PERSONAL SPECIAL 15 Revealing Signs You Genuinely Love
What You Do
Passion
and purpose--in short, doing what you love--can be difficult to find. Some
people search forever. Some gain remarkable skills and talents only to think,
I'm great at this. So why don't I feel successful? Others, even after
building successful businesses, suddenly think, Hold on. This is just not
me.
Though
we would all like to be happier at work, at times it's easy to
miss the work-we-love forest for the irritation trees. So I asked Dharmesh
Shah,
co-founder of HubSpot (No, 666 on the Inc. 5000 in 2013) and a guy who has spent a
tremendous amount of time thinking about doing what he loves and creating a company his employees love, how he knows he loves his work.
See what you think. Though some of
the following may not be true all of the time, when you love what you do, many
should be the case much of the time.
1. You don't struggle to stay
disciplined; you struggle to prioritize. Your problem definitely isn't staying busy and on task.
Getting going isn't an issue. Your problem is you have so many things you want
to do, you struggle to decide what to do first.
2. You think, I hope I get to...
instead of, I hope I don't have to... When
you love your work, it's like peeling an onion. There are always more layers to
discover and explore. When you hate your work it's also like peeling an
onion--but all you find are more tears.
3. You don't talk about other
people; you talk about the cool things other people are doing. "I hear Chad just invested in a startup. What are they
working on?" "I can't believe Angie won their business back; I'd love
to know how she did it." "Cecilia developed a new sales channel.
Let's ask her how we can best leverage that."
When you love your work, you don't
gossip about the personal failings of others. You talk about their successes,
because you're happy for them (which is also also a sign you're happy with
yourself.)
4. You think about what you will say,
not how you will say it. You
don't have to worry about agendas or politics or subtle machinations. You trust
your team members--and they trust you.
5. You see your internal and
external customers not as people to satisfy but simply as people. You don't see customers as numbers. They're real people who
have real needs. And you gain a real sense of fulfillment and purpose from
taking care of those needs.
6. You enjoy your time at
work. You don't have to put in time at
work and then escape to "life" to be happy. You enjoy life and
enjoy work. You feel alive and joyful not just at home but also at work.
When you love your work, it's a part of your life.
7. You enjoy attending
meetings. No, seriously, you enjoy
meetings. Why? Because you like being at the center of thoughtful,
challenging discussions that lead to decisions, initiatives, and
changes--changes you help make happen.
8. You don't think about surviving.
You think about winning. You
don't worry much about your business failing. You're more worried about
your business not achieving its potential. And you worry about whether you're
making as big an impact as you can. Those are good worries.
9. You're excited about what you're
doing, but you're more excited about the people you're doing it with. Why? They're smart. Passionate. Confident. Funny. Dedicated.
Giving. Inspiring.
10. You hardly ever look at the
clock. You're too busy making things
happen. And when you do look at the clock, you often find that the time has
flown.
11. You view success in terms of
fulfillment and gratification, not just money. Everyone wants to build something bigger. Everyone wants to
benefit financially. Yet somewhere along the way, your work has come to mean a
lot more to you than just a living. And if you left your business, even if
for something that paid more, you would miss it. A lot.
12. You leave work with items on
your to-do list you're excited about tackling tomorrow. Many people cross the fun tasks off their to-do lists within
the first hour or two. You often have cool stuff--new initiatives, side
projects, hunches you want to confirm with data, people you want to talk
to--left over when it's time to go home.
13. You help without thinking. You like seeing your employees succeed, so it's second
nature to help them out. You pitch in automatically. And they do the same
for you.
14. You don't think about
retirement, because retirement sounds boring…and
a lot less fulfilling.
15. Your business is a business you
would want your children to run. There
may be aspects of your business you wouldn't wish on your worst enemy, much
less your kids: insufferable customers, unbearable employees, difficult working
conditions, uncertain long-term prospects.
BY Jeff Haden
http://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/15-revealing-signs-you-genuinely-love-what-you-do.html?cid=em01014week16a
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