Amazon CEO Andy Jassy recently penned a blog post about career planning and development. Mostly, the post offers a series of clichés such as "find your passion" and "don't be afraid to fail." However, one point bears emphasis and reflection. Jassy argues as follows:
"I don't think that you have to know what your final destination is in your job early in your life. Maybe not even in your 40s, 50s, and 60s. I think that you have a chance to keep writing your own story and reinventing your own story. Before I got to Amazon, I had tried sportscasting and sports production, I coached a soccer team, I worked in a retail golf store, I did product management, I tried investment banking, I tried sales, I tried a lot of things. I really do believe it's perhaps as important to figure out what you don't want to do as what you want to do, because it actually helps you get more centered on what really makes you happy. So don't be afraid to try a lot of different things and don't let people tell you that whatever you've done—even if you've done it for a while—is what you must do. You have the opportunity to write your own story."
Most of my young students feel a great deal of pressure about their career choice and job search as they complete college. They often think they have to have it all figured out. If only they thought hard enough, talked to enough people, found the right mentors... they would land the perfect job and know precisely what career they should choose. Then, all they have to do is begin to set some concrete goals for the next 3, 5, 10 years... and they are off to a great start.
The reality is much different, of course. Most will switch jobs frequently, particularly in the early part of their careers. Some will switch to completely different professions, or different functional areas within the business world. The shifts will occur for various reasons, including the emergence of incredible opportunities, changes in family situation, etc. Some, though, will make substantial shifts because they are not satisfied with their early choices, don't find them fulfilling, or discover that they are simply not well-suited for those roles. Here, Jassy's advice becomes so important. We should not think that we have to have it all figured out. We should be willing to experiment, particularly early in our career. We will only know what we enjoy, and what we are skilled at, if we experience it for ourselves. Talking to others is helpful, but not sufficient, for coming to these conclusions effectively.
The willingness to experiment should not end early in your career, according to Jassy. Here I agree wholeheartedly as well. New technologies will emerge, creating new threats and opportunities that will shape people's careers. The willingness to learn will be crucial, and so will the willingness to adapt. Those who began their careers 35 years ago in retail could hardly have imagined the landscape today. Yet, opportunities still exist for those willing to put aside their early career goals and rethink what is best for them today. All of this change may be unsettling, but the first step is to accept that the career path will not be linear for most of us, even later in our lives.