4 Key Career Skills New Grads Are Missing | CollegeXpress
Four people in business attire on bench, holding big speech bubbles above heads

What Are New Grads Missing? The Top 4 Career Skills to Learn Now

It's common for today's students to graduate college lacking essential skills they need. Here are four to pick up and master for a successful career.

A college education is largely seen as the golden ticket to a solid career. But does college really make you a better, more promising, and competitive employee? I’ve been a business owner and employer for almost 20 years in fields spanning from law to construction. Experience has shown me that recent college grads lack a core group of soft skills that are critical in the workplace and other professional environments. Here are four crucial skills to master for most careers that you should work on ASAP, whether you’re just starting college or about to graduate.

1. How to participate in small talk

Small talk is a crucial stepping stone to improving how we interact with other people, creating connections, and forging relationships—all of which are key to making an impact and advancing in the workplace. Employers look for this and other soft skills during the hiring process as it’s the first step in most conversations and makes it easier to adjust to a new work environment. The ability to converse well, in essence, allows you to empathize with people and forge deeper connections. However, the ability to converse and make small talk receives little emphasis in college and can be weakened through lack of exercise. MIT Sociology Professor Sherry Turkle noted in her New York Times opinion piece, “We live in a technological universe in which we are always communicating. And yet we have sacrificed conversation for mere connection.”

2. How to be persuasive

After establishing trust through basic conversation and relationship building, you can guide another person’s thoughts toward an intended outcome by learning the art of persuasion. Managers value persuasive employees because these are the individuals who can promote and sell products and services, make deals, and establish beneficial connections. They’re also the ones trusted to manage others and thus often get promoted. In college, persuasion skills can be acquired through courses in debate, logic, and philosophy. But they are often best acquired and honed beyond the classroom in your everyday life.

 

Related: Boost Your Career Advantages With These 5 Liberal Arts Skills

3. How to look at things analytically

Analytic skills are key to both work and so many real-life situations. Analytical thinking begins with one simple thing: asking good questions. This skill can be acquired in the classroom and developed through a wide range of extracurricular activities as well as off-campus experiences. Start by researching things you’re interested in. Make a point of finding answers for yourself instead of taking what you are told at face value. Once you’ve found your first answers, ask even more questions, like:

  • What does this mean?
  • Is there any inconsistency here?
  • What can I do with this information?
  • How can I apply this information to real life?

4. How to take initiative

From inquiry flows initiative, by far considered one of the most valuable attributes in the workplace. For example, one of my employees in construction once researched Salesforce software to improve our customer relationship management (CRM) and discovered it could be expanded to include construction progress. He then set his mind to programming the available software to link construction progress to our reporting system and track the sales cycle from initial prospect all the way to project completion. His initiative saved our company time, money, and effort, greatly increasing his value as an employee. Being well educated doesn’t just mean attending college and leaving with a degree; it means developing a toolkit of essential skills that are necessary to succeed in one’s chosen field. An emerging trend right now among federal and state hiring authorities is to eliminate the degree requirement for many government jobs and pivot toward skill-based assessments.

Related: Easy Next Steps to Follow After Landing a Great Job Offer

Because these and other valuable soft skills are not necessarily taught during the standard college experience, students must be intentional about acquiring them through activities such as internships and summer jobs. Whether you develop these skills in college or outside of it, I hope this overview will help prepare you to thrive in your personal endeavors and the workforce.

It’s never too early or too late to learn important career skills—and CX can help with just about all of them! Check out Our Best Advice on Building Important Skills as a Student to start leveling up.

 

Like what you’re reading?

Join the CollegeXpress community! Create a free account and we’ll notify you about new articles, scholarship deadlines, and more.

Join Now

Tags:

Join our community of
over 5 million students!

CollegeXpress has everything you need to simplify your college search, get connected to schools, and find your perfect fit.

Join CollegeXpress

College Quick Connect

Swipe right to request information.
Swipe left if you're not interested.

University of Idaho

Moscow, ID


Rose Kearsley

Rose Kearsley

High School Class of 2021

CollegeXpress has seriously helped me out a lot, especially when it comes to scholarships and studying for tests like the ACT. I also really love the financial help. It’s a little harder to pay because I live with a family of eight, so any help is appreciated. Thanks for this opportunity!

Asia Stockdale

Asia Stockdale

High School Class of 2021

CollegeXpress helped me overcome a huge hurdle. Because of the small town I live in, I felt like I would never achieve more. I felt like I could never go beyond because of costs. I feared I wouldn’t be able to find scholarships. I had no idea of where to start. With CollegeXpress, I easily found scholarships—they came to me. It was a helper, and I was instantly matched with opportunities to go above and beyond educationally.

Hailey Riddile

Hailey Riddile

High School Class of 2021

CollegeXpress has helped me find scholarships to apply for and look into more colleges. While there are many websites similar to CollegeXpress, every website is different, and I've found a lot of good insight on this website. Receiving emails from CollegeXpress about scholarships is extremely useful, and getting insight about colleges near, far, and anywhere in between helps me narrow down my choices to what I want, which is also super helpful. The articles are always really good reads, and I can't stress enough how helpful this website has been to me. Anything related to college is beneficial to me as a senior, and I have learned lots of useful things to help me on my college journey this year.

Laura Wallace

Laura Wallace

High School Class of 2019

My favorite part of CollegeXpress is that it features student writers so I get an inside perspective from students slightly older and farther along than me. I realize that other college websites also utilize student writers; however, I relate the most to the college writers that I read articles from on CollegeXpress.

Yuhlani Patterson

Yuhlani Patterson

High School Student

CollegeXpress has helped me find so many scholarships that fit me. They match me to colleges I have specific interest in to make searching for colleges way easier and more efficient. CollegeXpress refers me to schools that have my major of interest and backup schools if I want to change my mind. CollegeXpress also gives out their own scholarships, so you have even more of a chance at gaining multiple scholarships. This website has helped me de-stress from the pressure of not being able to afford college, [of finding] what schools are right for me, and how to find easy access to scholarships that most people never knew existed.