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From Apprentice to Journeyman :
Dave Hoover : Home
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Context: Any given employer can offer only a limited sub-set of all possible career paths.
Problem: None of the career paths that your employer provides fits for you.
Solution: Consciously set out clear goals that address what's missing from your life and what you want to do about it. Identify the skills you feel you are lacking and have a go at imagining the sorts of experiences that would help you plug those gaps. Combine all of those into a conscious vision of the kind of person you want to be when you are a little further on the path. Then act upon it.
It is vitally important that you take the first step even if it doesn't seem that significant. By taking that first step you generate the momentum that will sustain you towards your goals. It's that very willingness to take the first terrifying step (and all the other steps later on) even in the absence of a perfect plan which turns your map from a daydream into reality.
Rather than just writing down high-level goals try to define small achievable steps. These small steps will provide feedback which you can use to modify your map but they also make it easier to get help from Kindred Spirits to achieve your goals. After all, there's not much anybody else can do to help you become what Paul Graham calls a "great hacker" but they can point you to resources which will help you learn Lisp or unix socket programming or achieve similarly well-defined goals. Ideally your goals will be S.M.A.R.T (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-framed).
If you find your vision of yourself is not in accord with your employer's vision for you and there doesn't seem to be a way reconcile the differences, examine other opportunities to see if they're heading in the desired direction. Remember there isn't one single path that all apprentices follow. Instead, successful apprentices follow paths that share a certain family resemblance. These resemblances do not happen because apprentices are inexorably shepherded into making the same decisions by their mentors. They happen because each apprentice consciously or not chooses their route through life based on an overlapping set of values.
You will continuously reassess your map as your circumstances and values change. Sometimes your map will be in accord with that of those around you and sometimes your map will require you to chart your own path through the wilderness. Some apprentices we've spoken to have found that being open about their current map has enabled them to find Kindred Spirits whilst maintaining healthy relationships with current and past employers. The only constant is that the map is always yours and you're free to redraw it at any time.
Use Sustainable Motivations and Ignore Your Title to prevent your current title and salary from narrowing the possible destinations on your map. If you need to move into a less hierarchically impressive role in order to stay "on the map", consider The Long Road and compare the relative importance of impressive titles and salaries to working in a company that is more congruent with your goals.
Desi draws her own map
Chris pushes the learning limit
I find this very interesting reading. Great food for thought.
(Dave, Ade) Is there a place for you to narrate how you drew and followed your own map?
Home : Dave Hoover
: From Apprentice to Journeyman
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