This is the second in a series of articles about my new book Finding the Sweet Spot. The book is available from most booksellers or online from the sites listed in the right sidebar. A synopsis of the book is here. A complete set of reviews of the book (thank you, reviewers!) can be found on Beth Patterson's site here.
My book has three intended audiences:
The
huge global cohort of young people (16-to-early twenties) who are not
yet employed, struggling unsuccessfully to get into the labor force, or
about to enter it. This is the largest cohort in the history of our
planet, even bigger than their boomer parents.
The "boomers" (50-65) who will have to, or want to, find "second careers", hopefully doing work they enjoy and find meaningful.
Squeezed
in between them, the half of all surveyed "working-age" (25-54) people
who say they find their work mind-numbing, humiliating, mismatched to
their skills, or otherwise dissatisfying.
I want to write
about the first and third groups in future articles, but this one is
about the second group, the boomers who, by choice or necessity, simply
are not retiring from the work force (as the two red circles at right
on the chart above attest), even though many are being pushed out of
their jobs to make room for younger and/or cheaper replacements. Many
of these people must, or wish to, find second careers.
Many
of them will try, mostly unsuccessfully, to make a living doing what
they did as employees, going it alone as "consultants". While those age
55+ make up 25% of the workforce, they make up 40% of the self-employed.
And unlike younger workers, only a minority of this age group has a
high school diploma. For many of them, they only know how to do one
job, and wouldn’t know how to begin starting a business to do anything
else. Statistically, the vast majority of them will earn much less than
they did as employees, despite working long hours trying to find
customers who will value their considerable experience. Many will put a
brave face on a very stressful and unprofitable period of
self-employment, because they can't imagine it being easier to do
anything else.
Workers aged 55-64 (especially women) are the
fastest-growing segment of the labor force. Many women in this age
bracket are re-entering the labor force after a protracted period
outside it, or even entering it for the first time, and finding the
prospect, and the experience, demoralizing and terrifying.
Increasingly,
lower- and middle-income Americans have no option of retiring -- their
savings are utterly insufficient to support them for the thirty or forty years
after age 55 that most can expect to live. We hear about the boomers
who have benefited from the decades-long boom in the housing and stock
markets (that ended abruptly this year) and can afford to retire and
live a long life of leisure, but this is a small proportion of the
boomer generation, and it has recently become much smaller. And even
for this wealthy minority, the prospect of three or four decades out of
the workforce is either fearsome or unimaginably boring -- after being
burned out from decades in exhausting executive jobs, they are likely
looking at second careers that will allow them to give something back,
and to do something they love that capitalizes on the immense skills
they have acquired over their first careers.
These
second-career seekers need the skills to create new enterprises, not
sole proprietorships that require them to compete with or outsource the
work of their former employer. For people who have a lifetime of
knowledge that is greatly needed in the challenging 21st century
workplace, work as a Wal-Mart greeter is a colossal waste of talent and
wisdom. We have to help them do better.
It is probably hard to
imagine the abject terror that making a living for themselves instills
in boomers who have absolutely no experience doing so. Chances are,
most of the entrepreneurs they do
know went at it the wrong way and failed, perhaps miserably and
expensively, so they have most of the same ten ingrained fears of
entrepreneurship that the young people I speak to in business schools
express: Not having the skills, self-confidence, ideas, money or time;
not being able to handle the stress, the failure or the loneliness; not
knowing the "process"; and the fear that "the deck's stacked against
entrepreneurs in favour of big business".
In my book I explain
how these ten fears are unwarranted, and how the most successful
entrepreneurs have discovered ways to make a living for yourself that
is not stressful, risky, exhausting or expensive.
The process
starts with self-discovery: knowing what you're really good at (your
Gifts), what your really love doing (your Passions), and what is needed
in the world that you really care about (your Purpose), and finding the
"sweet spot" where these three intersect. You might imagine that a
worker in his or her fifties would have a pretty good idea what his or
her Gifts and Passions are, but you'd be wrong. Most of us did what we
were trained to do, and worked at it so hard and so long that we had no
chance to even contemplate whether it was really what we were "meant to
do."
So, much of Finding the Sweet Spot
is exercises that help those with entrepreneurial aspirations try to
discover what that "sweet spot" is for them. This is a challenging task
(and it changes throughout our lifetime) but it can also be very
enjoyable.
I'm hoping that the book is successful enough that
there will be 'circles' of those seeking their "sweet spot" who will
get together, not only to help each other explore and imagine the work
they were really meant to do, but also to discover partners, people who
share their Purpose and whose Gifts and Passions complement their own.
Because the biggest mistake that entrepreneurs make, especially those
looking for second careers, is to try to do everything themselves,
alone. No one has all the
skills needed for a successful entrepreneurial venture, and sharing the
workload, the challenges and learning of a new enterprise converts the
experience from a stressful and lonely one to a joyful, social one --
and greatly increases the likelihood of success.
If I can get
the future entrepreneurs of the world -- people whose skills, ideas and
efforts are so critical to the economy of the future -- to just take
these two first steps -- to start with a discovery of the work they're
really meant to do, and to do so with partners with complementary Gifts
and Passions, I'll have succeeded in my book's purpose. Because with
this foundation, they'll be on their way to creating Natural
Enterprises, and being a part of a bold new Natural Economy -- one that
is purposeful, responsible, sustainable, and even fun. The events of
the past few months have shown clearly that the time for that new
Natural Economy is now.
People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs