Tuesday, November 12, 2019
The biggest mistake people make in their careers (and lives)
The biggest mistake people make in their careers (and lives) The biggest mistake people make in their careers (and lives) A CareerBuilder survey found that 49% of all workers accept the first offer given to them. For people under 35, who are far less likely to negotiate, these numbers are surely much higher.Losing an extra few thousand dollars may not seem like a big deal. However, over a long enough period of time, small things become big things.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!According to an analysis by Salary.com, negotiating your initial salary and renegotiating every few years will earn you over $1 million more during your career.Hereâs the kicker, raises and future offers generally build on your current salary or position?- ?which means your first mistake can haunt you for a long time.I had a conversation with Jeff Goins, best-selling author of The Art of Work, about 8 months ago. I asked his advice about publishing a book I wanted to write and he said, âWait. Donât jump the gun on this. I made that mistake myself. If you wait a year or two, youâll get a 10x bigger advance, which will change the trajectory of your whole career.âMost People Canât WaitIn the famous Stanford Marshmallow Experiment, four-year-old children were offered a treat of their choosing (an Oreo cookie, a marshmallow, or a pretzel stick). They were told they could have the treat now, or, if they waited 15 minutes and âresisted temptation,â they could have a second treat.So, for waiting 15 minutes, the kids who waited would get a 100% increase in their reward.Follow-up studies on these children later in life found that those who delayed gratification were more successful in generally all areas of life.Weâve all heard this before. Yet, despite knowing about this famous study?- ?and the loads of research on willpower and self-control since?- ?most people are still impulsive about their decision-making.The Wrong MotivationsThe reason most people fail to make the best long- term decisions is because they donât know what they really want.If you donât know what you want, of course youâll take the best thing offered you.In his book, Good to Great, Jim Collins said, âA âonce-in-a-lifetime opportunityâ is irrelevant if it is the wrong opportunity.â According to Collins, most companies donât go from good to great because they lose track of their original intent.When you start to succeed (or get a degree, etc.), more opportunities come your way. Unless you know exactly what you are and what youâre not, youâll be easily swayed.Because most people havenât decided what they intrinsically want, their primary motivation becomes external validation. Thus, rather than actually being good, the objective is to look as good as possible.Why do you really want to do what you are doing?Ryan Holiday, best-selling author of The Obstacle is the Way, told me that people write a book for one of two reasons: Get a book deal Write a book that does well long into the future Most people trying to develop a writing career, if they were honest with themselves, want to get a book deal. Theyâd sacrifice the long-term goal of writing a classic at the expense of merely âbecoming an author.â The same is true of most people trying to start a business, or doing anything else.The problem is, in most cases, it doesnât go both ways. Holiday, for example, took a substantially smaller book contract for his book, The Obstacle is the Way, because the book was on an unproven concept. But he was fine with the initial pay-cut because his goal was more long-term. He wanted to write a book that would continue to sell well years into the future.This is the exact opposite of how most people approach their goals. The goal for most people is to be a âbest-seller,â or an âentrepreneur,â or a âcollege grad.â Itâs all about the image. The external validation becomes more important than truly doing great work.The Benefits of Delayed GratificationHoliday diff ers in one more way than most people in his space. He was offered a book contract for the book that would eventually become The Obstacle is the Way several years before he wrote the book.Of course, he was ecstatic! He told his mentor, best-selling author Robert Greene, about it. Holiday recollects about that conversation:âRobert was as happy for me as everyone else, but he told me he didnât think I should do it. Not because it wasnât a good deal, but because I wasnât ready. Youâre 22 years old, he reminded me. Are you sure you can speak from a place of real understanding about the subject matter, he asked? He told me that every day I was experiencing new things, that I was widening my understanding and authority on the topic by living, and improving as a writer. âThe book would be better the longer I waitedâ was his nice way of saying âIt wouldnât be any good if it came out now.â He advised me to pass.âUnlike so many others, Holiday delayed gratification. He further explains that over the next few years, heâd learn things and have experiences allowing him to become the person that could write The Obstacle is the Way.Could he have written a great book at age 22? Probably.Would it have been a classic? Probably not.The question is: Do you really believe you could create a classic?Or, do you believe you can create something truly impactful?Rather than just âstarting a business,â do you believe you can create something truly important?Do you really believe in yourself?This may sound like a trite question. But itâs serious.Of course, you believe you could create something. But Iâm talking about something real. Something of enduring quality. Something truly great.Do you believe YOU could do that? Or, would you rather create something quick and inferior, but that gives you a false sense of achievement?Said Tony Robbins: Life gives you exactly what you ask of it, no more and no less. You get in life what youâre willing to tolerate. Itâs all about your personal standards.Most people get less in life than their potential because they have low standards for themselves and those around them.The greatest reward for delayed gratification is who you become. Itâs not necessarily about the work you do. More, itâs that you became someone who could do work at that level.Your work is a reflection of you. Who you become determines the quality of your work. The quality of your work influences the lives of other people.Youâll Know When Itâs the Right TimeAn obvious objection, or question, you should be having right now is: What if I wait too long?Waiting to act and delaying gratification are two completely different things. Perfectionism is not delaying gratification. Perfectionism is a disease that leads to procrastination and waiting.The time to act becomes painfully obvious, not only based on intrinsic feelings but also based on external demand. Itâs not enough to feel ready. There must be clear evidence that you are ready. That can only occur by experience in the real world and not merely in your head.80% of Life is Showing UpIn the book, The E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small Businesses Donât Work and What to Do About It, Michael Gerber explains that the natural thing for a new business to do is grow.Most people wonder if they will get any traction for their concept. This fear is legitimate but besides the point. If you start a business and work at it, it will grow.Most businesses fail when things start growing. They get too excited by future prospects and donât continue the technical and organizational stuff to support the growth. Of this, author and strategist Greg Mckeown has said, âWhy donât successful people and organizations automatically become very successful? Success is a catalyst for failure.âYou must balance 1) your plans for the future with 2) doing and improving the actual work (i.e., your products) and 3) keeping things well-managed.If you keep these three things balanced, your chances of success during growth are substantially higher, Gerber explains.ConclusionIf youâre willing to wait an extra year or two, the quality of your impact, as well as the quality of your life, could dramatically improve.You must first know what you want. Until you do, youâll be swayed by the first offer you get.You must also know why you are doing what youâre doing. Until you do, youâll be more concerned about looking good than actually doing something of lasting and significant value.Expect that when you go into business, it is going to grow. When it does, donât get distracted by all the âonce-in-a-lifetimeâ opportunities that come your way. Stay the course. When needed, delay the gratification for something good in order to create something truly great.Youâll never regret that extra 6 months, or year, or few years you were investing in yourself. When the harvest comes in, youâll look back with a satisfaction mos t people could never imagine.How I Turned $25,000 Into $374,592 In Less Than 6 MonthsIâve created a free training that will teach you how to become world class and successful at anything you choose.Access the free training here now!This article first appeared on Medium. You might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
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