This. I was once naive and thought your skills were what mattered. My mom told me growing up it was who you knew and that it was important to socialize at work events. I ignored the advice because I thought she was wrong, but she was 100% correct.
BTW, our corporate picnic is tomorrow and I'm not going. :awe:
For me it was who you know to get in the door and what I know to get promoted up to my current spot.
both of these.
i busted my ass when i was a screen printer, i wanted to move up and be management someday. i was passed over many times for promotions, but i always got raises. when i voiced my concerns about it, i was told i was too important to the production bottom line to take higher in the management chain. in other words, the people i trained couldnt keep up with me, and my numbers were too good. thats when i decided to go to college and get an education. they fired me 3 months after i started school, and bugged me for a year after to help train my replacement again. he was an idiot.
my current field is pretty specialized, once you get trained you pretty much know what your competitors all know as well. after that its personal style, attention to detail and low bidding that gets you the work. who you know is important, it gets you the work.