1: Beat your first deadline
Whatever
your supervisor gives you to do first, beat the deadline by at least 24 hours.
2: Get to know people who can make things happen
You
might not need them yet, but saying hello to secretaries, technicians, porters etc.
is a very good idea before you need a last minute favor later. Then…
3: Thank people who do things for you
Especially
your PhD supervisor. It’s easy to complain if they aren’t there for you, but recognize
that they are almost certainly busier than you are, and show that you value
their time.
4: Get to know other people’s research
This
will give you a broader knowledge base, and stop you getting too narrowly
focused on your own research. You’ll learn far more (and faster) by talking to
people than you will by reading.
And
your colleagues are more likely to be interested in your work if you show an
interest in theirs.
5: Get really, really good at one thing
Nobody
knows everything. You’re not expected to. But try to get seriously good at at
least one thing.Even better if it’s something useful to other people.
6: What you write now, you won’t like in 3 years’ time
3
years from now, you’ll know far more than you do now. That’s the whole point of
the PhD.
The
value of doing a lit review now though his to learn the basics. Focus on basic
concepts, and don’t let writing get in the way of starting research.
7: Downloading papers doesn’t count as reviewing the
literature
I
mentioned this in 17 random tips for PhD success, but it’s worth saying again.
Check out this post on an easier way to review literature.
8: Publish
Everything
you do should be working towards getting published. If your work isn’t going to
be publishable, it’s not going to be worth a PhD.
9: Make contacts outside your department
Contacts are the lifeblood of your career. Get to know people at conferences, get their business
card, add them on LinkedIn, and that CV you send 3 years from now won’t be
coming from a stranger.
Write
notes as if they are for someone else working coming in to take over your work
after your shift ends. Your future self will forget!
11: Time goes faster than you think
Sometimes
the days will drag, but the years will fly by. Set yourself a target for what
you’re going to achieve in the first 6 months.
12: Make mistakes
If
you make no mistakes, you’re not taking risks and you’re not pushing yourself.Just
make sure you learn from them, take responsibility for them, and try not to
make the same mistake twice.
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