The document provides career advice for developing an entrepreneurial mindset. It discusses developing a competitive advantage by differentiating yourself, planning for adaptation and change, leveraging your network, pursuing breakout opportunities, and taking intelligent risks. The authors recommend thinking of yourself as the CEO of your own career, having a growth mindset, investing in yourself continuously, and viewing every job as an opportunity to interact with people and build relationships.
An overview of 'The Start-up of You' by Reid Hoffman and Ben Casnocha highlighting the importance of applying entrepreneurial principles to personal careers.
Discusses that all humans possess entrepreneurial instincts, urging individuals to view careers as personal start-ups.
Identifies the outdated nature of traditional career paths and emphasizes the need to adapt to new rules to avoid irrelevance.
Introduction to a mindset of 'Permanent Beta' that stresses on continuous self-investment and adaptability.
Methods to differentiate oneself in the job market focusing on developing unique skills, setting career paths, and a balance between aspirations and market realities.
Strategies for improving competitive position by upgrading one's assets and choosing suitable market environments.
Challenges traditional career planning, advocating for flexible, experimental approaches in career navigation.
Emphasizes the essential role of relationships in career success, including building and maintaining networks.
Encourages being proactive to discover and create unique career opportunities through various behaviors and networking.
Explains the value of intelligent risk-taking, assessing risks, and the importance of resilience in career decisions.
Highlights the importance of information flow through networks, advocating for effective communication and knowledge sharing.
Encourages readers to take proactive steps in transforming their careers and adapting strategies for personal growth.
AUTHORS
REID HOFFMAN BEN CASNOCHA
Cofounder and Chairman of Entrepreneur and Author
3.
CHAPTER 1: ALLHUMANS ARE ENTREPRENEURS
CHAPTER 2: DEVELOP A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
CHAPTER 3: PLAN TO ADAPT
CHAPTER 4: IT TAKES A NETWORK
CHAPTER 5: PURSUE BREAKOUT OPPORTUNITIES
CHAPTER 6: TAKE INTELLIGENT RISKS
CHAPTER 7: WHO YOU KNOW IS WHAT YOU KNOW
4.
All human beings
areentrepreneurs.
When we were in the caves,
we were all self-employed...
finding our food, feeding
ourselves. That’s where
human history began. As
civilization came, we suppressed
it. We became “labor” because
they stamped us, “You are labor.”
We forgot that we are entrepreneurs.
—MUHAMMAD YUNUS
Nobel Peace Prize winner and microfinance pioneer
5.
To adapt tothe CHALLENGES of professional life today...
6.
We need torediscover our ENTREPRENEURIAL INSTINCTS
and use them to forge new sorts of careers.
7.
Whether you’re alawyer or
doctor or teacher or engineer
or even a business owner...
8.
Today you needto also think of
yourself as an entrepreneur at the
helm of at least one living, growing
start-up venture: YOUR CAREER.
CHAPTER 1: ALLHUMANS ARE ENTREPRENEURS
CHAPTER 2: DEVELOP A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
CHAPTER 3: PLAN TO ADAPT
CHAPTER 4: IT TAKES A NETWORK
CHAPTER 5: PURSUE BREAKOUT OPPORTUNITIES
CHAPTER 6: TAKE INTELLIGENT RISKS
CHAPTER 7: WHO YOU KNOW IS WHAT YOU KNOW
Differentiate or die.
To beat the competition,
companies develop
CLEAR REASONS WHY
a customer should pick
them instead of others.
23.
Zappos massively DIFFERENTIATEDITSELF
from other e-commerce companies by offering
free shipping both ways and 24/7 customer
service via a locally staffed 1-800 number.
24.
Similarly, in aworld where
A MILLION PEOPLE CAN DO YOUR JOB...
25.
CHART A CAREERPATH
that sets you apart from other professionals.
Picking a MARKETNICHE
where you’re better than
the competition is key to
entrepreneurial strategy.
44.
CHAPTER 1: ALLHUMANS ARE ENTREPRENEURS
CHAPTER 2: DEVELOP A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
CHAPTER 3: PLAN TO ADAPT
CHAPTER 4: IT TAKES A NETWORK
CHAPTER 5: PURSUE BREAKOUT OPPORTUNITIES
CHAPTER 6: TAKE INTELLIGENT RISKS
CHAPTER 7: WHO YOU KNOW IS WHAT YOU KNOW
45.
POPULAR CAREER PLANNINGADVICE
says you should decide where you want to be in
10 years and then develop a plan for getting there.
They presume ASTATIC WORLD.
In fact, you CHANGE, the competition
CHANGES, and the world CHANGES.
50.
They presume thatfixed, accurate self-knowledge
can be easily attained through INTROSPECTION.
51.
They presume thatfixed, accurate self-knowledge
can be easily attained through INTROSPECTION.
In fact, your identity is not found through
introspection but rather emerges through
EXPERIMENTATION.
52.
