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Great At Coordinating Others? You Could Earn Up To $150,000 A Year

by Noah Smith
Thursday, July 30, 2015



Coordination, which involves adjusting actions in relation to others' actions, is a skill that belongs to a group known as social skills. Social skills is a set of skills that describes developed capacities used to work with people to achieve goals. Other skills that belong in this group are

  • Social Perceptiveness
  • Persuasion
  • Negotiation
  • Instructing
  • Service Orientation

The occupations where coordination play a major role are listed below.

Chief executives
Chief executives determine and formulate policies and provide overall direction of companies or private and public sector organizations within guidelines set up by a board of directors or similar governing body. Plan, direct, or coordinate operational activities at the highest level of management with the help of subordinate executives and staff managers. Other skills that are considered important for this occupation include active learning, active listening, complex problem solving, critical thinking, judgment and decision making, management of financial resources, management of material resources, management of personnel resources, monitoring, negotiation, persuasion, reading comprehension, speaking, systems analysis, systems evaluation, time management and writing.
Median Annual Salary: $165,080

Foresters
Foresters manage public and private forested lands for economic, recreational, and conservation purposes. They may also inventory the type, amount, and location of standing timber, appraise the timber's worth, negotiate the purchase, and draw up contracts for procurement. They may also determine how to conserve wildlife habitats, creek beds, water quality, and soil stability, and how best to comply with environmental regulations. They may also devise plans for planting and growing new trees, monitor trees for healthy growth, and determine optimal harvesting schedules. Other skills that are considered important for this occupation include critical thinking, judgment and decision making, monitoring and systems analysis.
Median Annual Salary: $54,540 Projected 10-Year Employment Growth: 12.13%

Industrial production managers
Industrial production managers plan, direct, or coordinate the work activities and resources necessary for manufacturing products in accordance with cost, quality, and quantity specifications. Other skills that are considered important for this occupation include judgment and decision making, management of personnel resources and monitoring.
Median Annual Salary: $87,160
 

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