| Need a job? Try
improving your 'soft skills'
Published May 4, 2002
Truth be told, a bunch of folks
would love to sit around with a work-related injury for
two years if they could still collect a paycheck.
That's how it was when Michael Buggs fell down on the job.
The man hurt his back. But the checks kept coming. And he
kept cashing them.
Sounds like a sweet deal.
"It was," Buggs told me, "until I got the
last one."
He had to find a job.
It's why some of you read the classifieds first today. The
unemployment rate was 5 percent in metro Orlando in March.
That was a tad more than the 4.9 percent state average.
Nationally, according to numbers released Friday, it's 6
percent.
Is this you? Have you worked the mess out of the classifieds,
drawing circles around jobs that look appealing? Maybe you've
applied for some.
Nobody has called you back, though.
"Perhaps the reason is they lack the soft skills to
find and keep a meaningful career-path opportunity,"
said Marc Stanakis, executive director of The Jobs Partnership
of Florida.
Soft skills?
"It's the work ethic," Stanakis said. "It's
the punctuality and integrity and communication and teamwork."
Oh. That.
"It's the things employers expect employees to show
up to work with."
Man, that's basic stuff!
"You're making an assumption there, John," Stanakis
said.
"We've created a generation that wants something now,"
said Dennis Barrier, vice president of human resources at
Wiginton Corp., a fire-sprinkler company in Lake Mary. People
think they're owed something without working for it, he
said.
Wiginton has benefited from workers who completed the 12-week
course at Jobs Partnership. It's a faith-based program where
churches and businesses come together to build people into
good workers.
The Bible is the textbook. Local pastors are the teachers.
And the students are Jobs Partnership graduates such as
Orlando's Michael Buggs.
"Many days I wanted to quit, but I hung in there,"
said Buggs, 45.
He found work at the Orange County Sheriff's Office. He
answers phones and does some data entry in the evidence
department. On the job nearly two years, he's stable.
"He's an asset," said Ramiro Nunez, Buggs' boss.
The classes helped, as they did for the 189 who have graduated
from the program since 1999. Stanakis said 172 landed jobs.
The other 17 are getting more training at tech schools.
Soft skills, eh? I mean, it's one thing to have tangible
abilities. But if you can't get along with folks and can't
give your boss an honest day's work, then who'll hire you?
If you have a job, who'll keep you?
"God is your ultimate boss," said Buggs, who told
me he's not really a big-time church guy. "But you
know you're working for your employer down here. And you
know that for God you're going to do your all and put out
your best. So, therefore, your employer is going to be pleased."
Amen to that. And amen for this man's humility. I asked
what kind of worker he was before the program:
"Above-average," he said.
And now?
"I rate myself above above-average," said Buggs,
still willing to learn.
He's teachable.
The man has soft skills.
You can contact Marc Stanakis at
407-235-1522.
John McCann can be reached at 386-851-7925 - jmccann@orlandosentinel.com.
Copyright © 2002, Orlando Sentinel
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