https://eugeneyan.com/rss 09月30日
职业规划:价值观与超能力
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典型的职业生涯跨越数十年。正如Cedric Chin所说,职业生涯的前10年通常被认为是早期阶段。如果我们假设掌握某项技能大约需要10年,再加上几年时间来探索和找到适合自己的方向,那么职业生涯的前10-15年显得有些浪费是非常有道理的。找到适合自己的方向的一种方法是反思并深刻理解我们的价值观和超能力,这些然后将指导我们的职业选择。价值观是我们从中获得满足感的东西。成熟的人必须认识到自己最重视什么。没有一个人清楚地认识到自己的价值观是一种悲剧性的浪费。你错过了生活的整个意义。你需要有意识地抑制社会、父母和朋友强加给你的价值观。超能力是我们(可以)擅长的事情。你需要了解你的自然或习得的优势是什么。人们为什么找我寻求帮助或建议?对我来说容易的事情,对别人来说却很难。你也可以从曾经和你一起工作过的人或导师那里寻求反馈,或者参考过去的绩效评估(如果它们有一个关于优缺点部分)。超能力以各种形式存在。例如,Julian Shapiro、Paul Graham和Cedric Chin拥有写作超能力,而Alexey Grigorev和Shawn Wang拥有建立社区的超能力(DataTalk.Club和Coding Career)。在工作中,我看到的一些超能力是能够用简单的方式解释复杂的话题(即ELI5)以及提出正确的问题来揭示风险和不确定性。超能力有时被伪装成弱点。注意力不集中显然是一个弱点。然而,注意力不集中的人可能拥有关注大局的超能力。对他们来说,很容易看到一切是如何联系起来的,以及如何拉动杠杆来实现总体目标。他们擅长规划和协调。一个特质是超能力还是氪石取决于环境。例如,在保守的团队中被视为不切实际/天真的人 ≈ 在初创公司中成为远见卓识的人。缺乏结构和组织 ≈ 拥有高度的适应性和自发性。固执己见、不灵活 ≈ 拥有毅力和目标。这也取决于你的角色。注意力集中是会计师、审计员和QA工程师的优势,而大局观是产品人员和管理者的超能力。你想要找到能发挥你优势的角色,这引出了下一个要点……根据价值观和超能力来选择你的职业。我认为,当我们的职业与我们的价值观一致时,我们的职业会更加充实。考虑金钱和知识的价值观。重视金钱的人可能不会像学者那样感到满足。相反,重视知识的人可能不会从销售房屋中获得满足感。如果他们的角色互换,他们可能会做得更好。(这是一个人为的例子,但你知道我的意思。)此外,这个角色是否利用了你的超能力?你在尖端研究方面的超能力可能不适合一个仍在努力找到产品市场契合度的自筹资金B2C初创公司——你可能会在研究实验室做得更好。另一方面,如果你的超能力是通过务实的80/20方法解决问题,你可能会在初创公司而不是研究实验室中找到更好的契合度。

🌟价值观:明确你真正在乎的东西,例如成长、创造、服务、自主等,这些将指导你的职业选择,帮助你找到更有意义的工作。

🚀超能力:识别你擅长或有可能擅长的事情,例如写作、建立社区、解释复杂概念等,并在工作中发挥你的优势。

🤝价值观与超能力的结合:寻找与你价值观一致并能发挥你超能力的角色,例如快速迭代的团队、解决实际问题的机会、自主权等,这将使你的职业生涯更加充实。

🔄灵活适应:随着你的价值观和超能力可能随时间变化,定期反思并调整你的职业目标,保持灵活性,适应团队或环境的需求。

🌱持续发展:通过公开学习、磨练技艺,并采取步骤进入能发挥你价值观和超能力的角色,即使你目前还没有找到这样的角色。

A typical career spans decades. As Cedric Chin writes, the first 10 years of a career is often considered early game.

If we assume that it takes around 10 years to get good at something, and a few more years to faff around and find that thing, then having the first 10-15 years of a career appear to be a bit of a wash makes a ton of sense. — Cedric Chin

But how do we find that thing? One way is to reflect and deeply understand our values and superpowers which then guide our career choices.

Values: What we gain fulfillment from

To be mature you have to realize what you value most.

It is extraordinary to discover that comparatively few people reach this level of maturity. They seem never to have paused to consider what has value for them. They spend great effort and sometimes make great sacrifices for values that, fundamentally, meet no real needs of their own. Perhaps they have imbibed the values of their particular profession or job, of their community or their neighbors, of their parents or family.

