THE LOOP
Cassidy

Your Job Is Not Your Job

What you do for your job isn't just what you do, it's the goal you pursue with the team around you.

 

I don't often read LinkedIn articles, but the one I recently stumbled across by LinkedIn VP, Fred Kofman, was kind of a game changer.

 

If you think about your work as an ends far beyond the means, the entire concept of your daily work is transformed. At the end of the day, it's not just making belts that make us who we are, it's pushing the envelope and innovating and redefining a simple fashion accessory that's been around for centuries. The value in our actions is found in the overall contribution to the endgame.

 

Fred uses soccer as an example: if you're a defender and your team is down by a goal with 90 seconds left, you're likely not going to sit back in the goalie's box to play defense - even though, technically, your position is as a defender. Why? Because the overall goal is to win, and in that moment the team needs you to go on the offensive to have a better chance of scoring a goal and, ultimately, winning.

 

Your job description helps to describe how you contribute to the overall goal, but the goals of the team as a whole are paramount. "Your value as a player is your contribution to your team's success. If you think that your job is anything else than helping your team to win, you will lower your value and limit your career," wrote Kofman.

 

So how would your daily job, your resume and your career aspirations change if you focused on the end goal instead of the daily role? 

 

Navi

Team SlideBelts. Friday, August 18, 2016

Happy Friday crusaders!

 

We have two new Crusaders starting today. Please welcome Cameron and Nery to the Team. 


 

Theo

Motivation vs. discipline

I came across this interesting response to a question posted on a "Get Motivated" forum I follow.  (I'll summarize and clean up the expletives for y'all) 

How do you stay motivated to keep practicing?

Motivation is worthless, it's fickle and unreliable and isn't worth your time.  It is always better to cultivate discipline than to rely on motivation.  Force yourself to practice, force yourself to get out of bed, force yourself to work hard.

Motivation is easy to rely on because it requires no concentrated effort to get. Motivation is fleeting, it comes and goes as it pleases.

Discipline is reliable, motivation is momentary.  The question isn't how to keep yourself motivated, it's how to train yourself to work without it.  

I found this strangely inspiring.  Time to get disciplined!