Fortune | FORTUNE 15小时前
This Gen X CEO has only worked at one company for 35 years—she says job-hopping Gen Z are not putting enough energy and time into their current gigs
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本文探讨了ACT首席执行官Janet Godwin的职业生涯,她35年来在同一公司逐步晋升,强调了在当前岗位上积累经验和持续学习的重要性。文章对比了Godwin的职业路径与Gen Z热衷的频繁跳槽现象,并引用了其他CEO的观点,强调了耐心、专注和在现有工作中取得成就的重要性。文章还提到了Godwin在ACT内部通过不断尝试新角色来积累经验,以及在疫情期间通过提问和寻求帮助来应对挑战的经历,为年轻职场人提供了宝贵的职业发展建议。

💡ACT CEO Janet Godwin在ACT工作了35年,从撰写试题开始,逐步晋升至首席执行官,她认为这种职业路径是值得借鉴的。

🤔文章对比了Godwin的职业生涯与Gen Z的频繁跳槽行为。许多Gen Z员工倾向于每两到三年就更换工作,这与Godwin的长期职业生涯形成了鲜明对比。

📈Godwin强调了在现有岗位上积累经验的重要性,并引用了其他CEO的观点,例如思科的Sarah Walker和沃尔玛的Doug McMillion,他们都建议年轻人要对自己的职业发展保持耐心,并在当前工作中做到最好。

📚Godwin在ACT内部通过不断尝试新的角色来积累经验,这让她在应对公司面临的重大挑战,如COVID-19疫情时,拥有了更全面的视野和应对能力。

❓Godwin认为,作为领导者,承认自己并非无所不知,并勇于提问和寻求帮助,是应对挑战的关键。她强调了持续学习和保持好奇心的重要性。

While at the time, it may have felt a waste of precious time better spent sleeping in or hanging out with friends, in reality, the test has opened doors for millions of students to pursue their dream schools and careers. For ACT test takers over the past 35 years, you may have Janet Godwin to thank

Odds are, you probably have never heard of the Midwestern Gen Xer, but she has devoted her career to education; after first joining ACT in 1990 helping to write test questions, Godwin was named CEO in 2020 and became part of an exclusive group of leaders, including General Motors’ Mary Barra, Walmart’s Doug McMillon, and Nike’s Elliott Hill, to have spent their entire careers working their way up the same ladder.

“I came in thinking I’d be here for a couple of years, and here I am, 35 years later,” she tells Fortune. And while proponents of job hopping might view Godwin’s path as complacent, she sees it as resourceful. In fact, she recalls some of the best advice she ever received as a young employee was to quit focusing on what’s next in your career—and instead put your energy into what’s present.

Gen Z’s love of job hopping could backfire

Traditionally, workers have dedicated their careers to a job and company they enjoy—and settling down to steadily climb the ranks.

But as the cost of living has increased, wages stagnated, and people took to working longer (making it harder for younger workers to progress into senior roles), professionals today aren’t waiting for their boss to promote them. Instead, many Gen Zers in particular have taken matters into their own hands and job hop—with 56% of Gen Z finding it acceptable to hop every two to three years. 

But it could backfire. 

Godwin’s boss once told her: “If you’re so busy thinking about what you’re going to do next, I guarantee you you’re not putting enough energy and time into what you’re doing today.” 

“You need to make sure what you’re doing today is running the best,” she recalled. “You need to learn and mature in your current job before you have your eyes set on something else.”

Now, looking back on her own career, the 59-year-old agrees. 

“There’s some truth to maturing with what you have, and not just constantly grasping for the next thing on the ladder,” Godwin says. “Because you might not have built the skills yet to be really ready for that next thing on the ladder.”

It’s a message echoed by chief executives across the business world. Sarah Walker, Cisco’s U.K. CEO, said young people need to not expect a raise or new job title every year: “You just need to be patient in the journey.”

“Don’t take your current job for granted,” Walmart’s McMillion added in an interview with Stratechery last year. “The next job doesn’t come if you don’t do the one you’ve got well.”

The power of climbing the same ladder, ring by ring

Like many Gen Z grads, Godwin wasn’t sure where to take her career after obtaining her bachelor’s and master’s in English from the Universities of Oklahoma and Iowa, respectively. Her dream job was to one day be a novelist—but she instead reasoned that it would be better to use her writing skills to earn a living wage.

While she never expected to stay at the same company her entire career, she says simply being curious and seeking out new challenges is far more useful than trying to map out one’s future resume at a young age. 

“Don’t be afraid to learn new things, and don’t be too rigid on what your path is,” Godwin says.

“That’s what I mean about being curious. Because if you think you know where you’re going to be 10 years from now, you probably don’t.”

At ACT, Godwin said she took on a new role every two to three years—a round robin that helped her gain experience in nearly every department and was invaluable by the time she was tapped to lead the entire company during one of the company’s biggest existential crises: the COVID-19 pandemic.

Overnight, the company’s future looked all but dim as testing centers shut their doors and online testing was seemingly far down the pipeline. But after years of writing questions for students to answer, she found that being willing to ask questions was key to getting through the tough challenges.

“If you think you know it all and have all the answers, you don’t. One of the strongest leadership skills is the ability to ask for help, to know ‘man, I don’t know everything,’” Godwin says. “I might have a CEO title, but I guarantee you I do not know everything.”

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职业发展 ACT Janet Godwin 职场建议 领导力
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