South African National Office Professional of the Year Award 2011/2012 PDF Print E-mail


Priscilla Bouwer was awarded the OPSA/Rexel SA National Office Professional of the Year Award 2011/2012 on 7 September at the glamorous Secretaries Day High Tea at the Johannesburg Crowne Plaza – The Rosebank Hotel. OPSA Patron, Edith Venter, presented the award to Priscilla. The event, which was attended by many of the country's top Office Professionals, marked the culmination of a four-month process to determine the leading Office Professional in South Africa. She is the twenty-eighth woman to receive this award! The first Office Professional of the Year was named in 1983.

Priscilla is the Executive PA to Herman van den Berg, Managing Director of Yokogawa SA (Pty) Ltd and has been in the profession for more than 15 years. Her vision and belief as an Office Professional includes attributes such as learning, skills development, growth and sharing your knowledge and experiences with others every day. She also believes that it is important to have a positive impact on every person with whom she comes into contact with. Listening and learning from others broadens and enhances her skills. Priscilla believes that she leads by example. She is currently working on starting a PA Forum in her organization, which will focus on energizing optimism, professionalism, initiative and leadership.

In recognition of her achievement, Priscilla was presented with a magnificent trophy and a range of prizes including:

R10 000 in Cash generously sponsored by Rexel Office Products
Voucher to attend Office SA 2012 - SA's premier conference for admin professionals run by Siyanqoba Seminars (Valued at R9000)
Planet Fitness one-year gym membership (Valued at R6000)
Rexel Auto+100 Shredder (Valued at R4300)
R2 000 voucher from Office National
20 000 points on a Smart Shopper Card from Pick 'n Pay (Valued at R2000)
One night for two (including breakfast) at River Place sponsored by Cardinal Leisure (Valued at R1500)
Seven piece travel make up brush set from Colourburst.co.za (Valued at R600)
Two hour Hands on Retreat Spa Escape Package (Valued at R599)
Be my Guest by Fay Lewis (Valued at R260)
One year subscription to Office Life magazine (Valued at R120)


A huge thank you to all our generous sponsors who made the day possible.

 
Next >

Newsflash

How To Manage Your Boss

1. Communicate properly...

... on time, in adequate detail and regularly. Make sure that formal communication works and also that you simply talk and compare notes from time to time. Effective communication prevents a lot of misunderstandings and breakdowns in relationships.

2. Identify any blockages

Examine your current relationship with your boss. Identify where the blockages to a good working relationship lie - perhaps you have trouble communicating, or find it hard to express your own opinions or have discussions about workload. Identify what triggers these problems. Similaraly,think about parts of the relationship that work well. Build upon these and work on cutting problems in other areas.

3. Identify your boss's leadership style

It is important to be able to recognise the way, or ways, that your boss typically acts or behaves towards you. The following are typical leadership styles: bureaucratic, charismatic, dictatorial, consultative, laissez-faire. A specific style or mix of them will require different approaches from you. Also think about your boss's 'thinking' style. It's no surprise that we get on well with some people but others rub us up the wrong way. Try to figure out if your boss is one for detail, for the 'big picture', reactive or proactive, likes or hates change.

4. Identify your boss's key objectives and values

Think about what is important to your boss and work hard on these areas. The two main areas to pay attention to are:
a) His/her objectives - to your manager, what are the key objectives and what support can you give
b) towards achieving them?
c) What personal values your boss thinks are important - for instance customer care. Work on
d) supporting these values and don't do things that are contrary to them. Be wary though of values
e) that are clearly of self-interest, such as personal status.

5. Clarify boundaries of responsibility

Sort out with your boss exactly what decisions you can make

a)After discussion with your boss
b)On your own but reporting to your boss afterwards
c)On your own with no need to report.
d)Lack of clarity can be a major source of conflict and friction.

6. Tackle the simple issues

Look through the problems you have identified and decide which are the simple issues to solve. Can small administrative problems be solved by introducing a simple new system? Discuss minor sensitivities (eg opening the office window, working in silence or with background noise) with your boss and try to reach a compromise. Don't waste time reporting unimportant issues which your boss would expect you to deal with as routine. Work overload is often a common cause of conflict. Don't take on work you can't manage. Be honest but remember your manager's objectives and always suggest an alternative solution. Don't underestimate yourself or your point of view. If you don't have faith in your ability to do a good job and develop in your role, your boss certainly won't.

7. Tackle longer term issues with assertiveness

Some blockages can't be removed overnight. Concentrate on building up a stronger relationshipwith your boss by being assertive but not aggressive. Express your point of view, respect yourboss's opinions and work to find mutually acceptable solutions to existing problems. This will improve the value of your relationship and help you to handle difficult situations more effectively in the future. Don't go over your boss's head however attractive this may seem. If you feel blocked, tackle the issues directly to avoid creating other problems later.

8. Focus on loyalty and support

Concentrate on supporting the weak spots in your boss's make up without making it too obvious you are doing so. Find out what parts of the business they enjoy and are good at, and those s/he doesn't like doing or perhaps doesn't have the skills to deal with. Make yourself indispensable. Show you are keen to learn skills which complement your boss's skills. Win their trust by achieving things they value. Together you can become a winning team.