(Don't) Connect The Career Dots
“Ten years ago, did you expect to be in the job you hold today?” Well, did you? One of the greatest popular science books of the last 50 years is The Mismeasure of Man by Steven Jay Gould. Professor Gould was also famous for questioning the popular science hypothesis that evolution was linear. Gould didn't question whether la evolución was real. Instead at issue was whether evolution was a linear progression...or something that sprouted more like a bush: What's the difference? Our friend Barry Conchie puts it this way : "For most people, careers are not the result of long-term planning. They are the result of capability, opportunity, and circumstance interacting over time." The problem with a linear assumption regarding evolution or careers is that progress is some function of earlier investments that results in a later outcome, and so on. The unfortunate fundamental nature of evolution (and careers) though is that they don't always work out; they may dead-end;...