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How to future-proof your career | Jacob Morgan | TEDxAcademy

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    I was cheated,
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    lied to,
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    betrayed.
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    All of this happened
    within just six months
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    of being in a relationship.
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    (Laughter)
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    Naturally, I did what any rational
    person would do,
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    and I decided it was time
    to end the relationship.
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    So I waited until the right moment,
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    I planned,
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    and finally, I handed in
    my resignation letter.
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    Now, I'm not special.
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    There are millions of people
    around the world every single day
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    who feel this way
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    about the managers and the organizations
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    that they work for.
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    In fact, right now,
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    if you were to look up the word
    "employee" in the dictionary,
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    you would find that synonyms
    for the word "employee"
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    include cog, servant and slave.
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    If you look up the word
    "manager" in the dictionary,
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    (Laughter)
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    you find that synonyms
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    include slave driver, boss,
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    and my favorite one, zookeeper.
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    (Laughter)
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    But it gets better.
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    If you look up the word
    "work" in the dictionary,
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    (Laughter)
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    synonyms include daily grind,
    drudgery and struggle.
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    So if you put these three things together,
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    we are all cogs
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    (Laughter)
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    working for a zookeeper
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    as we go about our daily drudgery.
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    Wow!
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    Work sucks!
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    (Laughter)
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    And this is literally
    how we have built our organizations
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    over the last 50, 100 and 150 years -
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    on top of these outdated ways
    of thinking about work.
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    And it's no wonder
    that so many people around the world
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    don't like their jobs or their careers.
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    It's literally ingrained in our culture.
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    It's in our society.
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    It's how we even talk about work.
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    Now, I was never a good student.
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    In fact, for the majority of my life,
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    I was a rather terrible student.
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    The only two subjects
    I seemed to be any good at
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    were drama and physical education.
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    (Laughter)
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    But when I got to university, I realized
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    that this was my last opportunity
    to do something in school.
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    And if I ever wanted to get a good job,
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    that I really need
    to perform well in university.
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    So I studied really hard.
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    I graduated with honors
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    with a dual degree
    in economics and psychology.
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    I had these big crazy dreams
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    of one day becoming the CMO
    of an organization like Coca-Cola.
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    My first job out of college -
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    the one where I felt
    so lied and betrayed to -
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    during the interview process,
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    I was told that I would be meeting
    with executives and entrepreneurs,
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    traveling across the country
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    and doing all sorts of meaningful
    and impactful work.
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    A couple of months into my job,
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    I'm stuck doing data entry,
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    cold calling,
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    PowerPoint presentations.
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    Combine that with
    a three-hour daily commute
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    in bumper-to-bumper Los Angeles traffic.
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    That was my life.
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    And I'll never forget this.
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    One day, the CEO comes
    out of his beautiful corner office,
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    and he says, "Jacob come over here!
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    I have something
    really important for you."
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    And I got excited.
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    I thought, "This is it,
    this is the moment.
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    Something amazing is going to happen."
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    And so I run over to him,
    and I say, "Yes, what is it?"
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    And he puts his hand into his pocket,
    and he takes out his wallet.
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    And from his wallet, he gives me
    a crisp, clean 10-dollar bill,
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    slaps it right in my hand,
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    and says, "I'm late for a meeting.
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    I need you to go to Starbucks
    and get me a cup of coffee.
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    (Laughter)
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    And get something for yourself as well."
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    "What? Are you out of your damn mind?
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    This is why I worked so hard in school,
    is to get you a cup of coffee?
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    Get your own stupid cup of coffee!"
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    This is what I thought on the inside.
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    (Laughter)
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    On the outside, I said,
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    "Of course, I would love
    to get you that cup of coffee."
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    (Laughter)
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    Of course, I've been dreaming
    of getting you coffee.
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    (Applause)
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    And that was one
    of the last full-time jobs
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    I've had working for anybody else.
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    And that was around 10 years ago.
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    And looking back,
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    I suppose I should be
    very thankful to that executive
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    and to that cup of coffee
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    because it taught me
    a very important lesson:
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    There is no such thing as job security.
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    In fact, the only security that can exist
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    is the one that you create for yourself.
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    Today's world that we live in,
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    work is life and life is work.
