Enduring Work - Year Deux
As we approach the two year anniversary of the start of "unprecedented times", we've gone through a lot personally, and it has felt like professionally things have taken a pause as we all get our grounding again and again as we navigate each sub-crisis.
Two years ago we had no idea what we were in for. No. Idea.
We were patient; we can do this for two weeks. And two weeks became two more, and months more and here we are and we now know there is even more ahead of us. We have prepared (via the paper goods aisle in the grocery store), we've adjusted (signing up for workout classes we were too embarrassed to take in public), and acclimated after accepting the fate that there was no more 'back to normal'.
"Enduring" defines this phase well. We've endured the changes. We've endured the uncertainty. We've endured a new way of working. Essentially: we have survived.
But how does "enduring" translate to our careers? Have we lost over a year of our careers due to this pandemic?
We are all hungry for connection, for in person interactions, for drive bys in the hallways that we used to dread, and even the luxury of knowing how tall your new coworker is (seriously - everyone is the same height on Zoom and I just need to know!), but most of all we are hungry for 5 pm happy hours with coworkers (lets be real).
I am not talking about the impact of Zoom fatigue on our careers. I'm talking about how we no longer get the "good job" after a big presentation, or the ability to raise your hand for a unique opportunity or to help with something (maybe being voluntold is on the rise?), or getting casual feedback we wouldn't have asked for but desperately needed to hear. Everything is scheduled and therefore formal and if it isn't scheduled it doesn't happen.
Enduring doesn't sound like we are growing. According to Daniel Pink, we are motivated by Autonomy, Mastery and Purpose, but these words have taken on new meaning in an 'enduring' environment.
Autonomy: the need to direct your own life and work
What its NOT:
What it IS:
Mastery: the desire to improve
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What it is NOT:
What it IS:
Purpose: craving alignment to a greater cause than your own
What it is NOT:
What it IS:
We were on autopilot before. Wake up. Go to work. Work. Come home. Eat. Sleep. Repeat.
Now, we've seen the world suffer before our eyes. We've had time to (and been forced to) think introspectively about what truly matters to us in life. Do the same for work. What truly matters to you regarding your career?
Redefine your motivators. Make a new 5 year plan (because no one had 'WFH due to pandemic' written down, so just throw out your old one). Translate your approach to the virtual world, and the impending back to the office phase.
Simplify your new career goals, with your motivators in mind, and unpause your career.
Girl Dad | P&L Leader | Consumer Finance | Fintech | Edtech | Board Member
2 年Very insightful - thanks for sharing!
Contact Center Operations Executive | Transformational Leadership | EX and CX Advocate | BPO Management | Board of Advisors I talk about #ContactCenter #CustomerExperience #BPO
2 年Maria Psathas you are spot on with your observations and outlook for the immediate future. Thank you for sharing and well done!