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Lessons from my Career
Rank: Administration Joined: 11/19/2009 Posts: 679
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Dear Members, A opportunity to help @CreativesDome while learning from each other at the same time, on what makes for a fulfilling career. https://twitter.com/wazua/timelines/490111118409756674The Wazua spirit
<a class="twitter-timeline" width="450" height="900" href="https://twitter.com/wazua/timelines/490111118409756674" data-widget-id="490113640259801089">Career lessons</a> <script>!function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id)){js=d.createElement(s);js.id=id;js.src=p+"://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js";fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js,fjs);}}(document,"script","twitter-wjs");</script>
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Rank: Elder Joined: 9/15/2006 Posts: 3,907
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Just seen Bruce Odhiambo on The Trend. One of the longest practicing music producers. Something he said about music artists made me wonder whether it applies to all careers:
Success in the career 15% talent, 35% discipline and management, 50% luck
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Rank: New-farer Joined: 1/16/2014 Posts: 25
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50% discipline & hard work 30% innovation 20%luck
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Rank: User Joined: 8/15/2013 Posts: 13,237 Location: Vacuum
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40% networking 30% being smart and creative/innovative 20% discipline 10%Luck hardwork wachia watu wa mkono If Obiero did it, Who Am I?
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Rank: New-farer Joined: 6/1/2010 Posts: 87 Location: Zimbalabala
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What is luck. Luck only make sense when it is opportunity meeting a prepared mind and not just random chance alone. For example luck is you know someone selling a plot for half the value but if you don't know the value(preparedness) you wont exploit this lucky chance. So luck is not the randomness alone but includes some aspect of knowledge, risk taking, and insight that not everyone has!
I also think the ratio vary with industries. Networking might not be as important to a doctor as compared to an insurance agent etc etc!
To answer the lurker the lesson I learnt quite early is learn as much as possible when your young. Do all the boring reports, analyze all the things people dont want to do, learn from any and everyone and be as wholistic as possible. This will come in handy later in life even random far fetched skills and knowledge related to an obscure task can be used later or adapted.
More importantly learning doesn't necessarily happen in school and I think learning hand on skills in the workplace is more important.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/17/2009 Posts: 3,583 Location: Kenya
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real cindano wrote:What is luck. Luck only make sense when it is opportunity meeting a prepared mind and not just random chance alone. For example luck is you know someone selling a plot for half the value but if you don't know the value(preparedness) you wont exploit this lucky chance. So luck is not the randomness alone but includes some aspect of knowledge, risk taking, and insight that not everyone has!
I also think the ratio vary with industries. Networking might not be as important to a doctor as compared to an insurance agent etc etc!
To answer the lurker the lesson I learnt quite early is learn as much as possible when your young. Do all the boring reports, analyze all the things people dont want to do, learn from any and everyone and be as wholistic as possible. This will come in handy later in life even random far fetched skills and knowledge related to an obscure task can be used later or adapted.
More importantly learning doesn't necessarily happen in school and I think learning hand on skills in the workplace is more important. luck is just plain old luck
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Rank: New-farer Joined: 6/1/2010 Posts: 87 Location: Zimbalabala
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nakujua wrote:real cindano wrote:What is luck. Luck only make sense when it is opportunity meeting a prepared mind and not just random chance alone. For example luck is you know someone selling a plot for half the value but if you don't know the value(preparedness) you wont exploit this lucky chance. So luck is not the randomness alone but includes some aspect of knowledge, risk taking, and insight that not everyone has!
I also think the ratio vary with industries. Networking might not be as important to a doctor as compared to an insurance agent etc etc!
To answer the lurker the lesson I learnt quite early is learn as much as possible when your young. Do all the boring reports, analyze all the things people dont want to do, learn from any and everyone and be as wholistic as possible. This will come in handy later in life even random far fetched skills and knowledge related to an obscure task can be used later or adapted.
More importantly learning doesn't necessarily happen in school and I think learning hand on skills in the workplace is more important. luck is just plain old luck Wow that's deep! I feel enlightened! Thanks nakujua and I'm glad sikujui!
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Rank: Elder Joined: 9/15/2006 Posts: 3,907
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Management guru Tom Peters has some radical thoughts about luck 99.99% and hard work...
Seems in a Career, you have to acknowledge and be grateful for just the opportunity, and the talent to rise up to the plate. Then WORK, work, work, to attain excellence...
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/17/2009 Posts: 3,583 Location: Kenya
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real cindano wrote:nakujua wrote:real cindano wrote:What is luck. Luck only make sense when it is opportunity meeting a prepared mind and not just random chance alone. For example luck is you know someone selling a plot for half the value but if you don't know the value(preparedness) you wont exploit this lucky chance. So luck is not the randomness alone but includes some aspect of knowledge, risk taking, and insight that not everyone has!
I also think the ratio vary with industries. Networking might not be as important to a doctor as compared to an insurance agent etc etc!
To answer the lurker the lesson I learnt quite early is learn as much as possible when your young. Do all the boring reports, analyze all the things people dont want to do, learn from any and everyone and be as wholistic as possible. This will come in handy later in life even random far fetched skills and knowledge related to an obscure task can be used later or adapted.
More importantly learning doesn't necessarily happen in school and I think learning hand on skills in the workplace is more important. luck is just plain old luck Wow that's deep! I feel enlightened! Thanks nakujua and I'm glad sikujui! thanks for your compliment and you are welcome, nothing beats helping out an unenlightened young'un
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Rank: Elder Joined: 9/15/2006 Posts: 3,907
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Oh my! I've just seen a tweet on an article by Caroline Mutoko and read her for the first time. For all her be epic; do epic shit, she just answered this career issue raised by Wazua's lurker... Follow Your Skill - The True Career Capital (excerpts)
+ “follow your passion” is such a load of crap. Without the skill to actually guide that passion, it’s a pipe dream. Listen to me – how often do you watch the auditions for TPF or American Idol and cringe at the poor soul who keeps insisting “I am passionate about music” yet they can’t hold a note. They are tone deaf and the only person who tells them they can sing is their mum.
+ People with the passion mindset ask “What do I really want?” You’ve seen them and heard them. These bitter critcis of what everyone else is doing because they seem to think they can be better than them. These nutcases become minutely aware of everything they dislike about their work and their job satisfaction and happiness plummets.
+ By contrast, the people who understand they have a skill and they work at it have the attitude of a craftsman. Their mindset acknowledges that no matter what field you’re in, success is always about quality. Once you’re focused on the quality of the work you’re doing now rather than whether or not it’s right for you, you won’t hesitate to do what is necessary to improve it – that’s where the passion checks in.
+ I’m not known for walking away from the hard truths or not stating them as they are. So let me say this often with no apology – this follow your passion saga won’t get you anywhere but frustrated. Focus instead on acquiring unique skills and refining the quality of what you do with the focus of a devoted craftsman. Once you do that, you’ll be well on your way to cultivating not only a satisfying career, but a new, rarer kind of practical passion built on commitment, mastery, and pride.
+ In a world where a marketing manager at a beverage company, takes on marketing at a telecom company and then moves on to marketing at a bank or a software company with ease is because they have mastered the skill. Passion is in the execution. Skill is in the delivery of definite results. Their career capital and their competitive advantage is their skill. Case closed.http://www.the-star.co.ke/news/...tal#sthash.wbVX4lV0.dpuf
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