What are we measuring?
How are we measuring it?
Should we be measuring this?
And, most importantly, are we sure we measuring the right things?
Ignore Goodhart’s Law at your own peril.
What are we measuring?
How are we measuring it?
Should we be measuring this?
And, most importantly, are we sure we measuring the right things?
Ignore Goodhart’s Law at your own peril.
I anticipated some of the pushback I’d receive from yesterday’s post, and I wanted to address it here.
Some might argue that certain jobs require graduate or other advanced education to obtain them. And I agree some should: I’d much rather have a surgeon who went to medical school operate on me than one who learned from YouTube.
And we’re all better off with engineers who went to school for the subject than relying on amateurs to build our bridges.
But doctors, engineers, nurses, and other “professional” roles all require specialized education simply to learn and carry out the basics of their jobs.1
This isn’t the reality for many knowledge or service sector jobs, which comprise a significant portion of our modern workforce. However, you might point out that many of these jobs require a college or even graduate education, as indicated in their job postings. Isn’t that at odds with what I’m saying?
No—because these jobs don’t actually need you to have a degree. It’s a tool to keep you from applying for them.
Hiring managers simply use that to make their lives easier and weed out 90% of otherwise qualified applicants without ever having to look at their applications. It reduces their workload.
For the vast majority of us working in the knowledge sector, a college education neither prepares us for specific jobs, such as those professional jobs listed previously, nor does it actually equip us with most of the skills required for knowledge work. We learn on the job and through self-education.
You don’t need a master’s degree in computer science from MIT to work as a software developer. You simply need to know how to program (and be damn good at it). You can learn on Codecademy or attend a bootcamp, gaining enough knowledge to get a job. You’ll have to learn the specifics of the role when you start working, anyway.
I work in learning and development, so I’m somewhat biased in my thinking on this. The shift in L&D now is toward skills-based training and qualifications. Essentially, we’re trying to answer this question:
Leaving aside formal education, what specific skills does a person either need to possess—or need to learn—to be qualified for this specific job?
You don’t consider their past college education (or lack thereof); you only consider what they’re capable of. This approach doesn’t harm people who attend school for specific fields because, as long as they’re qualified by their skills, they can still get the job. However, it also doesn’t prevent those who didn’t attend a formal school, but who do possess the necessary skills, from securing work for which they’re qualified.
Again, why do we need someone who is applying for a job in marketing or customer success to have a college degree? If they have the skill, or can learn it outside of a university, shouldn’t that be enough?
For most knowledge work jobs, it’s simply ridiculous to require a college degree (and I have two of them, neither of which I’ve ever used in my knowledge work jobs).
So I suppose I’m arguing two things:
Only the quality and the results of the work should matter. Not how much education someone has.
And for God’s sake, not based on how good someone is at negotiating. Not everyone is comfortable negotiating salaries or demanding raises, especially when they think their boss will just fire them and hire someone cheaper if they try.
We are obsessed with meritocracy in this country, often to our detriment. And we obsess over it in such a way that it harms people who may be just as capable at a job as someone else, but who don’t have the courage or the skills to negotiate with someone in a position of power above them.
Does this mean that I think another L&D specialist at my company who hypothetically started today should make the same amount of money I make after nearly four years of raises?
Absolutely, I believe that. But I’ll save that rant for Part 3 tomorrow.
You don’t get time—to read, eat well, love your spouse, exercise, or whatever.
You have to make time. This applies to anything important to you. If it matters, you must carve out time in your day to ensure it happens.
Otherwise, life will ensure it doesn’t.
Virtue is moral, physical, and mental excellence.
Most major religions and philosophies recognize four “cardinal” virtues: courage, temperance, justice, and wisdom. Each of these virtues helps us develop the aforementioned excellence.
Why are they called “cardinal?” The word “cardinal” comes from the Latin cardo, which means “hinge,” the things upon which a door pivots.
This is an apt description, as these are the virtues on which a life of excellence pivots.
Here are just a few things…
Where does this time come from?
By saying no to a few minutes of social media each day. Or watching one less episode of your favorite show.
That small sacrifice can pay enormous dividends in your future, and your life satisfaction in general.
There is only feedback.
People who develop a growth mindset view every failure as a learning opportunity, not an end result.
Either you succeed or you learn. But you never fail.
Of course, something might not work out like you planned. But as long as you learn from the incident and improve, did you really fail?
Miguel de Cervantes (author of Don Quixote) once said this:
“The road is always better than the inn.”
The journey we’re on is always more interesting and more satisfying than the destination to which we’re heading.
What happens when we get to the end of the road anyway? Inevitably, we think, “What now?”
Soon after, we decide on another goal to achieve. Another trip to take. Another journey.
We’re like a dog chasing a car—we wouldn’t know what to do with it if we finally caught one.
Enjoy the journey, however bumpy it is. The destination is never all it’s cracked up to be.
If you leave a garden unattended, weeds will grow in abundance.
They do best when left alone. They don’t need any nurturing, nutrients, watering, or attention from you. They’ll grow just fine on their own.
But if you want a garden full of beautiful flowers or delicious fruits and vegetables, you must be intentional.
You must dig, plant, water, fertilize, nurture… And rip up the weeds by the root!
The same is true for the thoughts in your head, the story you’re telling yourself on a daily basis.
The negative thoughts are weeds.
“I can’t…”
“They won’t let me…”
“This won’t work…”
“I’ve failed before so why should I try again?”
“I’m not good enough…”
These thoughts will spring up naturally and strangle the garden of your mind if you sit idly. And they’ll take over without any action on your part.
So, just like with the garden in your backyard, you must be intentional and put in the difficult, caring work. Rip out the weedy thoughts by the roots. Replace them with the good stuff, whatever that is for you.
Positive mental attitudes, affirmations, visualizations… Or my favorite: someone else’s encouraging words playing on repeat in your head. (I’d recommend starting here.)
Whatever you want to grow in your mind, treat it with the same care and attention you would with a beautiful garden of your own.
Character is an unchanging foundation that supports everything else.
It’s much more important to be a person of character than it is to be successful.
(And the latter is more likely if you are the former…)
I see you there, hiding away to dream about what it would be like if you weren’t in your current J.O.B.
It’s so great to have big dreams.
So what now?
Feel stuck in moving forward with those dreams? Do you want them to become more than just a break-room diversion over a bologna sandwich or a microwave pizza?
My friend Dan Miller has helped thousands of people take their dreams and develop a plan and act on them with resources like his New York Times Bestseller 48 Days To the Work and Life You Love and No More Dreaded Mondays.
He’ll be hosting a FREE Masterclass that you NEED to check out. It’s Thursday, July 15th with two times to choose from — 1 PM CT and 7 PM CT.
“5 Reasons Big Dreamers Get Stuck And How To Blast Through Them To Success”
He’ll walk you through those 5 reasons. Chances are one (or some) of them are holding you back from your dreams as well.
He’ll also help you with some immediate action points and real-life examples of people who’ve used them so you can start blasting through those sticking points to the success you’ve been dreaming of.
So open up those eyes, dreamer, and save your seat TODAY for Dan Miller’s FREE Masterclass.