Not to arrive at a clear understanding of one’s own values is a tragic waste. You have missed the whole point of what life is for. — Eleanor Roosevelt

Start by understanding what you care about most. This fill-in-the-blank might help: “I care about being/having ____”. As we reflect on past experiences, the values that matter most should naturally stand out—what events led to higher-than-average fulfillment?

Identifying our own values requires deliberately silencing the values imposed on us by society, parents, and friends. As we’re exposed to their values, we’re also primed by those values and may unconsciously adopt them as our own. You may also be tempted to google “values” to find a list to pick from—don’t! Instead, try asking yourself the following:

    What do I get great satisfaction from? What can I (not) live without? What are some achievements I’m most proud of? What would I do if money was not a concern?

After listing our values, we can order them via pairwise comparison. First, pick any two values and rank them in order of importance. Then, pick another value, compare it to each of the ranked values, and insert the new value in the right order. Continue until all the values are ranked. Ideally, there should be a clear hierarchy instead of a cyclic relationship such as scissors > paper > stone > scissors > …

Or your can use this free tool. H/T to Charlie for bringing it to my attention.

Superpowers: What we (can) excel at

Next, understand what your natural or learned strengths are. What do you currently—or have the potential to—do better than 95 - 99% of people?

Reflect on your past experiences—when did you achieve outsized success relative to people around you (e.g., peers, industry)? This sounds straightforward but can be deceptively tricky—you might become so good at something that you take it for granted. (Sometimes, it grows into an expert blind spot where you forget how difficult it was to learn the subject or skill.) Here are some questions that might help:

    What do people reach out to me for (e.g., help, advice)? What seems easy for me, but difficult for others? What do I do that amazes others?

You can also seek feedback from people you’ve worked and mentors, or refer to past performance reviews (if they have a section on strengths and weaknesses). Some questions you might ask include:

    What do I do better than most people (on the team)? How do I contribute that’s unique?

Superpowers come in various forms. For example, Julian Shapiro, Paul Graham, and Cedric Chin have writing superpowers while Alexey Grigorev and Shawn Wang have build-a-community superpowers (DataTalk.Club and Coding Career respectively). At work, some superpowers I’ve seen are the ability to explain complex subjects in a simple manner (i.e., ELI5) and asking the right questions that uncover risks and uncertainties.

Superpowers are sometimes disguised as weaknesses

Poor attention to detail is clearly a weakness. However, someone with poor attention to detail might have the superpower of being focused on the big picture. For them, it’s easy to see how everything is connected and which levers to pull to achieve the overall goal. They excel at planning and coordination.

Whether a trait is a superpower or kryptonite depends on the context. Here are some example weaknesses and their mirror superpowers:

    Being seen as unrealistic/naive in staid teams ≈ Being a visionary in startups Lacking structure and organization ≈ Having high adaptability and spontaneity Being stubborn and inflexible ≈ Having persistence and purpose

It also depends on your role. Attention to detail is a strength for accountants, auditors, and QA engineers while big picture thinking is a superpower for product folks and managers. You’ll want to find roles that leverage your strengths, which leads us to the next point…

Base your career choices on values and superpowers

IMHO, our careers are more fulfilling when they’re aligned with our values. Consider the values of money and knowledge. Someone who values money might not be fulfilled as an academic. Conversely, someone who values knowledge might not gain satisfaction from selling houses. They might do better if their roles were switched. (It’s a contrived example but you get the point.)

Also, does the role take advantage of your superpowers? Your superpower in cutting-edge research might not fit well in a bootstrapped B2C startup that’s still struggling to find product-market fit—you’ll probably do better in a research lab. On the other hand, if your superpower is solving problems via a pragmatic 80/20 approach, you might find a better fit in a startup than a research lab.

Sometimes, we need to be flexible with our superpowers

If you’re lucky enough to be in a role that embraces your superpowers, remember that what the team needs from you might change from time to time.

For example, you might have superpowers in conducting thorough analysis that helps the team make sound, forward-thinking decisions that play out well over the long run. Nonetheless, unusual events (e.g., production emergencies, COVID) might require you to deviate from your modus operandi and make decisions in a quick and dirty manner. Ideally, this should be the exception, not the norm. Nonetheless, the point is to be flexible and adapt to whatever the team or situation needs.

