The #1 Career Mistake Capable People Make
December 06, 2012
I recently reviewed a resume for a colleague who was trying to define
a clearer career strategy. She has terrific experience. And yet, as I looked
through it I could see the problem she was concerned about: she had done so many
good things in so many different fields it was hard to know what was distinctive
about her.
As we talked it became clear the resume was only the symptom
of a deeper issue. In an attempt to be useful and adaptable she has said yes to
too many good projects and opportunities. She has ended up feeling overworked
and underutilized. It is easy to see how people end up in her
situation:
Step 1: Capable people are
driven to achieve.
Step 2: Other people see they
are capable and give them assignments.
Step 3: Capable people gain a
reputation as "go to" people. They become "good old [insert name] who is always
there when you need him." There is lots right with this, unless or
until...
Step 4: Capable people end up doing lots of
projects well but are distracted from what would otherwise be their highest point of contribution which I define as the intersection of talent,
passion and market (see more on this in the Harvard Business Review article The Disciplined Pursuit of Less). Then, both the company and
the employee lose out.
When this happens, some of the responsibility lies with
out-of-touch managers who are too busy or distracted to notice the very best use
of their people. But some of the responsibility lies with us. Perhaps we need to
be more deliberate and discerning in navigating our own careers.
In the conversation above, we spent some time to identify my
colleague's Highest Point of Contribution and develop a plan of action for
a more focused career strategy.
We followed a simple
process similar to one I write about here: If You Don’t Design Your Career, Someone Else Will. My friend
is not alone. Indeed, in coaching and teaching managers and executives around
the world it strikes me that failure to be conscientious about this
represents the #1 mistake, in frequency, I see capable people make in their
careers.
Using a camping metaphor, capable people often add
additional poles of the same height to their career tent. We end up with 10, 20
or 30 poles of the same height, somehow hoping the tent will go higher. I don't
just mean higher on the career ladder either. I mean higher in terms of our
ability to contribute.
The slightly painful truth is, at any one time there is only
one piece of real estate we can "own" in another person’s mind. People can't
think of us as a project manager, professor, attorney, insurance agent, editor
and entrepreneur all at exactly the same time. They may all be true about us but
people can only think of us as one thing first. At any one time there
is only one phrase that can follow our name. Might we be better served by
asking, at least occasionally, whether the various projects we have add up to a
longer pole?
I saw this illustrated some time ago in one of the more
distinctive resumes I have seen. It belonged to a Stanford Law School Professor
[there it is: the single phrase that follows his name, the longest pole in his
career tent]. His resume was clean and concise. For each entry there was one
impressive title/role/school and a succinct description of what he had achieved.
Each sentence seemed to say more than ten typical bullet points in many resumes
I have seen. When he was at university he had been the student body president,
under "teaching" he was teacher of the year and so on.
Being able to do many things is important in many
jobs today. Broad understanding also is a must. But developing
greater discernment about what is distinctive about us can be a great advantage.
Instead of simply doing more things we need to find, at every phase in our
careers, our highest point of contribution.
I look forward to your thoughts below and @gregorymckeown.
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