Editor's note: Whitney Johnson is the author of "Dare, Dream, Do: Remarkable Things Happen When You Dare to Dream," the founding partner of Clay Christensen's investment firm Rose Park Advisors, and speaks frequently on early-stage investing and leadership. You can follow her on Twitter @johnsonwhitney.
(CNN) -- I am a long-time fan of reality television:
first American Idol, then, So You Think You Can Dance, Project Runway,
and Master Chef.
The mythologist Joseph
Campbell provides an explanation for the success of these programs: "A
hero ventures forth from the world of common day into a region of
supernatural wonder; fabulous forces are there encountered and a
decisive victory is won; the hero comes back from this mysterious
adventure with the power to bestow boons on his fellow man."
Isn't this what happens in reality TV?
We see people who are
hoping to be called out of their everyday lives to an adventure, to be
tested on a road of trials in hopes of obtaining the ultimate boon.
Watching, we find pieces of ourselves mirrored in the contestants; we,
too, are on the mythic journey of a hero.
Our careers are a hero's journey -- a call to adventure
Early on, it's fairly
easy to see yourself as the hero. I, for example, fancied myself as Tess
McGill, of the movie Working Girl, having started out as a secretary.
But mid-career, accepting a beckoning call is far more difficult. You
likely have achieved some success; the stakeholders in your life,
including you, may be rather attached to the status quo.
Mid-career, the "another day, another dollar mindset" can quickly sideline us if we avoid challenges and the growth our work can bring.
What's important to remember here is that the dialing-it-in plateau can
be a precipice: we avoid a career-killing plateau by accepting the call
to a new adventure.
It may mean taking a
pay-cut, a demotion in terms of job title, or simply striking out into
the uncharted waters of entrepreneurship. And daunting though it may be,
we keep in our intellectual back pocket one of the findings of
disruptive innovation theory: the odds of success are six times higher,
the revenue opportunity 20 times greater, when we disrupt, and accept
the call to adventure.
A road of trials or succession of tough experiences is inevitable
Often they will come from where we least expect them, one obstacle being entitlement.
We may believe, for
example, that we have the right to a perk or promotion simply because we
have shown up (when we played soccer as kids we all got trophies
whether we won or lost, played or sat on the bench; why wouldn't this
also be true at work?) Mid-career, we may be inclined to become
benevolent dictators to our staff, deciding consensus isn't required.
After all, we are literally en-titled.
In battling the dragons
of entitlement and complacency, you become the hero of your career. When
you make and own your choices, fearlessly facing your challenges, you
become someone whom others want to follow: "leader" is just another name
for hero.
You are not meant to undertake this journey alone
Most heroes in
literature and film have a guide or a trainer: Frodo had Gandalf, Luke
Skywalker had Yoda, King Arthur had Merlin -- guides, who aren't about
exploiting you for their gain, but for whom your boon is also theirs.
If you want to be the
hero in your own story, seek out and cultivate the right kind of
mentors. I could never have made the leap from secretary to professional
without the sponsorship of a mentoring boss. If you are a professional
woman, a guide is even more essential.
We often measure the
success of our career by how much money we make and our job title, and
those are important yardsticks -- and an undeniable piece of achieving
the boon. But a true hero looks to the horizon with a vision of the
legacy he or she can leave -- what happens in the life of the company,
the people you worked with once you are long gone.
Ultimately the real boon
of a hero's journey is not that others will believe you are a hero, but
when you look in the mirror, you will see one.
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