International Development Career Highlights of 2011

by Shana Montesol Johnson

It’s hard to believe that 2011 is wrapping up.  One of my favorite year-end traditions is looking back on the year that has passed, noting the highlights, the low points, and (hopefully) the personal and professional growth.

Recently I asked blog readers, coaching clients, friends, and acquaintances working in international development to share their work-related highlight of 2011.  Their responses demonstrate that highlights can come in many forms – from program successes to leadership lessons to quitting a job.  I found their highlights uplifting and inspiring, and I hope you will, too.

Highlights at the Intersection of “Work” and “Life”

Our lives are about more than work. And our work is about more than work, too.  Some highlights of this year were at the intersection of “work” and “life.”

Chris Herink, National Director, World Vision Myanmar, shared, “One highlight from the past year was taking my wife and sons on a field visit.  The occasion was the opening of a new primary school, donated by a German company.  I have opened a number of schools, health clinics, latrines, water tanks, and other projects in my career, but this was the first time that my whole family was together for such an event.  While it was gratifying to see children learning in a better environment (the previous school was crumbling mess built 70 years ago), it was also fulfilling to see my children with the local children.  Not only did this cultivate a sense of gratitude, but it also helped me answer the question, “What does Daddy do all day?”  Saying “local capacity building” does not really mean much to a 6-year-old.  When we talk about a work/life balance, the implicit assumption is that clear boundaries can and should be drawn between the two.  I suppose this experience was a highlight, because “work” and “life” intersected in a fun and meaningful way.

“My highlight was running my first marathon race!” shared Angus Barnes, Client Manager and Practice Leader, International Development Assistance, Sinclair Knight Merz.  “You might say that’s not a ‘professional life’ highlight (no, I didn’t win any prize or get paid appearance money), but it’s important to have those non-professional goals outside your work life (e.g., fitness, family, friends) that can result in increased productivity at work.  So spending hours on the road training through winter actually made me more focused, relaxed and confident re the work situation… now for my next adventure!”

Leadership Successes

Some highlights were related to breakthroughs in leading and managing others.

Cindy Malvicini, Senior Water Resources Specialist at the Asian Development Bank, said that one of her highlights was a recent ADB mission.  “I was leading a team of 5, none of whom had previously worked together, and the team gelled well and had fun together despite a hectic field trip schedule in rather sub-optimal conditions (in India). I have noted in 2011 that I often take my job too seriously, and it was a gift to just laugh and be myself even as the team leader. I learned more about how to manage in a more personal yet still professional way – one of the strengths of women’s leadership that we often stifle!”

A manager at an international NGO in Cambodia, who asked not to be named, shared, “My top highlight from this year was indeed more meaningful than monumental.”  She explained that at the beginning of 2011, she took over supervision of one program team, headed by “an older, reticent Cambodian colleague – one of the smartest people I’ve ever worked with, but who had been trained by years of civil unrest and hardship to keep information and ideas close to the vest.”  Throughout the past year, they slowly built rapport and trust.  The older gentleman began stopping by her office on his own initiative to share updates, or to proactively talk things through with her.

“Last week, we completed his performance review, and this man of few words wrote in his review that he wanted to thank his supervisor for her valuable support during normal and critical times, and that without her support, he couldn’t do his job successfully.  Supervising people is an immense challenge, and I think all self-aware supervisors struggle with whether they are hitting the right balance of motivating their teams, pushing them when needed, and giving them space to do and learn for themselves.   The eternal question: when do you jump in and do, when do you demonstrate, when do you manage and from what distance, and when do you let things play out so the team can learn from mistakes.  I’ve been reflecting a lot on this challenge this year, so to receive that positive feedback from an unexpected place was a huge highlight of my year.”

Making an Impact

People who work in international development place a huge value on making an impact.  It’s no wonder that some of this year’s highlights were about program successes.

“A highlight of my professional year was to see the Helping Babies Breathe project become such a model for effective partnerships,” says Bonnie Koenig of Going International.  “I started working on strategies for scaling up this project several years ago when there was just one organization developing a global curriculum. It now has over 15 partners (academic, corporate, governmental and NGOs) working together in over 30 countries.  There have been significant efforts made to work in true partnerships across many challenging boundaries (real and artificial) and this has been rewarding to see.”

“The highlight of my year was exceeding 9 of our 10 indicator targets for the Philippine Sanitation Alliance project (we met the 10th indicator target),” said Lisa Kircher Lumbao, Chief of Party for the USAID-funded project.  “Several of the targets were quite high and we worked very hard to meet them.  After eight years working in the sanitation sector I feel that we accomplished a great deal with a very small amount of money and few staff. It’s sad to have it end, and to close our project office, but new opportunities and challenges await!”

Weh Yeoh, Rehabilitation Advisor with Handicap International, shared, “All year I had been training local partner staff on the social model of disability, which focuses on the barriers that society creates rather than impairments on the body of the individual. Seeing disability in this way is a fundamental step towards acknowledging a community’s collective responsibility to lower these barriers, and empowering people with disabilities to participate more fully. Usually, awareness of this concept is very low in partner staff, but there was a lightbulb moment when I asked a group on my last week in China what they thought disability was.  The answer, from a 60+ year old man, came back absolutely spot on: “Disability is the barriers that are created by society, that stop some people from doing what the rest of us can do.” I had to hug him, I was so impressed with his answer!”

