Words With The Weployees

Meet our Weployee of the Week - Dauksh

4 Min Read
Sara   |   April 11, 2019
Featured-Dauksh

What was your first job?

I joined Weploy in October 2018 and got my first job at Konekt Employment in Sydney by December 2018.

 

Who was the biggest influence in your career?

For me, the biggest influence are my parents who put in a huge amount of work and emotional investment encouraging me to get out of my comfort zone and stand beside me in every challenge I take. I also find TedX talks very inspiring and influential.

 

What would your ideal job be?

Something which allows me to wake up each day with a new challenge and end it with the satisfaction of coining, developing or implementing a change for a better future.

 

If you could have one super-human power what would it be?

I would be an “Opportunity Man” who can provide the Opportunity for everyone, somehow to try something they yearn to achieve.

 

What’s your guilty pleasure?

I am a big fan of teen comedy sitcoms that spread a deeper message through dark humour.

 

Do you have any other skills or talents others don’t really know about?

Only people close to me know that I am a very thorough observer of others.

 

Name a few of your daily habits?

After University I started a fresh chapter of growing new interests. I volunteered for a few not-for-profit organisations, began listening to audio books, followed a few Banking Channels on YouTube and exercising.

 

What publications do you regularly read?

From Financial Review to World Economic Forum, I follow various topics such as Finance, World Economy, Environment and Extra-Terrestrial life. My genuine interest is finding the things people are struggling with and looking for the problems faced, so that I can see if I can try to help.

 

Can you tell me a little bit about the challenges you’ve faced trying to find employment?

While in Australia, I did a lot of part time jobs to cover my expenses and save up for some decent outings with my friends. Towards the end of my studies, I couldn’t manage to get shortlisted in any of the jobs. Weploy came without conditions. They tested me with a standard selection process and I felt heard throughout the whole process.   

 

How do you feel that the current structure of hiring has disadvantaged some people and not others? Do you feel the hiring landscape really allows you to showcase your skills?

I feel everyone is different in terms of performing in a role. Some people take time to adapt and then may excel way beyond the ones who are immediately more impressive. Also, everyone has had different experiences in life. Some might grasp things better due to the situations they have experienced before and may learn or display other skills when required.

I understand not all business models could support an open recruitment process, but they must try with different candidates to better understand the full picture of what they could offer - beyond the resume.  

 

Did Weploy change your situation significantly? If so, can you tell me two ways it has helped further your career path?

Weploy made a huge change for me. Even though I am not working where I aspire to yet, I understand now that my career is a ladder and the best view will take a lot of climbing. I can see now that not all organisations want Analysts, they want someone to workup their current process and then enhance them for better results

The ease of finding a job by keeping the Weployees as prospects leads to wiser decision making from the Weployers and less bias towards the candidates shortlisted. Also, matching a person based on the skills saves a lot of time for the candidates waiting for a job and might suggest how to upskill themselves too.

 

Do you feel that opportunities through Weploy changed your perspective?

For people who are open to any work culture and challenges, Weploy is an ideal platform to search for and grab new opportunities. It felt great when Weploy realised my skills beyond my studies and placed me in a company where I found new ways to implement and new prospects to look for carving my future career path.

In my current experience at Konekt, I’ve learnt to deal with many new things on a daily basis, which helps me to develop the skills needed to integrate into the structure of the company.

 

What made you try Weploy?

I believe corporates have much to learn from Start-ups. The service from a Start-up is behind an idea of solving a problem, rather than earning capital gains. My hopes were to try a technology that equates with the gigantic job market and aims to solve or smoothen the basics of the industry rather than complicating it with biases and myths.

 

What was the process like for you?

From the invite to complete the assessment to the video interview with HR. All the standards are equal with any big 4 selection process I’ve experienced.

I felt well listened to and was dealt with very attentively. This thorough approach made the process wiser and more accurate when it came to identifying me for roles. Best part was, they were looking for people with skills, not to fill a certain position, but to perform in different types of short-term roles required.

I loved how transparent and honest they were, assuring me that things will take place and when, and keeping in touch with the people placed. Being a Weployee feels more like being part of a family who guides their nurtured children into the reality of the world! Even if I am busy in a job, my phone has often buzzed with someone from Weploy touching base with any new developments in the jobs.

 

What was the biggest surprise using Weploy?

To me the biggest surprise was that a start-up can change the traditional recruitment landscape. From filling prospective vacancies within minutes, to providing greater opportunities to diverse candidates with different skills. Weploy is more than a company, they are a movement which could go global, with my full support!

 

Has Weploy helped your work-life balance?

To me, work-life balance comes when you have equal access to both. So yes, Weploy did provide me the work, and brought balance to start my career on a good note. The hours are negotiated before my assignment begins so I can organise the rest of my life around it.

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Ask the Experts, Tips
How to Make Better Decisions

When I think about the best leaders I've worked with there has always been one element that stands true. I trust and respect their decision making. I don't have to want to be their best friend, but I have to believe in the decisions they make.

I'm faced with a multitude of decisions every day and my biggest priority, both professionally and personally, is to constantly improve how I make decisions. So I thought I'd share the four most important principles I've developed when it comes to making decisions. I've also added further reading within each principle, and if you're keen to learn more I'd highly recommend subscribing to the podcast and blog of Farnam Street as it's a goldmine of wisdom within this field of study.