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    The two things are blending;
    they're becoming one.
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    And it's why I find it
    so fascinating sometimes
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    when I have conversations with people
    and I say, "How are you?"
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    And they'll say, "Well,
    my personal life is going great,
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    but my work life is terrible."
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    But consider that you spend
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    almost as much time
    on planet Earth working
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    as you do living.
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    And if the work side
    of your life isn't going well,
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    chances are your life in general
    is not going well.
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    So over the last 10 years,
    I discovered three strategies
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    that allowed me to shape my work
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    and, as a result, to create
    a better personal life for myself.
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    First is you cannot rely on educational
    institutions or on companies
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    to teach you everything you need to know
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    about personal
    or professional development.
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    You have to become a perpetual learner.
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    You must learn how to learn.
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    This is perhaps the most important skill
    that you can possess,
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    and it's taking control
    over what that looks like.
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    My family is from the Republic of Georgia.
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    Now, usually when I say Georgia,
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    people think of "Hey, y'all,
    I'm from the South" kind of Georgia,
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    in the United States,
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    but I'm talking about
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    the "Hello, Mother Russia"
    kind of Georgia, right?
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    It's a very different part of the world.
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    In fact, my last name,
    my original last name, isn't even Morgan.
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    It's Mamishashvili.
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    Try saying that three times fast.
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    And my family came
    from the Republic of Georgia
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    in the '80s as refugees,
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    and they went from the Republic of Georgia
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    to Italy, to Australia,
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    to finally ending up in the United States.
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    Now, as refugees,
    when they came to America,
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    they knew nothing and they had nothing.
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    My dad learned how to speak English
    by watching a popular talk show:
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    "The Johnny Carson Show,"
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    with an English to Russian
    translation dictionary
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    so that he could understand the words
    that Johnny Carson was saying.
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    That is the ultimate perpetual learner.
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    And this is before the days of Google.
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    This is before we had access
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    to all of these amazing tools
    and resources at our disposal.
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    But being a perpetual learner also means
    paying attention to the tangential.
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    Now, how many of you had this happen?
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    You're in conversation with somebody,
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    and at some point during the conversation,
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    the other person says,
    "I am so heads down."
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    In fact, I'm willing to bet
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    that most people in this room
    have even said, "I'm so heads down."
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    But the problem with saying
    that you're so heads down
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    is that you miss everything else
    that's happening in the world.
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    It's no longer good enough
    to be heads down.
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    You need to be heads up,
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    you need to be heads side to side,
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    and you even need to be heads behind you.
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    You need to be aware of how your skills
    and abilities can be applied,
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    not just to what's right in front of you
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    but to things that are
    a little bit on the side.
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    Be a perpetual learner;
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    pay attention to the tangential.
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    The second thing that I learned
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    is that you have to fake it
    till you make it.
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    (Laughter)
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    After my first job out of college,
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    my whole goal in life simply became
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    "How can I make a living
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    without having to work
    for anybody else ever again?"
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    And at the time,
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    I was finding all sorts of jobs online
    on websites like Craigslist.
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    I wrote articles for $15 an article.
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    I did whatever I could
    to try to make money.
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    The reality of the situation
    was that I was a struggling young kid
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    without making much money.
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    But what I told myself
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    was that I was this young entrepreneur
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    building a life for himself
    that he truly wanted to live.
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    And I would repeat that phrase
    over and over, every single day,
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    all the time, even to this day.
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    What you believe
    and what you tell yourself
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    matters.
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    Because it will guide your behaviors,
    it will guide your actions,
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    and it will guide how you feel
    about yourself.
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    I remember one time I was actually
    on a stage much like this one,
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    and I was behind the stage
    getting ready to come on,
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    and the music was playing,
    the lights were beaming,
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    and from behind the stage,
    the announcer says,
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    "And now, please welcome
    to the stage Jacob Morgan!"
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    And people were clapping, and I came out;
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    I looked at everybody,
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    and I thought, "Am I naked?
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    (Laughter)
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    Am I wearing any pants?"
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    I had this impostor syndrome moment
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    that 70% of people around the world
    at some point experience.
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    To be honest, I don't know
    how I made it through my talk,
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    but I thought I had given
    such a terrible performance
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    that my career was over.
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    I thought nobody's going to want
    to hire me after this.
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    And so I just wanted to get offstage,
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    to not see anybody,
    to not talk to anybody -
