简体 | 繁体
loading...
海外博客
    • 首页
    • 新闻
    • 读图
    • 财经
    • 教育
    • 家居
    • 健康
    • 美食
    • 时尚
    • 旅游
    • 影视
    • 博客
    • 群吧
    • 论坛
    • 电台
  • 热点
  • 原创
  • 时政
  • 旅游
  • 美食
  • 家居
  • 健康
  • 财经
  • 教育
  • 情感
  • 星座
  • 时尚
  • 娱乐
  • 历史
  • 文化
  • 社区
  • 帮助
您的位置: 文学城 » 博客 »love what you do but got someone paid for

love what you do but got someone paid for

2017-08-07 13:32:29

TJKCB

TJKCB
宁静纯我心 感得事物人 写朴实清新. 闲书闲话养闲心,闲笔闲写记闲人;人生无虞懂珍惜,以沫相濡字字真。
首页 文章页 文章列表 博文目录
给我悄悄话
打印 被阅读次数

love what you do but got someone paid for

Want to love what you do? Pick something interesting. Pick something financially viable -- something people will pay you to do or provide.

Then work hard. Improve your skills, whether at managing, selling, creating, implementing -- whatever skills your business requires. Use the satisfaction and fulfillment of small victories as motivation to keep working hard.

**

Probably the most common career advice is "Do what you love!" People love hearing it, even though it's all wrong -- except under very specific circumstances.

"Telling someone to follow their passion can be disastrous," says Cal Newport, author of So Good They Can't Ignore You: Why Skills Trump Passion in the Search for Work You Love (a book I've given to at least 20 people). "That advice has probably resulted in more failed businesses than all the recessions combined ... because that's not how the vast majority of people end up owning successful businesses."

"Passion is not something you follow," Cal says. "Passion is something that will follow you as you put in the hard work to become valuable to the world."

Take Nelson Piquet Jr. He loves racing. Racing is his passion. But passion was not enough.

It's easy to confuse a hobby or interest for a profound passion that will result in career or business fulfillment. The reality is, that type of preexisting passion is rarely valuable.

Don't believe me? Think about something you are passionate about. Or that you were passionate about when you were a teenager. Then apply this test: Will people pay you to do it?

There are plenty of amateur racers. Nelson is a professional: He's driven in some of the top series in the world. He does what he loves, and, more importantly, he's so good he can earn a living doing what he loves.

"Money matters, at least in a relative sense," Newport says. "Money is a neutral indicator of value. Potential customers don't care about your passion. Potential customers care about giving up their money."

Here's another test to apply: the experience test. Nelson started racing when he was young. He also spent countless hours around racing. The same is true where business success is concerned: Passion is almost always the result of a tremendous amount of time and effort.

"The myth of the virtuoso is a problem," Newport says. "In the majority of cases, people didn't think of someone who became a virtuoso as having unusual talent when they were very young."

Instead, most highly skilled people were exposed to something in a way that made it interesting. Take music: Something (a song, an instrument, a teacher, etc.) initially inspired them. In Nelson's case, it was driving -- well, driving anything. Every highly skilled person started learning, and then benefited from what Newport describes as a feedback effect. "If you practice hard, soon you might find you're the best in your group of students," he says. "That's great feedback and it motivates you to keep practicing. Then you're one of the best in a larger group and that's motivating too. Practice and achievement is a gradual, self-reinforcing process."

And that's how Nelson moved up through the ranks. He won races, moved up a level, gained skill, won races, moved up, and so on.

More:
  • WATCH VIDEO
    The 1 Thing Daymond John Looks for in an Interview (It's Not a Resume)
More:
  • Top 10 Business Plan Templates You Can Download Free
  • Why Your Email Sign-Off Is More Important Than You Think
  • How to Finance a Business With Your 401(k)
  • Choosing Between an LLC and an S Corp
  • Start a Small Business in a Few Hours
  • Square Too Expensive? Try These Alternatives
  • Outsourcing HR: Big Savings for Small Businesses
  • 9 Places You Can Learn How to Code (for Free)

Of course Nelson's path is unusual; there are very few professional race car drivers in the world. Fortunately, for entrepreneurs the playing field is much larger. So if you think there is a market for your passion -- meaning people will pay you for it -- that is enough to get you started. Then doing the work, and working as hard as you can to improve your skills, will give you the feedback you need. Creating a viable product, for example, will motivate you to refine that product, or create even better products. Landing one customer will motivate you to develop more skills so you can land more customers. Winning at one level will motivate you to work hard to work up to the next level and prove yourself there.

