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career planning path…

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Today I have read great post on LinkedIn. It came in right time to me. Exactly at a time of desperate uncertainty. The thing is i was seeking for advice and it really showed me the way. İn short lets see what this post is telling us >>>

Why You Should Dump Your 5-Year Career Plan

Tip #1: Don’t plan your career.

What do I mean by don’t plan your career? You wouldn’t believe the number of people I’ve seen make bad decisions about their careers based on preconceived notions of where they want to be in five or 10 years. They feel like they have to make a certain amount of money, have a certain title, be promoted every three years, or move on. Yet what I’ve seen, both in terms of general business and individual career planning, is that in a world that is ever-changing with uncertainty just around the corner, long-term career planning is effectively extinct.

I’d be an absolute genius if I could predict exactly what Expedia, Inc. would look like five years from now. While I have one eye toward the future, I spend a majority of my time planning how we can be incredibly agile and smart about finding the right opportunities today and pouncing on them faster than our competition. I have no idea what feature set our air or hotel team will be building six months from now, and I consider that a good thing. Whatever they do, they’ll do it fast.

My career planning advice is similar: optimize for the next one to two years instead of the next five or 10. Look for the right opportunities, stay flexible, have some idea of what direction you are headed in, but don’t lock into a long-term direction because chances are that the world will change up on you.

Tip #2: Work for the right person.

The one constant I’ve found in an ever-changing world is that great, smart people stay great and smart. So my second piece of career planning advice is to find the smartest and most competent person around you and work for that person. It doesn’t matter if the move is lateral, down or up. Just get yourself working for that great person. Don’t ask for much; just work your ass off.

The benefit is two-fold. First, you’ll learn a lot. You’ll be challenged. You’ll grow as a person and as a professional. Second, smart people tend to get promoted. When they get promoted, you’ll tend to follow them as they rise in the ranks (assuming you’ve done a great job). You’ll essentially have your career planning taken care of until you find another amazing interest or great person that you can learn from. You won’t know exactly where you are headed, but chances are, at some point — and hopefully at more than one point — you’ll find yourself at the right place at the right time, and you’ll do better than fine.

http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20130913174556-222159609-why-you-should-dump-your-5-year-career-plan?trk=tod-home-art-list-large_0