Sunday, May 17, 2020
How to get a career that provides stability
How to get a career that provides stability I spent a lot of the last decade writing about what each generation wants from a job. I wrote for Time magazine that Generation Y wants engagement. I wrote that Generation X wants flexibility. I wrote that Baby Boomers want power. But the common truth is that we all want stability. Each generation just has their own idea of the right path to a stable career. A unifying thing about a multigenerational workforce is that career stability is the same for all of usits about keeping us with the changing demands of work. Heres what you need to do to create stability for yourself over the next ten years, no matter what generation you were born into. Get great at improvisation. Increasingly we are accustomed to output through computers. While some titles, like this one, are certainly not generated by a robot, Science magazine reports that most of us cannot tell the difference between sports news generated by a robot or by a person. Today 20 million twitter accounts are generated by robots, and its pretty safe to say youre following some of them. Jacob Bakkila spent a year imitating a robot on his twitter account. His followers loved the insane robotic tweets like Are you ready to have a swan? (re-tweeted 1000 times) and people were thrilled by the idea that he had made the content himself. Buzzfeed uses robots to find trending topics online, but the secret sauce of Buzzfeeds immense appeal is that a human organizes the information, in a matter of minutes, into bite-sized nuggets that are easy to nibble. Its that live improvisation between a human and technology that generates traffic. The same is true with photos online. The best are authentic photos, happy improvisations between the subject and the snapper. Photos that get re-pinned on Pintrest are those with a conversational feel rather than staging, like my son up top, about to slip and fall between hay bales. This is true in music as well. With YouTube we can see hundreds of excellent, planned performances from any artist under the sun. So in a sense the perfect performance is commodified and therefore, not nearly as interesting as it used to be. Instead the music thats most exciting to hear live is improvisation. Pianist Helene Grimaud does this by not practicing her music so that both she and her audience are surprised by what comes out in concert. Francisco Vila did it by taking out his cello in an airplane and accompanying Maximillian, a beatboxer who was a few rows away. If you google Francisco Vila, you wont find his perfect performances up top. Youll find hes most famous for his three-minute airplane improv. Feel comfortable going with your gut. If you can teach a person to do the job then you can teach a robot to do the job. So the best jobs for people will be ones that have gray areas, jobs that require a non-scientific decision, based at least partially on human instinct. This means we can all stop training school students to give right answers. Because right answers are available to everyone via Google. School is preparing people to fail in a world where all right answers are indexed. This is why suddenly we are not celebrating kids with Aspergers (they are crazy geniuses) but are putting them into special education (they are, sadly, rigid black-and-white thinkers). This is also why boys (who receive most of the Cs in school) end up making more money than girls (who are getting most of the As). And if you click on no other link in this post, click this one (warning: NSFW), where I got the quote about Cs and As. One of the best examples of a go-with-your-gut job is Melissa editing my photos. I send her thirty photos. She keeps one. She usually cant tell me why she keeps this one and not another, and she has no written rules for cropping, but her finished photos always reveal something I didnt see before. Another example of a go-with-your gut job is the hardest to fill position at Rent the Runway. The company allows people to rent extremely expensive clothes instead of buying them. The companys profit margins are dependent on being able to keep the clothes clean, and you can bet all these dresses are dry-clean only. So the company employs spotters. People who decide what the stain looks like (is that red from lipstick, blood, nail polish or berries?) and which chemical would the best thing to remove the stain. This is not a job with right answers. Even after ten years on the job, you still are only making good guesses. Which is why Rent the Runway poached every spotter in NYC and then began training their own. Another job based on instinct with a huge shortage of candidates: Food scientist. Who makes sure the new macaroni and cheese still looks orange enough when its cooked? Who do you call when your berry soda is green? And where is the hero who will finally find a satisfactory artificial flavoring for banana? The answer is a food scientist. Every consumer food producer hires these people, but no one wants to advertise their arsenal of food scientists, so you wouldnt know theres a shortage unless you talk to one. My friend the food scientist gets a recruiting call once a week. Be creative, yes, but in moderation. Youd think the world of ill-defined problems and gray-area answers would be great for the creative types. But in fact, its very scary to be highly creative. Cody Delistraty explains: The most creative people are continually making associations between the external world and their internal experiences and memories. They cannot focus on one thing quite like the average person. Essentially, their stream of ideas is always running?â"?the tap does not shut off?â"?and, as a result, creative people show schizophrenic, borderline manic-depressive tendencies. Really, thatâs no hyperbole. Fink found that this inability to suppress the precuneus [part of the brain] is seen most dominantly in two types of people: creatives and psychosis patients. The idea of the crazy, starving artist is too overwhelming for todays workers. People with a nonstop stream of new and exciting ideas are also people most likely to be depressedto the point that creating is almost inextricable from suffering. Unlike earlier generations that celebrated the crazy, mad artist, Generation Y are big fans of pharmaceuticalssometimes with off-label benefits but always without chemical dependency. The pharmaceuticals tame creative spurts, but more importantly depression and inactivity are such painful places to live. Pharmaceuticals are the rescue squad. 99U suggests you package your creativity into one of four types of people: the survivor, the cross-trainer, the called, and the specialist. On the one hand, this strategy allows you to market yourself to people in a memorable, digestible way that makes you more likely to land a job. But more importantly, stepping back from your creativity so you can wrestle it onto a resume allows you to treat creativity like firecrackers you control with a match, rather than a roller coaster you ride on constant loop. In this new world you cant just show up for work you have to actually give a part of yourself to the work to get it done. Which means that in-between jobs, you need to empty out your head, or refill your head, whichever feels right to you. An article in Art News surveys what painters do in-between canvases and its clear that each painter interviewed sees what they do during the gap as essential to their success. This is the time when you moderate your creative streak. You tone it down and you make sure, frankly, that youre not a lunatic. I sent Melissa a bunch of fall photos to edit. She said, You have enough fall photos. You need to write something. I cant write. I am overwhelmed with the links Ive saved to put into posts. Did you save the one about how the Vikings were women? Im sending it to you again. https://librarysciences.tumblr.com/post/96553989368 Dont tell me more links. My brain is suffocating in links. I need fall pictures. I convince Melissa the pictures are what I do to calm myself down when Im not writing. I need to look at something thats not words, I tell her. And she sends me a gift.
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