I could've entitled these 23 skills I learned from my actual
23 years but 20 is from me and I would like to hear the 3 from you. What have
you learned in your previous career (not necessarily military) that you have
learned or unlearned from those past life that you will continue to do or never
do it again? Here are 5 of the 20 enterprising skills and leadership
abilities I learned and use now as owner of a growing small business company.
1. Resilience - As a 23-year Navy veteran, I was structured
to do all my duties and finish them in short notice and be able to recover
quickly even if there is a personal issue going on such as when I have to leave
my 3-month-old son with my wife who happens to care for my mom's fragile health
as well. Although there is a limited family support group the military can
provide, there is no excuse in accomplishing a mission - I must recover quickly
from difficulties.
In my two years as entrepreneur - toughness and difficulties
dealing with deadline and customers is important to meet our return of
investment.
2. Multi-Tasking. This is a double-edged sword because I can
be unfocused on one task from another but when things go south, we must be
ready to do more than one task. Apart from my main duty in the Navy as career
counselor for squadrons from ships onboard USS Lincoln and USS Nimitz and
Military Sealift Command I was also given a major task as supervisor for
administration personnel, compartment and spaces of Air Wing spaces for 2,000
personnel, Equal Opportunity Manager, training and educational officer and even
Drug and Alcohol and Sexual Assault programs.
I learned to manage my time wisely and seeking the help of
my fellow Chiefs (these are my Navy colleagues on almost equal rank who passionately
look out for each other) to move on and prioritize what is important and what
needs to be done right away.
In business, it is important to be knowledgeable in many
areas, for example, in case something happens in my website I will be able to
tweak or monitor small errors or find the best one who can do the job. Also, I
can still run multiple Facebook and Instagram pages while I am sending email to
my clients or waiting for clients a coffee shop. I am also an independent
certified Career Counselor that needs timely response.
3. Courage. Many have said that public speaking is the major
fear (than snakes) because we don't know what is going to happen during those
talk. But I believe it is the "going" into the unknown is the number
one fear of everyone. In the Navy, we are all given a task to conduct training
once a month on average - whatever your job is. Speaking to public, doing a
task that I have no experience, being volunteered to go to a rescue mission in
Indonesia, shooting an M-16 or Mortars, leaving your love ones - are just some
of the fearful things I did that I learned to embrace while I was a First Class
at VAW 116 and twice at the Seabee battalion Five and Forty.
As owner of Mvoss Creation LLC and multiple social media
sites, I courageously (some would awkwardly say stupid) conduct public
speaking, create untried marketing strategy and post a video of me lip-singing
Seven Years on our Instagram page. These moments that I think outside the box
or go against the "rule" gets me business and big contract deals in a
month.
4. Bootstrapping. Cash is not just the lifeblood of every
business but everybody. Loans or investment are critical in business but during
the beginning of my business we use the most of what we have instead buying or
borrowing. Lately, the Navy learned how to recycle but during deployment out to
sea where access to all the convenience are very limited, we learn to use a
dirty blanket to sweep the floor, use coffee filter to wipe sensitive
equipment, use the smallest space into something very useful and other hacks or
DIY (Do It Yourself).
When Mvoss Creation LLC (a small promotional branding
company me and Myla created) just started with our first trade show, we have a
very limited budget, we were able to use my son's flat screen TV, some thrift
store picture frames to put our flat promotional products and dollar tree items
like clips. We pulled it and had a sophisticated booth and gained few followers
and new clients.
5. Lifetime Learning. All Navy personnel are required to
have a monthly training on their field besides the six or ten annual General
Military Training. I have completed some of my college and post-graduate
studies using tuition assistance as well. These training not only keeps the
Navy updated but helps us Sailors get promoted, minimize our job error but also
transition well later in our career.
As an entrepreneur, risk is inevitable, but it can be minimized
by educating ourselves. I am in post-college
for 18 years and continuously taking courses through Linda (an online course
through LinkedIn, it is free for the first 12 months for veterans), Udemy,
Coursera and other opportunities learning HTML, graphic design and public
speaking through Toastmasters and Dale Carnegie or even informal workshops in
our local community or DIY social media sites.
Never stop learning and never stop sharing what you have
learned.
I could keep all these five items as my trade secret for the
past two years as a business owner, but I chose to share it because I know that
it will bring me back support and comments that I can learn too. I am sure
there is more than twenty (depending on how open minded you are or your
willingness to learn) that I have absorbed from the military and so on my next
15 skills, I would like to get your input and share your story on it as I talk
my next 15 on my next blog. Here is a preview on the rest of the 15
enterprising and leadership skills I learned from the Navy:
6. Stay and Look Healthy or you're out
7. Be a Team Player but Lead
8. Copy and Paste but personalized it (Apple, Microsoft, Toyota - they all did)
9. Sponsor and Mentor someone
10. Don't Shortcut (or in the Navy, it's called Gundecking)
11. You are Late when You come in on Time (always be in your appointment 15 minutes early)
12. Wake up Early or Else (in the Navy ship, you miss the shower time, the donut, and the omelet)
13. Meeting is not always in a Boardroom (we do it in passageway every Monday)
14. Attention to Detail (From haircut to creases in your uniform)
15. Always respect your Boss and everyone else (Never disrespect your customers)
16. Use your power to Influence (Ranking has privileges to do good)
17. Don’t break the structure but always improvise
18. Use your leverage (hookup and mafia mentality)
19. Be patient to change and wait (change is constant on deployments and lots of waiting)
20. It’s an Adventure (enjoy your port calls while you’re in it)
On the other side, there are also habits and traits I gained from the military that I would never continue to do wherein I will be drafting next could be contentious or may touch some nerves of those who practice these not-so-recommended traits for more than 20 or worst 30 years in the military that does not work in the civilian and millennial community of where some of us continues to struggle, survive or succeed. I will show you the preview in a photo below - not necessarily true but just for laughs.
Remember whether you are a veteran or not, everything you did - fail or succeed in doing from mopping to leading becomes a value of you, learn from it and move on like Liam Neeson here:
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