My advice to high school and college kids on choosing a career.
Here is my two-step method to choose a career you will love. If you do the work on each step, you will exponentially increase your chances of having a great career.
Identify people who do what you think you want to do and follow them around. Don’t stalk them; ask them if you can volunteer to help them for a few weeks. Give them free labor in return for learning about their work. I know what you're thinking, duh, of course. But this obvious first step is often skipped.
How many college graduates jump to law school, business school or other graduate school and invest countless hours and money into their studies only to realize two or three years later that they hate being a lawyer, teacher, accountant, consultant or financial advisor? But now they're in big debt and have lost two to three years of earning capacity.
Make a serious effort to shatter your misconceptions. Bring a big hammer.
Find out what the work is really like by shadowing someone who does it. A Google search won't cut it.
You will discover what the person who does the work actually does:
You will find the real work is not like pop culture portrays it. The everyday life of an attorney is not like a John Grisham novel. Working in a restaurant is not like a Food Network Star. Working as an accountant is not like the movies; oh wait, there are no movies about accountants.
But be careful. Don't let your decision turn on your discovery that the work is hard. Rewarding careers are hard. Don’t be afraid of hard work.
After you've done your human research and you think you’ve narrowed it down, ask yourself whether that career will give you the life you want. This goes beyond how much money you will make or whether your talents match the work. It’s about what your life will be like in that career both now and ten years from now.
It's not just about your talents and likes. You may discover many careers you are capable of doing. More important than matching your skills and likes with the work is matching the work with the life you want.
Your career should be about creating the life you want. It won't help if you make lots of money but hate your life. Of course, money matters, it's very important. But you can make money and still have a good life if you are strategic.
What if you discover you really like the work but not the way it’s done?
Technology has made it possible to bend many careers into your lifestyle. The way the work has been done is not how it has to be done.
As an example: If you want to be an attorney but you don’t want to work in a downtown office with high-stress people with outsized egos, it's okay. You can bend the work toward your lifestyle. You can build a substantial practice with like-minded people who put clients and service above ego. More and more attorneys have robust practices working mostly from home. Cloud computing and productivity apps have significantly lowered the cost of doing business while making it easier to do business. Work that five years ago took three people to do can now be done by one person.
This article is not about finding a job. A job is what you do to pay the bills, and you need to do that. But what I’ve described here is how to find work and a career you will enjoy.