More on Liz
My daily schedule has finally cleared enough to focus on the blog and finish the round of staff introductions that I started in September. Today, I’m giving Liz a little more space than I provided to my other admissions pals. And she earns it — Liz is the first person most visitors to the office will meet. And whereas most of us started in “international” and ended up in higher education administration, Liz took a different pathway to both. Here’s her story:
I graduated from the University of Southern Maine with a degree in Business Administration. Degree in hand, my first “real world” job was with USA TODAY, and before you ask: No, I wasn’t a journalist. (It’s funny how that’s the first thing people think of when you tell them you worked for a newspaper.) I worked in Circulation, the behind-the-scenes operation required to make a newspaper work. Our office handled the printing, sales, distribution, and customer service for the New England area.
I started out as an Administrative Coordinator in USA TODAY‘s Marketing department (marketing, in the newspaper industry, being a fancy word for sales), handling any and all paperwork, purchasing, data processing, and general support for three managers. I find enjoyment in routine, and in the structured chaos that exists in an admin position (including what others may consider mundane, such as paperwork and data processing). After a year or so, I moved to the Customer Service side of the office, which allowed me to experience the unpredictability of working directly with customers — it made for an exciting and sometimes frustrating day, but it kept me on my toes and taught me how to juggle competing work demands. In addition to my 9-to-5 job, I remained highly active in my National Sorority which you’ve previously read about. Needless to say, I rarely had a dull moment with either position.
Fortunately or unfortunately (depending on how you look at it), after three years at USA TODAY, I was forced to think about my future career, when I was one of many customer service reps who were laid off. And so, after I had finished crying over being laid off for the first time ever, I started to think about what I liked to do. I realized that a return to higher education administration was the way for me to go. I loved my time in college: I loved working with students when I was a student worker in a university office and when I was a Resident Assistant; and I loved the sense of community that higher ed brought, and that didn’t exist for me at the newspaper.
This brings me to where I am now at The Fletcher School. Working in the Admissions Office as the Staff Assistant has allowed me to get my foot back in the door of higher education. I’m in a position where I utilize my admin and customer service skills from USA TODAY, as well as the event planning experience I gained from my sorority. I don’t know if Admissions is my final stopping place in higher education, as it’s a brand new area for me, but I am enjoying what I do here every day. I still have the structured chaos that comes with being in an admin role, and I truly enjoy the spontaneity and unpredictable nature of working with prospective applicants and current students.