Showing posts with label Passion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Passion. Show all posts

2017-09-08

Unsolicited Career Advice You Will Likely Ignore, Unfortunately (video)

Prof Galloway's Career Advice

As summer winds down, Professor Scott Galloway offers some unsolicited career advice.

Sources:
(0:18) "Unemployment Rate for College Graduates," Macro Trends, July 2017. http://bit.ly/2eHqpRt (0:24) "The College Payoff," Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, November 2014. http://bit.ly/25tOVsS
(1:24) "The 440 Cities Driving Global Growth," City Lab, June 2012. http://bit.ly/2xAPG7B

Transcript via YouTube.com:
00:01  as summer winds down and many head back
00:04  to school or into the workforce some
00:07  unsolicited career advice which I'm
00:08  fairly certain will resonate and 100%
00:11  certain you will ignore: 1. Get
00:15  certified and the depths of the Great
00:16  Recession college grads enjoyed half the
00:19  unemployment rate of high school
00:21  graduates over the course of your
00:22  lifetime college grads are going to make
00:24  an average two times with someone
00:27  without a degree earns if you can't find
00:28  your way to college then seek other
00:30  certification whether it's a class three
00:32  driver's license scuba certification or
00:34  a degree in cosmetology 2. Be remarkable
00:38  develop not just one area of expertise
00:40  but two skills that don't always
00:42  naturally go together be the CFO who
00:44  also understands what music should be
00:46  played at your events be the creative
00:48  director who knows how to use Excel just
00:50  as Lindt chocolate brings together dark
00:52  chocolate and chili peppers what two
00:54  attributes are you going to bring
00:56  together that differentiate you 
00:58  3. Find the variance look at the six or
01:01  eight things that are key to your firm
01:03  success and identify one or two of those
01:05  where you can differentiate yourself by
01:06  becoming an expert if everyone's pretty
01:09  good at PowerPoint that's not where the
01:10  variance is but if some people can't
01:12  string together a sentence and writing
01:14  is important your job and try to become
01:16  a great writer. 4. Get to a city your
01:20  zip code is a strong signal of future
01:23  wealth two-thirds of economic growth
01:24  will take place in cities like tennis
01:27  when your rally with someone better than
01:29  you you improve being in a city forces
01:32  you to rally with the best. 5. Boring
01:35  is sexy want to produce movies work for
01:37  Vogue or open restaurants then you
01:39  better receive a great deal of psychic
01:41  income because your return on investment
01:43  will be lousy software as a service for
01:45  healthcare maintenance workers sounds
01:47  awful that's where the money is
01:49  6. Be willing to delay gratification
01:52  Einstein said the power of compound
01:55  interest is the most powerful force in
01:57  the universe this is true not only for
01:59  money but your own efforts every day
02:01  invest in something with a path won't
02:03  come for several years but aggregates
02:06  7. Demonstrate strength and grit what
02:09  do fortune 500 CEOs have in common
02:11  not that they went to Ivy League schools
02:13  nor that they were born into wealthy
02:15  families but they exercise every day
02:18  it's about being a stronger version of
02:20  you if shit gets real you know you could
02:22  kill and eat everyone in the room which
02:24  will make you feel more confident by the
02:26  way I'm not suggesting you do this 
02:28  8. Don't follow your passion when a
02:31  luncheon speaker tells people to follow
02:32  their passion it means they're already
02:34  rich the best tax lawyers aren't
02:37  passionate about tax law they're
02:39  passionate about being great at
02:40  something in the accoutrements of being
02:42  the best in your field 9. Ignore the
02:44  myth of balance we've all heard about
02:47  somebody's great at their work
02:48  volunteers at the ASPCA and runs a food
02:50  blog assume you are not this person I
02:53  have a lot of balance in my life now why
02:56  because I worked my ass off in my 20s
02:59  and my 30s it cost me my first marriage
03:01  it cost me my hair and it was worth it
03:04  Finally fight unfair what are you
03:07  willing to do that the majority of
03:08  people around you aren't I'm a professor
03:11  with a decent amount of credibility but
03:13  there are dozens that have more
03:14  credibility I'm a good entrepreneur but
03:16  there are other more successful
03:18  entrepreneurs however there are few
03:20  professor entrepreneurs who are willing
03:22  to put on wigs why do this I'm fighting
03:25  unfair what are you willing to do that
03:27  your colleagues won't -- fight unfair 


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DISCLAIMER

2015-07-18

Startups, Best Practices (slides); Ben Horowitz at Columbia video


"Don't Follow Your Passion": Ben Horowitz's Commencement Speech at Columbia University from a16z 

Don’t Follow Your Passion: Career Advice for Recent Graduates | Andreessen Horowitz"... I learned the most valuable lesson that I learned at Columbia, which is: Don’t listen to your friends. Think for yourself. Thinking for yourself sounds both simple and trivial, but in reality it’s extremely difficult and it’s profound and here is why. As human beings, we want to be liked. It’s anthropological. If people didn’t like you in caveman days, they would just eat you. So you really have a natural built in instinct to want to be liked and the easiest way to be liked is to tell people what they want to hear. And you know what everybody wants to hear? What they already believe to be true. And so the last thing they want to hear is an original idea that contradicts their belief system. So it’s very hard to even bring that kind of stuff up. But those are the things; those are the only things — things that YOU believe, that everybody around you doesn’t believe — that when you’re right that create real value in the world. Everything else people already know. There is no value created. It’s just business as usual. So it’s so important to think for yourself ... my recommendation would be follow your contribution. Find the thing that you’re great at, put that into the world, contribute to others, help the world be better and that is the thing to follow ..."

Andreessen Horowitz, Venture Capital firm, domain name: a16z.com



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