Entrepreneurial career planning
and adapting is about being
FLEXIBLY
PERSISTENT
always ready to adapt, but also
persistent in driving toward goals.
Then craft anexperimental PLAN A,
an alternative PLAN B, and
an unchanging, certain PLAN Z.
66.
PLAN A
What you’redoing now.
Your current implementation of
your competitive advantage.
67.
PLAN B
You pivotto B when
your plan isn’t working
or when you discover
a better way toward
your goal.
68.
PLAN Z
You shiftto Z if something goes seriously
wrong. It’s the lifeboat you can jump in if
your plan fails and you need to reload
before getting back in the game.
69.
Did you knowthat
started out as a multiplayer online game?
70.
Did you knowthat
started out as a “digital wallet” for storage only?
71.
Did you knowthat
JERRY
SPRINGER
was mayor of Cincinnati?
72.
Did you knowthat
SHERYL
SANDBERG
began her career in India?
There, she worked on
public health projects
for the World Bank.
An experimental PLANA,
an alternative PLAN B, and
an unchanging, certain PLAN Z.
76.
An experimental PLANA,
an alternative PLAN B, and
an unchanging, certain PLAN Z.
This is
ABZ PLANNING .
77.
CHAPTER 1: ALLHUMANS ARE ENTREPRENEURS
CHAPTER 2: DEVELOP A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
CHAPTER 3: PLAN TO ADAPT
CHAPTER 4: IT TAKES A NETWORK
CHAPTER 5: PURSUE BREAKOUT OPPORTUNITIES
CHAPTER 6: TAKE INTELLIGENT RISKS
CHAPTER 7: WHO YOU KNOW IS WHAT YOU KNOW
78.
Relationships matter toyour career no matter the
organization or your level of seniority because, ultimately,
EVERY JOB BOILS DOWN TO INTERACTING WITH PEOPLE.
While not asvital as allies, acquaintances usually
INTRODUCE DIVERSITY to your network.
95.
They tend tohail from different social circles or
industries and so they can be useful to find opportunities
or intelligence OUTSIDE YOUR INNER CIRCLE.
96.
While there’s alimit to the number of
people you can ever know at one time...
97.
...you are partof a broader network of
FRIENDS OF FRIENDS and
FRIENDS OF FRIENDS OF FRIENDS
—second and third degree connections—
for which there is VIRTUALLY NO LIMIT.
Use it topay for coffees,
lunches, and the occasional
plane ticket to meet new
people and shore up
existing relationships.
107.
CHAPTER 1: ALLHUMANS ARE ENTREPRENEURS
CHAPTER 2: DEVELOP A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
CHAPTER 3: PLAN TO ADAPT
CHAPTER 4: IT TAKES A NETWORK
CHAPTER 5: PURSUE BREAKOUT OPPORTUNITIES
CHAPTER 6: TAKE INTELLIGENT RISKS
CHAPTER 7: WHO YOU KNOW IS WHAT YOU KNOW
108.
The trajectories ofremarkable careers are NOT
slow and steady up and to the right.
109.
Rather, they aremarked by
BREAKOUT OPPORTUNITIES
—career experiences that lead to unusually rapid gains.
110.
You can developHABITS OF BEHAVIOR that increase
the likelihood you find great career opportunities.
There will betimes when your back’s against the wall,
when you’re low on resources or time, and when you’ll
have to get scrappy and HUSTLE for opportunities.
123.
Constraints can bea blessing in disguise:
it’s amazing how RESOURCEFUL one can get
when one has no choice but to be resourceful.
124.
The founders ofAirbnb were running out of cash,
but they still believed in their idea.
125.
To buy moretime to figure out a way to scale their business,
they did what any hustling entrepreneur would do...
And the extracash — $20,000 in profit — bought them
enough time to figure out how to turn a consistent profit.
129.
CHAPTER 1: ALLHUMANS ARE ENTREPRENEURS
CHAPTER 2: DEVELOP A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
CHAPTER 3: PLAN TO ADAPT
CHAPTER 4: IT TAKES A NETWORK
CHAPTER 5: PURSUE BREAKOUT OPPORTUNITIES
CHAPTER 6: TAKE INTELLIGENT RISKS
CHAPTER 7: WHO YOU KNOW IS WHAT YOU KNOW
CHAPTER 1: ALLHUMANS ARE ENTREPRENEURS
CHAPTER 2: DEVELOP A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
CHAPTER 3: PLAN TO ADAPT
CHAPTER 4: IT TAKES A NETWORK
CHAPTER 5: PURSUE BREAKOUT OPPORTUNITIES
CHAPTER 6: TAKE INTELLIGENT RISKS
CHAPTER 7: WHO YOU KNOW IS WHAT YOU KNOW
165.
The most meaningful
wayto differentiate
your company from
your competition, the
best way to put distance
between you and the
crowd, is to do an
outstanding job with
information. How you
gather, manage, and
use information will
determine whether
you win or lose.
—BILL GATES