Friday, November 15, 2019
The Unexpected Contract You Should Write When Taking on a New Job
The Unexpected Contract You Should Write When Taking on a New Job The Unexpected Contract You Should Write When Taking on a New Job âCongratulations, Neil!â I was sitting across from an HR exec at Walmart a few years ago. His hand was outstretched, and on the desk in front of us was a crisp sheet of paper spelling out all the terms of my new promotion. I shook his hand and left doing mental cartwheels down the hall. This was it! The dream job: more money, bigger team, fancier title, more interesting work. And more total work, too. A few more meetings. A few more hours. A few more business trips. A bigger job means bigger responsibilities, which would probably mean dedicating more time and effort overall- thatâs just how promotions work, I inwardly shrugged. Promotion letter in hand, I popped my head into the office of one of my mentors at the company: âGuess what! I got the big promotion.â âCongratulations!â he said. âAre you going to accept it?â What did he mean, Was I going to accept it? âWell, it feels like a slam dunk,â I replied, wondering what he was getting at. âI feel like I should sign this right now and head straight back to the SVPâs office.â âGo ahead and sign it,â he said with smile. âBut itâs a big job! Youâll be leading a large team and on the road a lot. So, before you hand it back in, make sure you take the contract home, share it with your wife, and write up another contract, too- a family contract. One between you and her. The company is changing all your terms, arenât they? So, make sure you revisit all your home terms, too.â He had a point. Many of us have contracts with our employers, but few of us have contracts with our partners. Strange as it sounds, I went home that night and pitched the idea to my wife, Leslie. We both agreed it was a smart move to think deliberately about how changes in either of our careers might affect work-life balance for both of us. So, we sat down and spent a long time that night discussing things. At the end, we arrived at a short contract with four key bullet points whose terms are still in force today: 1. Nights Away As a parent, it breaks my heart to miss bath time. Knowing thereâs a finite number of these nights in our lives, Leslie weighed approximately how many nights per year I might have to be away in the new role. We came up with a number that we could both live with. Then, we began tracking it. The nights-away cap weâd agreed to was easy to break down per month, so if I had a really busy month (say, a conference out of town) then I knew Iâd need to cut back on travel the next month to make up for it. No, I never actually told my boss, âSorry, Iâve hit my quota, send someone else!â In fact, just tracking things helped me stop sweating every business trip. I simply counted them toward an annual number. Plus, if I ever fumbled this bullet point, I knew Iâd have to make it up on one of the subsequent three (thereâs only so much control you have when youâre working for someone else). Can this hamper your career? Absolutely. Letâs not pretend you can have everything. Come up with a number that works for your family, and stick with it. Related: Hereâs How âMetric Parentingâ Can Relieve Working Parent Guilt 2. Family Day We decided it was important for us to have one family day every weekend- a full day with no cell phones, no extended family, no friends, nothing. Just me, my wife, our two little kids, and zero interruptions. Before setting this down in writing, so many weekends would rush past in a blur of gymnastics, birthday parties, and extended family dinners. They were fun! But there was no deep family time for just us four. To be honest, sticking to this bullet point has been really tough. Sometimes you feel terrible declining an invitation to an outing or get-together you know will be really special. But prioritizing one family day every weekend creates energy, and it helps you be choosier about your commitments. After all, thereâs a real risk in saying âyesâ to things reflexively. 3. Nights Out The third item in our contract reads âNNO/LNO:â âNeilâs Night Out/Leslieâs Night Out.â This is a fun one. Once a week, we each get one night to do whatever we feel like. That can mean dinner with a friend, catching some live music by myself, spinning around in circles in empty parking lots- hey, who cares, itâs my night off! Leslie gets her own each week, too. Again, energy is the priceless commodity here. Itâs too easy to collapse on the couch in a Netflix coma once the kids are in bed. These regular night-out appointments help us plan to prioritize ourselves and maintain our other relationships, too. I feel like a great father and husband both before and after I go away on business, because I get energy from those nights to carry me through the time Iâm away. Plus, I get my own stories and experiences to bring back into the home while continuing to develop my life as an individual. The best part is thereâs no guilt, since my wife and I both practice this habit in equal proportion (so in a way our two nights âpay forâ each other). The two nights end up feeling like a gift to each other- even when we (admittedly) need to push one another to actually take them during a tiring week. Related: How I Knew When Saying âYesâ Was Hurting My Productivity (and Worse) 4. Vacation Days I know work contracts generally have a number of vacation days spelled out. But most of us arenât taking real vacation. We either donât take all our days- by some recent estimates most Americans leave paid time-off that theyâre entitled to on the table- or we work while weâre away. Itâs also worth noting that some companies have policies where you can either buy additional vacation days or take unpaid personal days. Whatâs my point? Simply that itâs one thing for your employer to tell you what you get and another for you and your family to decide what you want to take. After all, vacation time is one of the things many people donât bother to negotiate when theyâre considering a new job offer or weighing a promotion. In fact, you might even be able to swap out something smaller, like a bonus, for more vacation time if you ask for it. After finalizing our contract, I took advantage each year of a policy at Walmart that let me apply for an extra couple weeks of unpaid leave, and then took the 5% annual hit to my salary. It was a worthwhile tradeoff for the extra time with my family, and I never noticed the funds that were being skimmed off the top. Thatâs it! Four bullet points- but they couldnât be more important. Everybody will have a different set of terms that matter to them and their partner. Maybe yours will involve school drop-off and pickup, or whether or not you work from home certain days of the week. In any case, you donât have to march into work and share this work-life contract with your boss. The point is simply to help you articulate your values, then actually express them in how you live. Iâve actually found this helps me make smarter, speedier decisions about the way Iâm spending my time. For instance, if I canât avoid traveling on a weekend and miss a family day, then I automatically know I need to book two back-to-back family days on an upcoming weekend. Good excuse for a road trip! As you think about a contract that works with you and your partner, remember that the goal is never to be perfect. Itâs simply to be a little better- and more balanced- than before. Related: The Insanely Simple Way to Prioritize Your Life and Work This article was originally published on Fast Company. It has been republished here with permission.
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