The Best Career Advice
As a researcher of people who excel in their work, I’ve had the opportunity to listen to a lot of successful people talk about their careers. Although everyone is different, I’ve honed in on the three best pieces of career advice I’ve heard from successful people:
- Think of your career as a scavenger hunt.
We love to think of our careers as ladders, when really, they are scavenger hunts. When it comes to work, there is no preset route. The most successful people are always searching for new opportunities to use their strengths. They’re able to pivot paths, and if it’s not right, they scavenge back. Don’t worry about moving a little off course; in fact, a lot of successful peoples’ routes are scattered because their scavenger hunt has led them to a few different places, and they’ve course-corrected until they’ve found the best opportunities to fit their strengths. When it comes to work, there is no preset route. The most successful people are always scavenging for opportunities. Share on X
- The best careers are incremental.
The most successful people are not making huge career leaps, but rather minor moves and small adjustments. Instead of looking far ahead and yearning to be in a completely different field or job title, they take baby steps to make incremental changes, effecting small adjustments to their current job until they’ve shaped it into a career that is uniquely perfect for them. Your biggest career moves often come from the smallest, incremental changes. Share on X
- Understand which parts of you are inherent and which parts you can change.
There are certain things you will take to every job: what you love about your work, what activities draw you in and make you feel great, and what activities lead to aspiration. And when you’re scavenging, you’ll find that each job is an opportunity to learn more about yourself, identify other things you love, and lean into them. Never take a job based on the role above it — you’ll burn out in the current position and never get to the role you think you’d actually love.
It’s also important to understand what skills you can acquire. You can be trained with new skills in order to fulfill a specific role, but no amount of training will allow you to become a different person. Be clear on what parts of your personality you take with you from job to job, and what skills you can legitimately learn.Never take a job that requires you to learn to become a totally different human being; it’s never going to work. Share on X
6 Comments
Comments are closed.
Great advice!
Great guidance. I love the metaphor of building a career through the lens of a scavenger hunt. In acquiring new capabilities, two questions that I think far too few people ask themselves once they are done with their formal education is “What investment do I want to make in myself? What do I hope/expect this specific investment to help me achieve or become?” As a leadership and business coach, I see too many individuals not personally and continually investing in their own growth and professionalism maturation (beyond what is minimally required by their employer.) It’s important to remember, your employer owns the job, you own the career; they are not one and the same.
Excellent feedback and I love the scavenger hunt thought! Keep the awesome posts coming!
This is excellent and I so agree!
I loved hearing him break your career path down into these three guidelines. I enjoyed the scavenger hunt process, very true!
I enjoyed this article very much! Great perspective!