Debunking Popular Career Myths
It is often understood that
successful ca reers are about higher designations, big ger organisations and
fatter wallet possibilities. While some of these may indeed be a cocktail of
rewards, careers are not just these alone. In my own experience as a career
coach, I have been appalled to see how widespread the disillusionment with
organisations, their leaders and their own careers is. They remain stuck
because of the career myths that we all have conveniently rationalised our
situations with. However, myths are often just that and need to be contested.
Careers are yours, not theirs:
The challenge with the
subject is that we forget that we own our careers. However, much of our actions
are in response to what the world may think. We start to make decisions to live
up to a Pygmalion expectation. The reality is the external world has more to
worry about than be obsessed with any of us. Everyone may have an opinion but
it always squarely remains ours.
Careers are about various peaks, not just the highest one:
People believe that being
in the so-called big job(s) is proof of a successful career. Just being in a big
job, even in a large organisation may, however, not be intrinsically fulfilling
or inspiring. It may actually be more titular; maybe in a culture that is
excessively draining. The classical big jobs may be mere bureaucratic parking
slots rather than addressing core design essentials of your own career. The
apparent smaller assignments may actually be more challenging, more complex,
richer in experience and more satisfying. Every peak, small or large, can be
career enhancing, depending on the variables.
Careers are internal, not external:
You own your career, not
your organisation. I have so very often witnessed the passenger syndrome in
employees. There is the eternal expectation, often misplaced, that their
organisation will take them to a desired destination. It never can be the case.
If you are on the wrong train, you can never get to your destination. Or if you
do not know your destination, you do not get onto the right train.In the future
workplace, career anchors will get even more self-controlled. Careers will be
more a product of active self-steer than an organisation owned reality.
Careers are not linear:
they have their jagged
edges: Over time a career graph may look like a nice slope but in real terms no
career has been an easy ride up. There are often lateral steps and at times
some strategic comedowns. Some career moments are rough air pockets. Both
successes and disappointments contribute to an eventual career trajectory.
Realise that not every successful careerist was always a hero. He was once just
a boy-next-door.
Career choices can also be counterintuitive:
The best career moments lie
at the fringes, not at the end of the tunnel. Careers are not always about
doing more of the same, albeit larger. It could be about doing something
different lateral shifts, different functions, various industries, even a
presumably lower order startup. In the New World, one cannot remain a prisoner
of one's education or past experiences. Successful careers are more about
deeply embedded life interests, not just formal educa tional qualifications.
The next big career opportunities will be at various intersects, some seemingly
very counterintuitive. It will take a good trapeze artist inspiration to know
which handle bar to shoot for. Otherwise organisational seduction is bound to
dull many promising careers.
Careers of others can inspire you but need not be your mould:
Inspired by films, we do
have a tendency to imitate the stars in what we do. That does not necessarily
make us a star. Every person is a product of one's circumstances. It is good to
be inspired by the perceived success of someone as is useful to learn from a
sensed derailment of another. However, each of our careers is unique and very
contextual. Enjoy the ride, howsoever a roller coaster, it may seem. Do things
that no one else may have done be fore. You too could be an inspiration to many
others too but not become a mould.
Careers are not just about skills or pedigree. They are about you:
Your reputation with
people, your ability to inspire, your trustworthiness, your tone of the voice,
your ability to handle difference of opinions all become even more central to
the effectiveness of your career. The softer issues over time become hard
career inputs.Functional expertise becomes the clichéd “necessary but not
adequate“ ingredient of a happening career. The majority of mid-career
derailments happen, not because of hard skills but the soft ones.
Career is not about win-lose. It can be win-win:
Conventional thinking,
supportive of a single organisation career, would make us believe that one's
career is all about edging out a peer. Careers today are no longer bounded in
by organisation limits. In fact the best careers happen when you help oth ers
succeed and work at your redundancy.You make yourself available for bigger
opportunities within, and by the spread of your reputation, even beyond.
Careers are not just about plain hard work at your job:
There can be no debate that
good honest work is an all-weather plus. But just doing that does not
necessarily set you up for higher jobs. It is even more important to
demonstrate the potential to do higher order jobs. We must remember be ing good
at our current job is just a passport to a future career; it is not a visa.
Stepping beyond the ask, influencing non-reporting relationships, redefining
one's role and eventually building a personal brand significantly influence
career possibilities.Hence, sticking to a job description remit is no longer a
career accelerator.
Careers exist within your larger life space:
I have met so many people
whose only identity is their career. They have few other interests, hobbies or
networks beyond work.The risk of burnout with such category of people can be
very high. They also could inadvertently be seen as slave driving workaholics.
While there is no substitute to honest hard work, careers are not soulless
constructs. They exist in the larger scheme of a life space. They impact and
get influenced by many factors beyond the work space.Sustainable and high
impact careers thus need to have their share of antidotes. What worth is a
career if you succeeded in it but lost a lot beyond it? This is one of the
biggest regrets of the most-successful careerists! Careers, then, are what you
make of them.The choices are ours. The constraints are ours. The myths too are
ours.
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Prabir Jha
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The writer is Global Chief
People Officer at Cipla. The views expressed are personal
ET15JAN16
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