 

Principle 1: Prioritise

We are faced with a paradox of our own evolutionary making. People who lack choice, seem to want and fight for choice but this has a cost. The more choices and decisions we make, the less effective we become over time at choice making. It's well understood now that we have limited resources when it comes to making decisions, and continually working this muscle creates decision fatigue. We see this in all parts of life, with research showing judges make poorer decisions later in the day. But we're not just talking about big decisions, choices come at us from all angles each day. Choosing what coffee to order, which shampoo to buy, if I should snooze my alarm or get up. No matter how trivial, they all have an impact on our ability to make good decisions. So to improve, the only option is to limit the number of decisions you make. A great tool I found on the Farnam Street blog was a take on the 2x2 Eisenhower matrix that categorised decisions into four categories.

  1. Irreversible and inconsequential
  2. Reversible and inconsequential
  3. Reversible and consequential
  4. Irreversible and consequential

Those decisions that are inconsequential, whether reversible or not, are to be delegated. For decisions that have consequences but are reversible - there is opportunity to run experiments of which your team or individuals can share the learnings. The only decisions that should require your brain power are those which are consequential and irreversible. Of course this is only a framework and you will have to clearly define what the terms ‘consequential’ and ‘reversible’ mean to you and your business. But this has already helped me focus on what matters and build capability and empowerment in my teams.

Further reading: https://fs.blog/2009/07/an-introduction-to-decision-making/

 

Principle 2: Give Yourself Time

It's easy to think that great decision makers are those that are instantly able to weigh up a scenario, identify the possible outcomes and come to an immediate decision. It's impressive but what's the rush? If this really is an important decision - by which I mean one that is both consequential and irreversible, then the desire to make an immediate decision is due to us falling prey to a cognitive bias of pushing to do what is easiest with the available information.

It's hard to think of opposing points of view or other alternate outcomes but that's really what success in my job is all about. I try to give myself time to think about as many contributing factors and apply as many lenses onto a situation as I can. Then I give myself thinking time. Personally, I’ve found I need to change my environment, go for a walk, or sit in another part of the office to let my mind wander around the decision. Play thought experiments and try to walk through the outcomes with different hats on.

One great model from the mathematician Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi is to inverse the problem. To do this, rather than try to think of solving a problem forward (for instance - trying to increase productivity in your team), instead invert the problem, and ask what are all the things that I could do to reduce productivity in my team. Then don't do them! It may not solve the problem you're facing but it can mean you don't factor in arguments that can lead to poor outcomes.

Further reading: https://fs.blog/2014/06/avoiding-stupidity/

 

Principle 3: Be accepting of ignorance

First let's define what a decision in uncertainty means. Uncertainty is when we don't know the outcome of a decision and we don't know the probability of those outcomes. This is different from a decision in risk - where we don't know the outcomes but we do know the probabilities. A professional poker player will know the probabilities of a win based on their hand but the outcome is still unknown. So, when dealing with uncertainty you are going to be ignorant of some elements that are relevant and consequential to a decision. Importantly there are two states of ignorance.

  1. Primary ignorance: If you cannot see it or understand it, it does not exist
  2. Recognised ignorance: We recognise we cannot predict all the outcomes

It may seem that if we can't predict the unknowable outcomes any better if they are recognised or not... then why bother. But when you are aware of your own ignorance, you can start to look for sources of cognitive bias that could cloud your decision-making. There are plenty of such biases that can affect how we approach decision making - but the three that are most relevant are:

  1. Overconfidence Bias: The subjective confidence that accuracy of our own beliefs is higher than the objective accuracy
  2. Salience Bias: We tend to focus on information that is more prominent and perceptible to us, ignoring factors that are less so.
  3. Confirmation Bias: We tend to recall examples that reinforce our existing beliefs

Personally, I look to embrace my own ignorance when it comes to uncertainty and try to uncover how my decisions could be coloured.

Further reading: https://sites.hks.harvard.edu/fs/rzeckhau/anatomy of ignorance.pdf

 

Principle 4: Optimise for the long term

Another factor I find important is to optimise decisions for the long term. Again - the human brain is hard-wired to seek instant gratification. For me, this comes down to looking for win/win scenarios and what is called second order thinking. They are strikingly simple concepts in theory but both require conscious effort to implement. Any relationship, if it is to last, must be win/win so when I'm considering which direction to go, it must benefit both my customer, and Weploy as a business, if it has any chance to prosper over time. The other model, second order thinking can be boiled down to a simple phrase:

And then what?

If I make this decision now, what happens tomorrow, what about in a weeks time, a month, year, 10 years… Not all decisions need you to go too far in the future, but thinking about the branches of possible outcomes through and then what is hugely valuable. I regularly find decisions come up that can be negative in the first order (have a high cost, slow down production etc.) but when we move to the second order and third order they can become a net positive. As all of my decisions should look to build long term, sustainable competitive advantage, second order thinking is essential if I am to succeed.

Further reading: https://medium.com/@noahmp/second-order-thinking-3fc2a224b131

 

So those are the four principles I try to use when making decisions, hopefully you find it valuable and I'd love to hear more about the most important tricks and models you use to improve your decision making.

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Education: Year 12, Cert 4 commercial cookery, Cert 4 security operations

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