At my company, ReWork,
we connect talented professionals to meaningful work opportunities at
companies that are making substantive social, environmental, and
cultural progress. Based on our conversations with over 12,000
professionals and hundreds of hiring managers, we've gained insights
into what's lacking in the traditional approach to career planning, and
how professionals can create careers with an ongoing sense of purpose.
Here's my advice:
See Your Career as a Series of Stepping Stones, Not a Linear Trajectory
There's an
implicit view that careers are still linear. Sure, many people accept
that the career ladder is broken, but most still attempt to somehow
increase the "slope" of their career trajectory. They wait until they
are unhappy, look around for opportunities that seem better than their
current job, apply for a few, cross their fingers, and take the best
option that they can get. Then, they toil away until they are unhappy
again, and the cycle repeats.
Though this approach can increase your salary over time, studies show
that, once you make more than $75,000, more money doesn't correlate to
happiness or emotional wellbeing. Most people end up with a career path
of somewhat arbitrary events that, at best, is a gradually improving
wandering path, and, at worst, is just a series of unfulfilling jobs.
The
solution to this dismal cycle? Let go of the idea that careers are
linear. These days, they are much more like a field of stepping stones
that extends in all directions. Each stone is a job or project that is
available to you, and you can move in any direction that you like. The
trick is simply to move to stones that take you closer and closer to
what is meaningful to you. There is no single path—but rather, an
infinite number of options that will lead to the sweet spot of
fulfillment.
Seek Legacy, Mastery, and Freedom—In That Order
Research from authors such as Daniel Pink (Drive), Cal Newport (So Good They Can't Ignore You), Ben Casnocha and Reid Hoffman (Startup of You), and Tony Hsieh (Delivering Happiness) shows that there are three primary attributes of fulfilling work:
- Legacy. A higher purpose, a mission, a cause. This means knowing that in some way— large or small—the world will be a better place after you've done your work.
- Mastery. This refers to the art of getting better and better at skills and talents that you enjoy using, to the extent that they become intertwined with your identity. Picture a Jedi, or a Samurai, or a master blacksmith.
- Freedom. The ability to choose who you work with, what projects you work on, where and when you work each day, and getting paid enough to responsibly support the lifestyle that you want.
The order
is important. People are fulfilled most quickly when they first
prioritize the impact that they want to have (legacy), then understand
which skills and talents they need to have that impact (mastery), and
finally "exchange" those skills for higher pay and flexibility (freedom)
as they develop and advance.
People
don't typically have just one purpose. The things you're passionate
about—women's health, early childhood education, organic food, or
renewable energy—are likely to evolve over time. And it's important to
develop a high degree of freedom so that you're able to hunt down your
purpose again when it floats onto the next thing. This means being able
to do things like volunteer on the side, go months at a time without
getting a paycheck, or invest in unusual professional development
opportunities.
Treat Your Career Like a Grand Experiment
In my
experience, people who are successful in finding—and
maintaining—meaningful work approach their careers like a grand
experiment. All of the things you think you know about what you want to
be doing, what you're good at, what people want to hire you to do (and
at what salary), how different organizations operate, etc. are
hypotheses that can be validated or invalidated with evidence—either
from the first-hand experience of trying something (including bite-sized
projects), or second-hand from asking the right questions of the right
people.
The faster
and cheaper that you're able to validate your career hypotheses, the
sooner you'll find fulfillment. You don't have to take a job in a new
industry to realize it's not for you. You can learn a ton about
potential lines of work from reading online, having conversations,
taking on side projects, and volunteering. And a bonus: by doing your
homework on what's actually a good fit for you, you won't waste your
time applying to jobs that you aren't competitive for. And like any good
scientist, you'll achieve a healthy detachment from your incorrect
hypotheses—they are just par for the course, after all.
I use the
word "grand" to describe this experiment because the reality is that
your career is not just a way to earn a living. It's your chance to
discover what you're here for and what you love. It's your best shot at
improving the world in a way that is important to you. It's a sizeable
component of your human experience, in a very real way. As such, it
should be an adventure, with a healthy bit of magic and mystery along
the way.
So if
you're one of the many who find themselves on the path to meaningful
work— remember to enjoy the journey, don't give up, and don't settle.
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