如果你不规划你的职业生涯,别人会替你规划。
If you don't design your career, someone else will (2014)

原始链接: https://gregmckeown.com/if-you-dont-design-your-career-someone-else-will/

不要因为过于“忙碌生活”而忽略对职业道路的深思熟虑。为了避免这种常见陷阱,作者建议在假期进行为期两小时的职业反思练习。 这个过程包括回顾过去一年的活动,识别趋势(“发生了什么?”),并头脑风暴理想的职业情景,不要自我设限。一个关键步骤是重新审视那些“不切实际”的梦想——它们可能比你想象的更容易实现。 最终,将你的愿望提炼成一个优先目标,然后制定每月行动计划,专注于实现它。至关重要的是,识别并学会拒绝那些分散你注意力、偏离核心目标的承诺。 这种专注的方法,源于作者自己改变人生的决定,即离开法律行业去追求教学/写作,强调主动的职业设计。不要让别人决定你的道路——现在花一点时间,可以显著改善你的未来。

## 职业生涯设计:一则黑客新闻讨论总结 最近一则黑客新闻的讨论集中在主动设计职业生涯的重要性上。核心观点源于约翰·冯·诺伊曼的一句话,并以“醉酒水手”的比喻说明:即使是有偏差的愿景,也比漫无目的地漂流能带来显著更大的进步(进步与*n*成正比),而后者进步与*n*的平方根成正比。 评论者分享了有意的职业发展策略,包括持续的自我记录(待办事项列表、截图、对成功和失败的反思)和设定界限。 几位评论指出,能够设计自己职业生涯是一种特权,承认许多人并没有这种奢侈。 另一些人则告诫不要过度僵化的计划,强调保持对意外机会的开放性。 最终,共识是,如果没有有意识的努力,你的职业生涯将受到外部力量的塑造,而主动承担责任对于取得有意义的进步至关重要。
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原文

A client once responded to one of my questions by saying, “Oh Greg, I am too busy living to think about life!” His off-the-cuff comment named a trap all of us fall into sometimes. In just one example, it is easy to become so consumed in our careers we fail to really think about our careers.

To avoid this trap, I suggest carving out a couple of hours over the holiday break to follow these simple steps for reflecting on your career.

Step 1: Review the last 12 months. Review the year, month by month. Make a list of where you spent your time: include your major projects, responsibilities and accomplishments. No need to overcomplicate this.

Step 2: Ask, “What is the news?” Look over your list and reflect on what is really going on. Think like a journalist and ask yourself: Why does this matter? What are the trends here? What happens if these trends continue?

Step 3: Ask “What would I do in my career if I could do anything?” Just brainstorm with no voice of criticism to hold you back. Just write out all the ideas that come to mind.

Step 4: Go back and spend a bit more time on Step 3. Too often we begin our career planning with our second best option in mind. We have a sense of what we would most love to do but we immediately push it aside. Why? Typically because “it is not realistic” which is code for, “I can’t make money doing this.” In this economy—in any economy—I understand why making money is critical. However, sometimes we pass by legitimate career paths because we set them aside too quickly.

Step 5: Write down six objectives for the next 12 months. Make a list of the top six items you would like to accomplish in your career this year and place them in priority order.

Step 6: Cross off the bottom five. Once you’re back to the whirlwind of work you’ll benefit from having a single “true north” career objective for the year.

Step 7: Make an action plan for this month. Make a list of some quick wins you’d like to have in place over the next 3-4 weeks.

Step 8: Decide what you will say no to. Make a list of the “good” things that will keep you from achieving your one “great” career objective. Think about how to delete, defer or delegate these other tasks. Ralph Waldo Emerson said, “The crime which bankrupts men and nations is that of turning aside from one’s main purpose to serve a job here and there.”

Many years ago I followed this process and, without exaggeration, it changed the course of my life. The insight I gained led me to quit law school, leave England and move to America and start down the path as a teacher and author. You’re reading this because of that choice. It remains the single most important career decision of my life.

Two hours spent wisely over the next couple of weeks could easily improve the quality of your life over the 8760 hours of the next year–and perhaps far beyond. After all, if we don’t design our careers, someone else will.

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