Four seconds is all it takes to travel a quarter of a mile
at approximately 300 miles per hour. No this is not in an airplane, this is in
a Nitro Funny car driven by a professional NHRA driver. For work I attended my
first ever professional drag race. This was the NHRA event in Charlotte, North
Carolina. Our work involved student recruiting for Ford Motor Company, in the
pursuit to bring back the popularity of vocational schools and fill the empty
field of service technicians. We spent the weekend communicating with high
school aged students regarding career paths in the automotive technician field.
This is a program we have spent the whole year working on, but only activated
twice so far. This was my first time being at an activation, which includes
plenty of logistical hurdles including contacting and meeting with dealerships
local to the race track to obtain employees who want to positively impact our
youth. Below is a photo I took of our professional driver Bob Tasca III addressing a group of students in his pit area. He spent a lot of time talking about the opportunities that exist within the industry beyond working at a Belle Tire or other shop. Motorsports is where the fun is at, that is for sure.
There is a lot of on the job learning that occurs on a trip
like this. Sitting in an office in meetings can’t ever teach you how to
interact with student’s or how they may interact with you. It also could never prepare
you for what could or does go wrong that requires an immediate judgement call
to be made. On site at an event like this we do not have an hour to email with
a supervisor regarding how to solve an issue, we all have an understanding of what
the overarching goal is and on site you do whatever it takes to achieve that.
When you are learning on the job and working events it seems
like the days last forever. Time just crawls as you try to process everything
that is happening and it feels like the weekend will never end. Going forward
it always feels like the next event approaches so slowly. There was a study
done regarding our perception of time. Burkhard Bilger found that the more
familiar our world becomes, the less information our brains hold on to. When
your brain is not writing down as much information, time seems to pass by faster.
Once you make it back to the office, you get to apply all of
what you have learned on site to the programs you work on for the rest of the
year. I have to mention again that you will never be fully prepared to host an
event in another state, because of all the logistics behind making it all
possible, but in time you learn how to adjust on the fly.
Interesting!
ReplyDeleteThe idea of being able to drive one of those cars sound like an exciting way to recruit students. I can also see this being an interesting career choice and fun to learn on the job.
ReplyDeleteHow cool is would be to see one of those fast cars. I think that your carrier can be really fun!!
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