Your first ‘real’ job should give you the foundation needed for future success. This couldn’t have been more true in my case, but not in the ways you’d expect.
你的第一份“真正”的工作,應(yīng)該為你未來的成功奠定基礎(chǔ)。我的經(jīng)歷充分證明了這一點,只是過程有些出人意料。
After graduating from the UC Berkeley Haas School of Business, I went to work as an analyst in the technology group of a bulge bracket investment bank. It paid very well and was in the tech field I wanted. This was it. I was on my way.
從加州大學(xué)伯克利分校哈斯商學(xué)院(UC Berkeley Haas School of Business)畢業(yè)后,我在一家超大型投資銀行的技術(shù)部門擔(dān)任分析師。這份工作收入豐厚,也是我所期待的技術(shù)領(lǐng)域。這就是我的第一份工作。我從這里開始了自己的職業(yè)生涯。
It was 2002, during the depths of the dot-com bust and when the tech sector was a wasteland. I was working with the only active client for the group, a private technology company that engaged our bank to sell itself. As this was the only business for the group at that time, this deal was under tremendous scrutiny on all levels.
時值2002年,正是網(wǎng)絡(luò)泡沫破滅影響最嚴(yán)重的時期,高科技領(lǐng)域哀鴻遍野。當(dāng)時我負(fù)責(zé)部門唯一一位活躍的客戶,這是一家私人高科技公司,正在通過我們銀行對外出售。由于這是我所在部門當(dāng)時唯一的業(yè)務(wù),它的各個層面都受到了嚴(yán)格審查。
I was working 100-plus hour weeks for three straight months, and I remember vividly one weekend when I had a horrible flu. I was at the office working on a Saturday when the VP managing this deal went out to dinner. As she left, she asked for “another rev” on the presentation. Translation: I had to put in another eight hours that night, with a fever, and the CEO wanted to review the presentation on a 7:00 AM call the next morning (Sunday).
我每周工作100多個小時,連續(xù)工作了三個月,我清楚記得有一個周末,我得了嚴(yán)重的流感。周六的時候,我正在辦公室加班,負(fù)責(zé)該交易的副總裁外出用餐。她走的時候要求我對演示稿“再修改一遍”。這意味著:雖然我正在發(fā)燒,但那天晚上我還是得再加班八個小時,因為CEO希望在第二天(周日)早上7點通過電話審核演示稿。
I cant remember the exact mixture of caffeine and decongestants I took, but I somehow managed to get the presentation done, nab a couple hours of sleep and arrive back in the office for the call. I was drowsy, achy and coughing miserably during the call. At one point the VP muted the phone, looked at me and said, “I’m going to need you to perk up.
我還記得當(dāng)時喝了大量咖啡因和減充血劑,不過最終還是努力完場了演示稿。小睡了一兩個小時候,我又回到辦公室接聽電話。在通話過程中,我昏昏欲睡,渾身疼痛不已,還不停咳嗽。一會兒,那位副總裁將電話調(diào)為靜音,看著我說:“我需要你打起精神來。”
Perk up I did, but not in the way she was thinking. At that precise moment, I knew I was in the wrong job and more importantly, the wrong career path. In one life lesson she had unwittingly (and unrelentingly) taught me three key things:
我確實打起了精神,但并不是按她所想的那樣。就在那一刻,我明白這份工作并不適合我,更重要的是,這也不是適合我的職業(yè)道路。她在不經(jīng)意間(并且無情地)給我上了一課,讓我認(rèn)識到了三件重要的事情:
Pursue great people and not the paycheck
• 追隨優(yōu)秀的人,而不是工資
Do work you love
• 做自己喜愛的工作
Create a healthy work-life balance
• 保證健康的工作和生活平衡
Suddenly, the income was not as important as being able to work with great mentors and people I could learn from. I had hoped for this when accepting the investment-banking job and soon realized it didn’t exist. I remained blinded by the pay until that mute button was pressed. I left and ultimately took a job that paid much less but was far more rewarding in terms of the people and the work.
突然之間,收入不再重要,重要的是能夠與優(yōu)秀的導(dǎo)師和了不起的人一起共事。最初接受這份投行工作的時候,我也是抱著這樣的希望,可惜,希望很快落空。但我一直被高工資所蒙蔽,直到靜音鍵被按下的那一刻才幡然醒悟。我離開了那家銀行,最終找到的工作雖然薪酬沒有那么高,但那里的人和工作卻給我?guī)砹烁嗷貓蟆?/p>
Having a clear understanding of what was important to me was critical not just when co-founding a company that I wanted to work at – but also to create a place that fosters satisfying careers for all those I work with as well.
不論是共同創(chuàng)建一家自己希望為其奮斗的公司,還是為同事們創(chuàng)造一個平臺,讓他們獲得令人滿意的職業(yè)發(fā)展,對我而言,最為關(guān)鍵的是,清楚什么才是對自己最重要的。