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flibble | 1 year ago
I think this is poor and dangerous advice for anyone who wants to get ahead in life. If you are happy to coast by and not achieve much in life, sure, don’t work hard. But if you want to be one of the few who either rise to the top in your field or to create value in the world, then don’t feel bad about wanting to work hard. People generally learn by doing and those who do a lot learn a lot. Of course, don’t prioritize it over things that are important to you (physical health, family etc) but don’t feel it’s wrong to prioritize it above stuff isn’t important to you (eg Netflix and YouTube shorts).
josephg|1 year ago
Go to therapy. Learn about yourself. Work on your communication skills. Figure out what matters to you and invest in it. (For most people, family and friends are high on that list).
By all means work hard, but be strategic about it. Martyring yourself for your company won't make people respect you.
rowanG077|1 year ago
pjc50|1 year ago
It's worthwhile working for yourself if you do think you're learning, but in today's corporate environment loyalty is just showing your willingness to be exploited.
atoav|1 year ago
Shilling for work place abuse and unpaid overtime isn't getting you ahead in life the same way begging for forgivness with an abuser will make your life better.
If your corp can't manage people's time realistically, why would you expect them to manage anything realistically? Get out and go to a real place that knows how to run projects.
binarymax|1 year ago
Work hard for yourself to build your own. But don’t think for one moment that death marches will result in a swift rise to the top.
intelVISA|1 year ago
refurb|1 year ago
Nothing wrong with working hard, but make sure you get something about of it.
If you’re being asked to cancel a holiday because some clown can’t get anything done without setting realistic timelines, don’t do it.
But if you take a job where your boss says “we need to get this done by this date and we need people who are willing to get it done even if that means sacrificing work-life balance” and you get paid like you should for a job like that, then do it.
scaryclam|1 year ago
So no, "working hard" won't get you ahead. The people who really get that far ahead in life are the ones networking and learning the political games, not really working. And why do you need to "get ahead" to be successful? I'm ambitious, and I love growing in my career. I'm not someone who is happy with the bog standard things, but I've also learned that when all you value is being ahead of your peers, you miss out on more than you gain. And on top of it, you all end up in similar roles anyway.
fineIllregister|1 year ago
insane_dreamer|1 year ago
"rising to the top" is pure ego-inflation
"create value in the world" -- you'd better make sure that you're creating value for the world in something that's important and meaningful to you, not just "create value for shareholders" (who don't give a f about you) which is what "creating value" means 90% of the time if you're in industry
sebastiansm|1 year ago
holoduke|1 year ago
dasil003|1 year ago
The trick is to make sure you're always investing in yourself. Even when you're working for others you be either "learning or earning", ideally both.
itsoktocry|1 year ago
Oh yeah, every new-comer to the tech world thinks like this, and 99.99% of them don't get any further "ahead" in life than the rest of us. In fact, many end up further behind.