
By: Lorraine
Pirihi
Hi!
Many managers will often say their personal assistant is
invaluable to them yet they often treat them as if they're
not.
Day after day, week after week the P.A. is in the office,
slogging away making sure the work gets done. In many
instances it is the P.A. that holds the business /
department together.
Many of them are so conscientious they won't take time out
and will stay at their desk until the work is done. Not only
are they integral to the running of any business, their
income and the way they are treated may not always reflect
the importance of their role.
Jenny's Story
Jenny has worked for her current employer for the past three
years and thoroughly enjoys her role as Personal Assistant
to the General Manager. They have a great working
relationship.
If she requires the occasional afternoon or morning off to
deal with personal matters, all she has to do is ask. Her
boss praises her regularly for her contribution and rewards
her … sometimes monetarily and other times with a dinner out
or movie tickets when they achieve their sales targets.
Because of this attitude with her employer, she does her
utmost best in her work and never thinks twice about working
overtime on the odd occasion. In fact she works twice as
hard because she’s appreciated and has some flexibility in
her working hours.
This is a totally different situation to Jenny's previous
employer. Jenny had been working for another organisation
where her boss was 'married to the job'. Although he had a
wife and family, his behaviour didn't reflect this. He
worked all hours of the day and night and couldn't
understand why everyone else went home at 5.00 p.m.
Although she did her utmost best to organise him and get the
work done on time, he would always ask for tasks to be done
just when she was getting ready to leave for the day.
On the many occasions when she worked back or took work home
so that her boss would have what he wanted for the next
morning, he never thanked her. He just assumed that's what
she should do. He never considered her needs. She was a
single parent and therefore had major responsibilities. She
had a life too. Her boss on the other hand was fortunate to
have a wife who didn't work and took care of their personal
life.
Prior to Jenny being in this role, there had been three
other people who had worked in her position, and each one
had lasted less than 3 months.
Jenny had enough, she left after 6 months and found her
current position. It wasn't the money that was her main
issue. It was the flexibility and appreciation. Although her
boss was pleasant enough, he just didn't understand that
there is more to working with someone than just paying their
wages.
Learn How to Look After Your People
As soon as you have people to manage, the most important
skill you need to learn is how to look after them.
Every client I have coached will often say their biggest
challenge is the people that work for them.
There are many reasons for this including hiring the wrong
people to begin with and the most common being the
manager/boss… they haven’t developed the skills on being a
masterful manager.
What the Boss Wants:
Someone who can use their initiative, make decisions in
their absence and carry out tasks without supervision.
A person they can trust and take many of the basic
administrative duties from them so the boss can spend
his/her time on more important tasks.
A person who can organise them (and in some cases be a
mind-reader).
An assistant who is their right-hand person and can keep
everything running smoothly.
What the PA Wants:
A boss who they can communicate with.
A boss who understands that when they are given tasks to do,
although they may have taken 2 minutes to discuss, could
take the P.A. 2 days to complete with all the interruptions
they have from others.
A boss who realises that the P.A. is a person who has to do
many tasks as well as answering all the phone calls and
often has many interruptions in their day which can cause
them to get very behind with their work.
A boss who is appreciative of them and realises that the
P.A. does have a life outside of work and needs to have
time-out just like they do.
To be recognised on a regular basis that they are important.
They also need to be renumerated for their valuable
contribution and should have regular performance appraisals
and be offered incentives.
The Final Word
When employing a personal assistant make sure they are the
right fit. If you're looking for someone who can be
extremely flexible in their hours and can come in early and
stay late, then make sure that person is in the right
personal situation to do that. Using our invaluable tool How
to Hire the Right People can save you time, money and stress
before you go through the process.
Employing people is a skill in itself. Keeping them happy so
that they will be an important part of your business is
another story. See Look After Your People And They Will Look
After You
Have a great week
Lorraine Pirihi
About The Author
Lorraine Pirihi is Australia's Personal Productivity
Specialist and Leading Life Coach. Her business The Office
Organiser specialises in showing small business owners and
managers, how to get organised at work so they can have a
life! Lorraine is also a dynamic speaker and has produced
many products including "How to Survive and Thrive at Work!"
To subscribe to her free ezine visit
www.office-organiser.com.au
loraine@office-organiser.com.au |