My Aptitude for Factory Work

In my junior year of high school, more than 35 years ago, my Guidance Counselor Rita Ostrom asked me to take a career aptitude test. She suggested we would use the results to help me start thinking about life after high school. 

I had always thought of myself as smart, and expected I would go to college. My high school resume to that moment reflected this: I took AP courses and the AP exams, built my extra-curricular resume, and had scored well on the PSAT. I knew I wanted to go to college in a big city and study politics or public affairs. 

When I sat down with Mrs. Ostrom to review the test results, she told me they recommended I’d do well in a factory environment. 

A factory environment? I was stunned. 

While as a child I had dreamed of being the Shirley to my best friend Laverne and working the line in the Shotz Brewery, I now had big plans for myself. In fact, a year later I publicly declared via my high school yearbook that I intended to “be the first female president of the United States.” 

I tossed aside the results of the exam and proceeded to stumble my way through college, graduate school, and then several careers. 

Looking back on that experience, I realize the test results were spot on. I wish Mrs. Ostrom had the language to help 17 year-old me understand the subjective interpretation of the results. What she might have said is the test revealed that I have aptitude for: 

  • Carefully following instructions to design and build complex, multi-part products. 

  • Successfully understanding when I need to adhere to the letter of the law and where there is room for interpretation. 

  • Developing and testing systems for improving the efficiency of processes. 

  • Expressing and acting on a relentless curiosity about how work gets done. 

  • Being an enthusiastic and encouraging member of a team. 

These are among the aptitudes and skills I think make me a strong and successful market capture and proposal professional today, particularly one who specializes in navigating compliance-heavy government procurements.

I long ago abandoned my aspiration to be the first female president of the United States. And right now, I'm leaning into my professional identity as a proposal management professional. I recently earned certification in market capture and proposal management from the Association of Proposal Management Professionals, and I've starting a proposal consulting business. Thank you Mrs. Ostrom for planting the seeds back in 1987 to help me understand what I’m great at in 2023. 

Previous
Previous

Not THAT Kind of Consultant