The satisfaction of achieving one level of success spurs you on to gain the skills to reach the next level, and the next, and the next.

And one day you wake up realizing that you're doing what you love -- and getting paid to do it.

"The satisfaction of improving is deeply satisfying, as eons of craftspeople will attest," Newport says. "The process of becoming really good at something valuable is a fulfilling and satisfying process in itself ... and is the foundation for a great entrepreneurial career."

Want to love what you do? Pick something interesting. Pick something financially viable -- something people will pay you to do or provide.

Then work hard. Improve your skills, whether at managing, selling, creating, implementing -- whatever skills your business requires. Use the satisfaction and fulfillment of small victories as motivation to keep working hard.

That's how you build a business. That's how you build a racing career. Nelson loves to race, but he gets to race because he is such a valuable commodity to race teams. If he weren't so skilled, they wouldn't hire him.

"Don't focus on the value your work offers you," Newport says. "That's the passion mindset. Instead focus on the value you produce through your work: how your actions are important, how you're good at what you do, and how you're connected to other people."

That's how you get to do what you love. Follow your passions, but make sure that what you're passionate about is a field where you can also make a living.

Doing work you love, over the long-term, requires getting paid to do what you love -- which means being good enough at something other people value enough to pay you for it.

 

 
The opinions expressed here by Inc.com columnists are their own, not those of Inc.com.
https://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/a-brutal-truth-about-following-your-passion-and-doing-what-you-love-that-few-people-admit.html?cid=sf01001&sr_share=twitter
登录后才可评论.
  • 文学城简介
  • 广告服务
  • 联系我们
  • 招聘信息
  • 注册笔名
  • 申请版主
  • 收藏文学城

WENXUECITY.COM does not represent or guarantee the truthfulness, accuracy, or reliability of any of communications posted by other users.

Copyright ©1998-2025 wenxuecity.com All rights reserved. Privacy Statement & Terms of Use & User Privacy Protection Policy

今日热点

  • 在美国坐火车的体会net422003
  • 他走得很轻,背上的家庭却很重凌水
  • 早饭就吃一个包子心之初
  • 两面人巴铁和中国撕破脸力挺俄国朱头山
  • 都是女权主义惹的祸:母亲性侵儿子?earth2029
  • 【万水千山,一起走遍】大提顿许你一世欢颜
  • 没有了她的性生活阿里克斯Y格雷
  • 贴个菜,怀个旧陈默
  • 女人做了强者总觉得内心委屈DoraDora2008
  • 美国华二代后浪推前浪:参赛《Jeopardy》和发表Cell论文雅美之途
  • 读书杂感格兰德
  • 日本自由行散照散记 三: 东京和东京周围并州客
  • “移民融入“从”吃“开始barberry
  • 夏日饮品--玉米汁(附视频)喜鹊

一周热点

  • 我家后院子的花草瓜菜都长疯了!mychina
  • BeijingGirl1真的被封号了吗?硅谷居士
  • 中年丈夫失业的唏嘘BeijingGirl1
  • 又参观了一个老人公寓帕格尼尼
  • 人间清醒与人间糊涂多伦多橄榄树
  • 进攻伊朗犯了战略错误朱头山
  • 2025年回国感想九月红豆
  • 吃得就是任性!国庆节挑战105磅巨无霸汉堡爪四哥
  • 2025上半年三地股市见闻: 投资与做人康赛欧
  • 国庆,《大而美法案》后的税务变化有哪些?(图)菲儿天地
  • 举国震惊:一场家宴,竟是一次生死劫!麦姐
  • 美国梦碎:精英女儿出圈了。。。岸沚汀兰
  • “南京红姐”之事件,全民狂欢毁三观雅酷原创
  • 【原创】在美国如何把钱传给下一代更省税? —— Step-Up Basis、不可撤销信托和新税法全解析BrightLine
love what you do...
切换到网页版
TJKCB

TJKCB

love what you do but got someone paid for

TJKCB (2017-08-07 13:32:29) 评论 (0)

love what you do but got someone paid for

Want to love what you do? Pick something interesting. Pick something financially viable -- something people will pay you to do or provide.

Then work hard. Improve your skills, whether at managing, selling, creating, implementing -- whatever skills your business requires. Use the satisfaction and fulfillment of small victories as motivation to keep working hard.

**

Probably the most common career advice is "Do what you love!" People love hearing it, even though it's all wrong -- except under very specific circumstances.