Professional Beginnings…and Endings

Sometimes the high point of the year is related to starting a new chapter.  Since 2006 when he began teaching, Brendan Rigby has been working toward a career in education in the development sector.  Earlier this year, he started a job as an education officer for UNICEF Ghana.  “I am ‘on the ground’ and ‘in the field’, in northern Ghana, working very closely with a number of NGOs and government partners to study and support the improvement of basic education. It is fascinating to see aid and development in motion, from a donor to a recipient perspective. I know this is an amazing professional opportunity, for which I am very privileged.”

The highlight of the year may also be an ending.  The career highlight of 2011 for me was quitting my jobs,” shares Lara Quarterman, consultant.  “Yes, I had two and I left them both at the same time.  I had been at both for three years and had learned an incredible amount through challenging projects and supportive supervisors.  I knew I could continue on the same path and experience more success, including promotions and raises, but I wasn’t sure it was the path I wanted to be on.  I knew I needed a change, but I wasn’t sure what it was.  I booked a flight for a two-week solo vacation and came back with the answer.  Or at least closer to the answer: I needed to initiate the change if it was to come.  I left my jobs in October and although I am not quite sure what the next step will be, I am enjoying the downtime to reflect and make a conscious choice on how I want to move forward.”

Since I am fascinated by the process by which people make career decisions, I asked Lara to share more about how she came to this decision.  “I think the biggest factor was that I was physically removed from ‘home’ and had the freedom to think bigger than when you are right in the middle of something.  I find just getting out of the city I am living in helps to do that too.  I think I knew the answer deep down and I just needed the space to think it through and find it.”

She Stole Mine!

Disclaimer: Before I share the next highlight, I solemnly swear that I did not, in any way, pressure, cajole, or bribe the following individual to issue the statement below.

I received the following email from one of my coaching clients, an international development consultant who requested to withhold her name: “My professional highlight of the year was joining the “What’s Next?” coaching group!  Seriously, it was wonderful to find a forum to share experiences with no fear of judgment or criticism. It really made a big difference to me, and gave me confidence about being myself at all times, even if and when the going gets tough.”

What can I say?!  She stole mine!  The highlight of my year, professionally speaking, was leading the “What’s Next?” coaching group.  I had a blast facilitating the group sessions and seeing people gain greater clarity, confidence, and excitement about their careers, their lives, and their future.  I can’t wait to launch the next “What’s Next?” group in 2012.

 

What about you?  I hope you’ll share the career highlight of your year in the Comments section below. And here is wishing all of you a 2012 full of wonderful highlights, at work and in life.

 Photo by Mykl Roventine

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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

Jennifer Lentfer

Great reflections! The highlight of my year was a poem of mine being included in a composition commissioned for the opening of the Derry Peace Bridge. (I even wrote writer/poet rather than aid worker on the immigration card!) The bridge itself is stunning and the experience of joining the delegation and walking across the bridge for the first time with those who have been involved in the Northern Ireland peace process was a moment to remember for the rest of my life. What a privilege. That day there was a palpable sense of hope, while at the same time, the acknowledgement that there is still more work to be done. You can read more at: http://www.how-matters.org/2011/06/08/an-aid-worker’s-poetic-journey/ and http://www.how-matters.org/2011/07/26/delights-of-the-green-isle/

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Shana Montesol Johnson

Jennifer, what an amazing highlight of your year! Thank you for sharing. I enjoyed reading your posts about this experience, and the journey that led to it. I love that once you finally “came out of the closet” as a poet (http://www.how-matters.org/2011/01/24/coming-out-of-the-closet/), your writing fulfilled a need halfway around the world. Just another shining example of how when we bring our best gifts and our true strengths to our work, magic can happen. Best wishes for more magical intersections of your many talents in 2012!

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Keri Lijinsky

I would say that the professional highlight of my year was having learned a highly-demanded and respected skill (project and financial management), and at the same time realizing that my job is not for me. There are several reasons that I am grateful for this year: 1) I always sell myself short, lacking the confidence to try something completely new even if my innate skills or education seem like a match. The job I fell into (actually in 2010) was unchartered territory, yet I rose to the challenge and succeeded. 2) I now feel more confident in applying for a job in any sector due to my experience in this area at the age of 31. 3) I have discovered that I really dislike what I’m doing and, oddly enough, this is extremely liberating. The worst kind of unhappiness is a cryptic one – feeling miserable and not knowing why. Through the What’s Next course, I have shed light on what I don’t like and why, which gives me the tools to go on a professional shopping spree in search of a good fit.

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Jaume Fortuny

The highlight of my year was to be able to bring my proposals for development to one of the Under-SG of United Nations. Half of my life I’ve fighting against digital divide and I decided to take a step forward. And I was invited, I was received and I was listened. I do not know if my proposals will come to see the light (and to be sure, I’m a little skeptical), but at least I can say that I have tried this way. And I will go on trying.

This, and understand by my own how fragile is human life, made me decide that my working life have to be aligned with my passion and with what makes me feel good in life. Although I don’t know the way my future will take, but I’m sure will be next to the development of human capabilities.

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Shana Montesol Johnson

Jaume, thanks for sharing the highlight of your year, and congratulations on being invited to present your proposals to the UN. Savor that accomplishment – and please keep us posted!

I wholeheartedly agree that our working lives ought to be aligned with our passions. I talk, write, and coach a lot about the importance of knowing our strengths, and orienting our work around them — if we can do this, we’ll deeply enjoy our work, be more effective than ever before, and produce some amazing results (hopefully making the world a better place!). Best wishes to you as you continue to work in alignment with your passions.

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