“Try not to become a person of success, but rather try to become a person of value.”
- Albert Einstein
What defines a successful career? Why is it that, by conventional
definitions, only the few people at the top of the ladder have
successful careers, while the majority just survive and plenty fail?
These questions have been been on my mind and in my heart for more than
two decades. Let’s start with the first question. Let’s start with how
we define a successful career.
The usual understanding of success revolves around two basic
assumptions. The first: the hero of the workplace is the person who
climbs all the way to the top. The second: getting to the top – winning
promotion after promotion – is therefore the only thing that matters.
This mindset leads us to endlessly climb the corporate ladder, adhering
to the cult of physical and mental endurance to finally attain the
status of corporate hero.
Does this really make sense?
Let’s challenge the first assumption. Who is the hero?
In my opinion, the hero is the middle-aged man who loses his job and
then his identity, but has the strength to bounce back and start from
scratch. The hero is the single mother who does not give up, as she
wants to offer a better future for her children. The hero is the young
woman who, faced with high unemployment rates, keeps going until she
finds a job or finishes her studies or starts her own business.
The hero is the worker on night shifts who takes the same bus for 30
years at 5 am. The cleaning lady who works with dignity before 8 am and
after 8 pm, allowing us to find our offices clean and tidy. The
immigrant who came from a far-away country, performing a menial job
decently though he used to be a lawyer or teacher, sending everything he
gets to his family. Heroes are the religious men and women who help the
underprivileged, the forgotten and the invisible. Heroes are the
doctors, the teachers, the judges, the nurses and the police officers
who help people in their communities. The executive who does not accept
corruption, cheating, loaded dices, dirty tricks, at the expense of
those who deserve opportunities. Heroes are the journalists or artists
who use their art and knowledge to tell us stories, expose corruption,
serve the public good, alleviate suffering and give us courage. The hero
is the person working to protect our environment.
It’s time to change our out-dated ideas of corporate heroism. To
become a hero is not a magic process reserved for the few, but something
that is open to all of us if we strive to make the best of our
circumstances.
Now let’s challenge the second assumption, that only climbing the
corporate ladder matters. We should replace the question “How can I get
to the top?” with “What really matters?”
How do you measure personal and professional success, and who does the measuring?
On my first day at work in investment banking in New York, back in
the early 90s, I met a person who did not tell me his name, but only his
rank: “I am a managing director.”
He claimed that I should aim to be promoted at least to vice president
level within three years, since only a fast career was a successful
career.
It was only years later that I realized I made two mistakes on that
day. One, I believed the managing director, and two, I never even raised
the question of whether there were other ways to define a career.
It is time to move from the idea of success as defined by an
organization, to significance defined by us. Relentlessly pursuing the
next rung of the ladder doesn’t work, for the following three reasons:
1. If we only value those who have reached the top of the hierarchy,
then by definition we’re writing off the other 99%. We create a cruel
assembly line that produces myriad people who are frustrated and
unhappy, who believe – often wrongly – that only those who arrived at
the top truly triumphed.
2. By seeing our careers as a race, we enter a state of constant
struggle: “us” against everyone else. Think, for example, about
incentive systems: I have seen many and – mea culpa - designed
some that are focused on individual performance results but never based
on sharing, cooperation or a sense of purpose. I believe that stress is
not linked solely to the amount of work we have, but rather on the poor
quality of the relationships we develop with our colleagues. An
organizational climate of “dog eats dog” downgrades our relationships,
so they become only transactional, utilitarian, losing any trace of
connection between people. This obsession with appearances over
substance strips us of our humanity.
3. Ultimately, we all end up taking part in a rat race. We became so
self-absorbed and busy trying to win this race that we forget that even
by winning it, we will still remain rats. And vulnerable rats: the
chronic economic crisis, corporate restructuring or simple events
outside of our control can all oust us from our jobs. If corporate
success is the only way you define your identity, then that identity
will be destroyed with all the emotional and social consequences that
result.
So how do we redefine what it means to succeed at work?
Given my professional role I have observed and followed hundreds of
people and their careers. I want to share with you not only what does it
means to have a successful career, but also how we can monitor and
measure according to our own criteria, not those defined by others.
In a series of 10 posts, I will provide practical tools for
rethinking work, based on 25 years of experience. I’m convinced that
we’re all too often missing what really matters: not the destination of
some far-off career pinnacle, but the journey of our working lives, and
the meaning we ascribe to it.
Paolo Gallo is the Chief Human Resources Officer of the World Economic Forum.
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