"Telling someone to follow their passion can be disastrous," says Cal Newport, author of So Good They Can't Ignore You: Why Skills Trump Passion in the Search for Work You Love (a book I've given to at least 20 people). "That advice has probably resulted in more failed businesses than all the recessions combined ... because that's not how the vast majority of people end up owning successful businesses."

"Passion is not something you follow," Cal says. "Passion is something that will follow you as you put in the hard work to become valuable to the world."

Take Nelson Piquet Jr. He loves racing. Racing is his passion. But passion was not enough.

It's easy to confuse a hobby or interest for a profound passion that will result in career or business fulfillment. The reality is, that type of preexisting passion is rarely valuable.

Don't believe me? Think about something you are passionate about. Or that you were passionate about when you were a teenager. Then apply this test: Will people pay you to do it?

There are plenty of amateur racers. Nelson is a professional: He's driven in some of the top series in the world. He does what he loves, and, more importantly, he's so good he can earn a living doing what he loves.

"Money matters, at least in a relative sense," Newport says. "Money is a neutral indicator of value. Potential customers don't care about your passion. Potential customers care about giving up their money."

Here's another test to apply: the experience test. Nelson started racing when he was young. He also spent countless hours around racing. The same is true where business success is concerned: Passion is almost always the result of a tremendous amount of time and effort.

"The myth of the virtuoso is a problem," Newport says. "In the majority of cases, people didn't think of someone who became a virtuoso as having unusual talent when they were very young."

Instead, most highly skilled people were exposed to something in a way that made it interesting. Take music: Something (a song, an instrument, a teacher, etc.) initially inspired them. In Nelson's case, it was driving -- well, driving anything. Every highly skilled person started learning, and then benefited from what Newport describes as a feedback effect. "If you practice hard, soon you might find you're the best in your group of students," he says. "That's great feedback and it motivates you to keep practicing. Then you're one of the best in a larger group and that's motivating too. Practice and achievement is a gradual, self-reinforcing process."

And that's how Nelson moved up through the ranks. He won races, moved up a level, gained skill, won races, moved up, and so on.

More:
  • WATCH VIDEO
    The 1 Thing Daymond John Looks for in an Interview (It's Not a Resume)
More:
  • Top 10 Business Plan Templates You Can Download Free
  • Why Your Email Sign-Off Is More Important Than You Think
  • How to Finance a Business With Your 401(k)
  • Choosing Between an LLC and an S Corp
  • Start a Small Business in a Few Hours
  • Square Too Expensive? Try These Alternatives
  • Outsourcing HR: Big Savings for Small Businesses
  • 9 Places You Can Learn How to Code (for Free)

Of course Nelson's path is unusual; there are very few professional race car drivers in the world. Fortunately, for entrepreneurs the playing field is much larger. So if you think there is a market for your passion -- meaning people will pay you for it -- that is enough to get you started. Then doing the work, and working as hard as you can to improve your skills, will give you the feedback you need. Creating a viable product, for example, will motivate you to refine that product, or create even better products. Landing one customer will motivate you to develop more skills so you can land more customers. Winning at one level will motivate you to work hard to work up to the next level and prove yourself there.

The satisfaction of achieving one level of success spurs you on to gain the skills to reach the next level, and the next, and the next.

And one day you wake up realizing that you're doing what you love -- and getting paid to do it.

"The satisfaction of improving is deeply satisfying, as eons of craftspeople will attest," Newport says. "The process of becoming really good at something valuable is a fulfilling and satisfying process in itself ... and is the foundation for a great entrepreneurial career."

Want to love what you do? Pick something interesting. Pick something financially viable -- something people will pay you to do or provide.

Then work hard. Improve your skills, whether at managing, selling, creating, implementing -- whatever skills your business requires. Use the satisfaction and fulfillment of small victories as motivation to keep working hard.

That's how you build a business. That's how you build a racing career. Nelson loves to race, but he gets to race because he is such a valuable commodity to race teams. If he weren't so skilled, they wouldn't hire him.

"Don't focus on the value your work offers you," Newport says. "That's the passion mindset. Instead focus on the value you produce through your work: how your actions are important, how you're good at what you do, and how you're connected to other people."

That's how you get to do what you love. Follow your passions, but make sure that what you're passionate about is a field where you can also make a living.

Doing work you love, over the long-term, requires getting paid to do what you love -- which means being good enough at something other people value enough to pay you for it.

 

 
The opinions expressed here by Inc.com columnists are their own, not those of Inc.com.
https://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/a-brutal-truth-about-following-your-passion-and-doing-what-you-love-that-few-people-admit.html?cid=sf01001&sr_share=twitter