By now, unless you've been living under a rock in Nepal, you probably are aware that General Motors named a woman to be CEO late last year. Her name is Mary Barra and she's the first female executive to run a major car company. In an ABC News interview celebrating GM's double coup, winning top car and truck at this year's Detroit auto show, Barra conveyed the following piece of golden career advice to interviewer, Rebecca Jarvis: "I always approached each job like it was the one that I would do the rest of my life." Now, 30 years later, she holds the automaker's top job.
What a refreshing perspective. During a time when everyone is moving rapidly on to the next thing, or so they think, someone who has risen to the top offers up some timeless truth. Do the best job you can right now at this moment, stay focused (another theme emerging early in 2014) and quit worrying about the next job. The next opportunity will form one way or another.
As an aside that buffers these comments, contrary to how it may seem, workers used to change jobs a lot more than they do today. According to a Bureau of Labor Statistics report reported by CBS Marketwatch, http://www.marketwatch.com/story/americans-less-likely-to-change-jobs-now-than-in-1980s-2014-01-10?link=MW_home_latest_news, workers are more loyal now than they were 10, 20, or even 30 years ago. Whether that's out of economic fear, genuine desire or combination of all the above remains an open-ended question.
Bottom line: Keep working hard, and when nothing else is working, try a different angle or tact.
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