Be so good they can’t ignore you

As you hone your superpowers (and become world-class at them), the situation might reverse—instead of having to look for roles or opportunities, those opportunities go look for you. Here are two lesser-known examples where hobbies grew into unmatched expertise and led to valuable careers. We start with the story of Thomas Mueller:

Thomas Mueller started with buying and putting together mail-order rocket kits before eventually building his own devices. At 12, he crafted a mock-up space shuttle that could be attached to a rocket, set up into the air, and then glide back to the ground. For a science project, he borrowed his dad’s oxyacetylene torch to make a rocket engine prototype—this won him a couple of science fair competitions.

After graduating from college, he worked for Hughes Aircraft on satellites before joining TRW Space and Electronics. Here, he experimented with crazy types of propellents and oversaw the development of the TR-106 engine that was fueled by liquid oxygen and hydrogen.

As a hobby, he hung out with amateur rocket builders at the Reaction Research Society. On weekends, he would travel out to the Mojave Desert to push the limits of his rockets. His crowning achievement was an 80-pound engine that could produce 13,000 pounds of thrust.

His work caught the attention of Elon Musk who visited him on a Sunday in January 2002. Musk started interrogating him: How much thrust does the engine have? Have you worked on anything bigger? How much would it cost to build a bigger engine? They ended up chatting for hours.

In February 2002, PayPal went public and Musk’s net worth increased from tens of millions to hundreds of millions. In June 2002, SpaceX was founded. Mueller joined as a founding employee and eventually became CTO of Propulsion at SpaceX. — Elon Musk

Daniel Bowen has a similar story. He was a long-time amateur balloonist and between 2005 and 2008, he autonomously flew 3,300 miles in 40 hours, surpassing the records of his peers. From 2010 to 2012, he worked on long-duration balloons and led the White Star Trans-Atlantic Balloon project.

In early 2012, Bowen decided to leave his day job and focus on his passion for high-altitude balloons. His new LinkedIn profile was up for less than two weeks when a Google recruiter called asking if he would join Google X’s Project Loon. He then spent 2013 to 2018 guiding Project Loon to maturity. (Loon was shut down in January 2021).

What are your values and superpowers?

Are you aware of your values and superpowers? If not, take some time to reflect and/or ask your loved ones and colleagues. Having a better understanding will help with building a rewarding, sustainable career.

If you’re already in such a role, congrats! Recognize how lucky you are and keep at it. If not, commit a year (or three) to learn/build in public, hone your craft, and take steps into a role that leverages your values and superpowers.

Identifying our values and superpowers is not a one-off exercise—they can change over time. A fresh graduate might initially value growth and career but shift towards family and freedom as he becomes a parent. We might also discover or gain new superpowers. Thus, check in with yourself every now and then and tweak your career objectives accordingly.

Feeling stuck with finding your values and superpowers? Here’s how I did it.

Note: I encourage you to have a grasp of your values and superpowers before reading further. Be aware that going through this section may prime (i.e., influence) how you reflect and think about your values/superpowers.

To identify my values, I reflected on past experiences. Which were awesome and which were blah? Why were some experiences awesome? I also asked loved ones what they thought I valued based on how I behaved. This helped identify six values of which four were relevant to career:

    Growth: Continuous learning via working at the edge of my abilities. Creation: Building ML systems & teams through code & leadership. Service: Improving lives and leaving things better than I found them. Autonomy: Freedom to figure out the best way to approach problems.

To understand my superpowers (and weaknesses), I’m consistently asking people for feedback. I also reflect on past work reviews (e.g., Amazon’s annual review has a specific section for superpowers) and the LinkedIn recommendations others wrote for me. This led to five superpowers:

    Empathy: I care about doing the right thing for customers and the team. Ownership: I cannot help but act like an owner; nothing is not my job. Bias for action + Delivering results: I iterate fast and measure results. Pragmatism + Simplicity: I design simple solutions to complex problems. Communication: I’m told that I write & speak better than most tech folks.

With these values and superpowers in mind, I deliberately sought roles (including my current role) that have elements of the following:

    Two-pizza teams that iterate fast and provide rapid growth and feedback. Opportunity to build pragmatic ML systems that serve customers. Autonomy to define the right problems decide how to solve them.

Further reading

Thanks to Yang Xinyi for reading drafts of this.

If you found this useful, please cite this write-up as:

Yan, Ziyou. (Apr 2021). Planning Your Career: Values and Superpowers. eugeneyan.com. https://eugeneyan.com/writing/values-and-superpowers/.

or

@article{yan2021value,  title   = {Planning Your Career: Values and Superpowers},  author  = {Yan, Ziyou},  journal = {eugeneyan.com},  year    = {2021},  month   = {Apr},  url     = {https://eugeneyan.com/writing/values-and-superpowers/}}
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职业规划 价值观 超能力 个人发展 工作满意度
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