DiscoverDear HBR:New Chapters
New Chapters

New Chapters

Update: 2020-12-101
Share

Description

Is it time to do something different in your career? Dan and Alison answer your questions with the help of Bruce Feiler, a researcher and the author of Life Is in the Transitions: Mastering Change at Any Age. They talk through what to do when you’ve been out of work and can’t find a job the usual ways, you feel lost in the ambiguity of a new role, or you want to convince your boss to release you to another team.


Dear HBR: is taking a break from publishing new episodes. The plan is to return after a hiatus, potentially with an updated format. Please subscribe to the podcast to stay up to date. Find out how to subscribe and listen to more episodes on the Dear HBR: page. And feel free to email your comments and questions to dearhbr@hbr.org.


HBS Working Knowledge: Nine Unconventional Strategies For Reinventing Your Career by Herminia Ibarra — “Major career transitions take three to five years. The big ‘turning point,’ if there is one, tends to come late in the story. In the interim, make use of anything as a trigger. Don’t wait for a catalyst. What you make of events is more important than the events themselves. Take advantage of whatever life sends your way to revise, or at least reconsider, your story.”


Book: Life Is in the Transitions: Mastering Change at Any Age by Bruce Feiler — “Each of us carries around an unspoken set of assumptions that dictate how we expect our lives will unfold. These expectations come from all corners and influence us more than we admit. We’ve been led to believe that our lives will always ascend, for example, and are shocked to discover they oscillate instead. Our society tells us we should be basking in progress, but our experience tells us we are beset by slip-ups. Might this gap help explain the anxiety so many of us feel?”


HBR: Disrupt Yourself by Whitney Johnson — “Current stakeholders in your life and career will probably encourage you to avoid disruption. For many of us, though, holding steady really means slipping—as we ignore the threat of competition from younger, more agile innovators, bypass opportunities for greater reward, and sacrifice personal growth.”


HBR: Managing Yourself: Five Ways to Bungle a Job Change by Boris Groysberg and Robin Abrahams — “People who switch organizations—whether they’re wide receivers changing football teams or general managers going to new companies—all face similar problems. It’s not just about the learning curve. Moves of all kinds entail significant internal and external challenges and transaction costs: upheaval in your home and social life; potential relocation expenses; adjustments to new cultural and political norms; navigation of unclear expectations; and the need to learn a new canon, skill set, and jargon.”

Comments 
In Channel
New Chapters

New Chapters

2020-12-1031:20

Remote Feedback

Remote Feedback

2020-11-2531:40

Commutes

Commutes

2020-11-1231:46

Safe Workplaces

Safe Workplaces

2020-10-2933:44

Sexism

Sexism

2020-10-1535:24

Flawed Bosses

Flawed Bosses

2020-10-0137:24

Public Sector Careers

Public Sector Careers

2020-09-0331:10

Covid and Kids

Covid and Kids

2020-08-2030:39

Management Material

Management Material

2020-08-0634:04

Start-Ups

Start-Ups

2020-07-2334:18

Frustrated Engineers

Frustrated Engineers

2020-07-0933:07

Self-Promotion

Self-Promotion

2020-06-2529:01

Tough Teams

Tough Teams

2020-06-1129:30

Career Reinvention

Career Reinvention

2020-05-2834:48

Challenging the Boss

Challenging the Boss

2020-05-1435:56

loading
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

New Chapters

New Chapters