Thursday, September 14, 2006

Take Responsibility For Your Career


I’m getting caught back up on my reading of The Daily Drucker. The reading for September 9 is just so true and so powerful and so relevant that I have to reprint it here:

The stepladder is gone, and there’s not even the implied structure on an industry’s rope ladder. It’s more like vines, and you bring your own machete.

If a young man in a gray flannel suit represented the lifelong corporate type, what’s today’s image? Taking individual responsibility and not depending on any particular company. Equally important is managing your own career. You don’t know what you’ll be doing next, or whether you’ll work in a private office or one big amphitheater or even out of your home. You have to take responsibility for knowing yourself, so you can find the right jobs as you develop and as your family becomes a factor in your values and choices.

Remarkably few Americans are prepared to select jobs for themselves. When you ask, “Do you know what you are good at? Do you know your limitations?” they look you in the eye with a blank stare. Or they often respond in terms of subject knowledge, which is the wrong answer. When they prepare their résumés, they try to list positions like steps up a ladder. It is time to give up thinking of jobs as career paths as we once did and think in terms of taking on one assignment after another. We have to leap right over the search for objective criteria and get into the subjective – what I call competencies.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Commitment


I am getting back into the swing of things after taking a week off for vacation. During my vacation I started reading the book Co-Active Coaching. One thing that struck a chord with me was the point that was made about the difference between what your goal is and what you are committed to. The difference seems very subtle, but also very powerful. Think about it. The goal is the ending point but your commitment is what will get you started and also what will get you to your goal. Your commitment begins with your values. Ask yourself, “What do I value? Where is my heart? What really gets me fired up?” If you are not taking action to address the things that come up when you answer these questions then you are not living an authentic life. When we do not live our lives with authenticity we create internal strife and conflict. Unfortunately, this internal conflict usually manifests itself in external conflict. We start blaming other people or circumstances for our problems when its root cause is inside of us.

So, please ask yourself, “What am I committed to?” What action will you take? Then, take action to live a life of authenticity committed to what you value. Make a commitment to live a future that you want, not one that others decide for you.

Peace