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    to just go home.
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    And as I was getting ready
    to walk off the stage,
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    these executives were lining up
    to come speak with me,
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    to shake my hand, to ask me for feedback,
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    to tell me that they enjoyed my talk.
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    It was at that moment that I realized
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    "I am wearing pants"
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    and that I do belong.
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    In my situation though,
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    it wasn't just the imaginary voices
    in my head I had that were telling me
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    I was no good.
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    I had real voices from real people
    telling me I was no good.
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    These are people -
    today we call them online trolls.
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    They would leave
    angry comments on my website,
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    create fake Twitter accounts about me.
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    They would message my wife,
    then girlfriend,
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    telling her to break up with me
    because I was bad for her career.
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    You can imagine how angry they are now
    that we're actually married.
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    (Laughter)
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    And for months,
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    I would let these people make me feel bad,
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    and for months after that,
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    I would argue and fight
    and debate with all of them.
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    And then finally, I realized
    nobody knows who these people are.
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    And perhaps, more importantly,
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    nobody cares.
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    Whether you are dealing
    with imaginary voices in your head
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    telling you that you're no good
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    or real voices
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    that are telling you you're no good,
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    you have to remember to be optimistic.
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    You're a beast!
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    What you tell yourself matters.
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    It will guide your behaviors,
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    your actions
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    and how you feel.
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    And you can think of yourself
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    as the struggling young kid
    without any money,
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    or you can think of yourself
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    as the young entrepreneur
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    wanting to build a life for themselves
    that they truly want to live.
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    It's a choice.
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    It's how you think.
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    Fake it till you make it.
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    The last thing that I learned
    is perhaps the most controversial,
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    and that is don't follow your passion.
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    Bring your passion with you.
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    Follow your passion is one
    of the biggest business platitudes
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    we keep hearing about.
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    We're always told to follow our passions.
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    But the problem with that
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    is, first, it assumes that passion
    lives outside of you
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    and that you need to go chase it.
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    Second, it assumes that passion
    is one static thing, right?
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    "Here's your passion. Go get it!"
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    But as you grow,
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    as you experience different things,
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    as you become good at different things,
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    your passion is going to change.
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    And lastly, most of us
    can't even figure out our passion
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    before we choose what to pursue.
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    I was never passionate
    about the future of work
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    or employee experience or speaking
    or doing any of the stuff that I'm doing.
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    But as I got involved
    with doing these things,
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    I noticed that people
    would start to share my ideas.
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    That opportunities
    would start to unlock for me.
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    And then I became passionate
    about what it is that I'm doing.
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    I learned to focus on the little things
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    that allowed me to see the big picture
    of what I was trying to create.
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    It reminds me a lot of a story about a man
    who went to visit a construction site.
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    And on the construction site,
    he sees three people working.
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    And he goes up to the first person,
    and he says, "What do you do?"
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    And the person says,
    "I am laying bricks."
  • 13:40 - 13:44
    And he goes up to the second person,
    and he says, "What are you doing?"
  • 13:44 - 13:46
    And the person says,
    "I'm building a wall."
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    And he goes up to the third person,
  • 13:49 - 13:51
    and as he's walking
    up to the third person,
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    he hears him singing a tune.
  • 13:52 - 13:54
    (Humming)
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    He goes over to him and says,
  • 14:01 - 14:03
    "My goodness! What do you do?"
  • 14:03 - 14:05
    And the person stops their work,
  • 14:05 - 14:09
    wipes their brow, takes off their hat,
    looks up at the sky and says,
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    "I'm building a cathedral!"
  • 14:12 - 14:16
    Everyone is passionate about something.
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    Isn't it better to live your life
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    bringing that passion with you
    to everything that you do
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    instead of chasing it?
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    In a world where everybody is told
    to follow their passion,
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    you can instead stand out
    by bringing yours.
  • 14:35 - 14:38
    If you can be a perpetual learner,
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    if you can fake it till you make it
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    and if you don't follow your passion -
    you bring it with you -
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    then you will take more control
    over your work life,
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    and as a result,
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    you will build a life for yourself
    that you truly want to live.
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    And if this struggling young kid
    without any money was able to do it,
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    then so can you.
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    Thank you.
  • 15:03 - 15:06
    (Applause)
Title:
How to future-proof your career | Jacob Morgan | TEDxAcademy
Description:

After graduating from college, Jacob Morgan got a job in the corporate world. When his dreams were belittled, he quit. That was the last "job" he ever had. Since then, he has been passionate about the future of work and designing great employee experiences. In this talk, Jacob shares three counterintuitive strategies for how anyone can future-proof their career whether they are a full-time employee or an entrepreneur.

Today, Jacob is a best-selling author, speaker and futurist who explores how the world of work is changing. His ideas on the future of work have earned him audiences with senior executives around the world. His work has also been endorsed by the President of Mexico and the CEOs of T-Mobile, SAP, Cisco, Nestle, Best Buy, Schneider Electric, KPMG, and many others.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
15:19

English subtitles

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