Fortune | FORTUNE 10月02日
O'Leary:忠诚度比跳槽更能赢得职业发展
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凯文·奥利里(Kevin O'Leary)强调,频繁跳槽(每六个月一次)表明缺乏执行力,会直接导致简历被丢弃。他认为,低于两年的工作年限是危险信号。研究表明,初入职场的平均工作年限仅为1.1年,近三分之一的职场新人计划在一年内换工作。奥利里建议,年轻员工应专注于在工作中展现执行力,证明自己能在一个岗位上长期投入并交付成果,这比建立职场友谊更为重要,并以史蒂夫·乔布斯为例,说明领导力不等于讨人喜欢。同时,多位CEO也认同,过度关注未来而忽视当前工作可能导致职业灾难,耐心和专注于当前职责是长期成功的关键。

🎯 **长期任职的重要性**:凯文·奥利里认为,频繁跳槽(每六个月一次)表明员工缺乏执行力,无法在工作中取得实质性成果,因此会直接丢弃此类简历。他将低于两年的工作年限视为危险信号,强调证明在特定岗位上长期投入并交付成果(两年或以上)是“黄金标准”,这体现了纪律、专注和结果导向。

🤝 **职业成功的核心在于执行而非社交**:奥利里指出,职场并非关于结交朋友,而是关于交付结果。他认为工作伙伴需要相互尊重并能促进彼此职业发展,而非追求“讨人喜欢”。他从史蒂夫·乔布斯身上学到,领导力不应过分关注个人魅力,而是要专注于实现目标,即使这意味着可能得罪人。

⏳ **耐心和专注于当前职责是长期发展的基石**:多位CEO,包括思科的Sarah Walker和沃尔玛的Doug McMillon,认同过度关注未来和频繁跳槽可能导致职业灾难。他们强调,在当前岗位上表现出色是获得下一个机会的基础。ACT公司CEO Janet Godwin也分享了她老板的建议:过于关注未来会分散对当下工作的精力。因此,在设定长远目标之前,必须先在当前工作中学习和成熟,确保当下的工作是“最好的”。

“What I can’t stand is seeing a résumé where every six months they job hop. To me that means they couldn’t execute anything, and I take that resume into the garbage,” O’Leary said in a video posted to his social media

New research shows that the average job tenure for those in their first five years is just 1.1 years, and nearly one in three budding professionals plan to change jobs in the next 12 months. 

“If I see anything that’s less than two [years], that’s a red flag for me,” the boomer added.

Why? O’Leary says he’s looking for proof of execution from new hires—something that’s not possible if you are only at a company for a few months, he said. It’s why “Mr. Wonderful” recommends young workers take the time to become integrated into a job and show they’re a valuable team player.

“Show me you had a mandate and delivered on it over two years or more, that’s gold,” he said.

“Discipline, focus, and results matter; that’s how I decide who gets hired.”

Execution beats out friendship in the workplace

While Gen Z may also want to prioritize purpose and workplace culture, O’Leary argues that work isn’t about making friends, but delivering results. 

“I don’t think people you work with need to be your friends,” O’Leary told Fortune earlier this year. “They have to respect you, and you have to lead them forward on their careers, make them money, and help them achieve their goals.”

It’s a philosophy O’Leary said he learned from working in the late 1990s with Apple cofounder Steve Jobs, someone who wasn’t exactly known for being the most charismatic leader.

“I don’t spend a lot of time on likability, I don’t care about that. It seems so irrelevant. If you spend your time worrying about that, you’re going to fail for sure, because you’re going to miss the signal,” O’Leary continued. 

“The signal is not having everybody like you—that has nothing to do with success…You can’t worry about whose feelings you bruise. You’ve got to get it done.”

Taking your eye off your current role could lead to career diaster

Many CEOs have voiced their agreement with O’Leary—focusing too much on what’s coming next and forgetting about your current role can be a recipe for career disaster.

While Gen Z may want promotions and fatter paychecks, business leaders think they might want to lower their expectations. In fact, according to Sarah Walker, Cisco’s U.K. CEO, young people need to be more patient if they want long-term success.

“As a society, we’ve moved on to where everything is immediate,” she told Fortune earlier this year. “And that does bleed into people’s expectations of how quickly progression should be made and the pressure that people put on themselves to say, ‘I have to get promoted within a year and if I haven’t, then that means I’m not on the right trajectory, and therefore I’m going to go elsewhere and see if I can get there any quicker.’”

“Don’t take your current job for granted,” added Walmart CEO Doug McMillon in an interview with Stratechery last year. “The next job doesn’t come if you don’t do the one you’ve got well.”

As someone who worked his way up from unloading trucks in the warehouse to eventually landing in the C-suite, McMillon embodies how staying dedicated to one employer can work wonders for aspiring leaders—in contrast to job-hopping in search of potential pay gains.

Janet Godwin, the CEO of education testing company ACT, is another prime example. She has spent 35 years working at the company, and her mantra for staying grounded is centered around the advice her boss once told her: “If you’re so busy thinking about what you’re going to do next, I guarantee you you’re not putting enough energy and time into what you’re doing today.” 

“You need to make sure what you’re doing today is running the best,” Godwin recalled to Fortune earlier this year. “You need to learn and mature in your current job before you have your eyes set on something else.”

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