Design your future – Taylor Pearson on the end of jobs

Create your own job, Taylor Pearson tells us in The End of Jobs. And explains how profitable this can be in today’s world.

Jobs as we know them will largely disappear. We are at the end of the Frederick Taylor work era.

Jobs are replaced by entrepreneurs. Everyone can be an entrepreneur, building a meaningful life doing what they want, now serving the long tail of markets has become profitable.

“The opportunity to align your fundamental drives for freedom and meaning with profitable work is greater than you may believe.”

“The problem both for us as a society and as individuals is that we’re asking the wrong question: “How do I get a job doing that?” What if the better question is: “How do I create a job doing that?”

linchpin

Pearson refers to Seth Godin (The Linchpin), Tim Ferriss (The 4 Hour Work Week) and James Altucher (Choose Yourself, and here), not just as examples of
people building something that did not exist, but also to their stories on how to create more meaningful and profitable work.

Pearson explains that new technologies give everyone access to higher education, leading to pressure on the job market. In addition to that, moving work to low cost countries has never been as easy.

This is why employees, with their seemingly safe jobs, should remain looking for a competitive advantage. The good part however is that these emerging technologies also provide new exciting opportunities for self realization, and do what you really want to do.

“For the first time in history, we’ve reached a point where humans’ natural drive to strive and grow by working on interesting problems aligns with what the market demands. It’s not only in congruence with fundamental human drives—it’s more economically valuable. Finding meaning in your work isn’t just fulfilling. It’s a profitable business strategy.”

There is a growth in the fourth economy – chaos, where entrepreneurial approaches and skills are key to success.

But fear of the unknown is withholding us.

“What the stoics unearthed and Ferriss rediscovered was this fundamental truth: we frequently avoid making choices not because the outcome is bad, but simply because it’s unknown.”

Citing and referring to Nassim Taleb (Antifragile, and here), Pearson argues that technology drives everyone from Mediocristan (the bell curve, extrapolate past performance) to Extremistan. Risk no longer lives in the past, but it lives in the future. And as an entrepreneur you need to become more capable of handling risk, to stand out in unpredictable environments. Become more Antifragile.

This change in our world, and the rising opportunity has been described by Chris Anderson in The Long Tail. The works of Ferriss, Altucher, Seth Godin and Nassim Taleb are driven by the same change force.

“As the costs of production and distribution fall, especially online, there is now less need to lump products and consumers into one-size-fits-all containers. In an era without the constraints of physical shelf space and other bottlenecks of distribution, narrowly-targeted goods and services can be as economically attractive as mainstream fare.”

we-are-all-weird

The books Seth Godin (Tribes, We Are All Weird) elaborate on the same phenomenon, from merely a marketing perspective.

While the book has a great title, Pearson very unfortunately in the conclusion section puts a question mark to his own work.

“Many people I talked to in the process of writing this asked me, do you really think that’s happening?
You really think that we’re moving into this amazing period of freedom and wealth as entrepreneurs?
The short answer: maybe.”

Pearson is hesitant but continues his positive story about the opportunities for us to build our own life.

“Never before in human history has an individual staring at his world had a greater ability to craft that story into one that now exists only in your imagination. You have the opportunity, right now, to design the future. Your future. Our future.”

The rich mindset, the idea muscle and on-the-side-business

the rich employee

A whole book in James Altucher’s typical style. 

Packed. Informative. Entertaining. A little chaotic. Jumping quickly between styles, digressing, then getting back on track. Interlaced with stories illustrating his points.

Do expect the “rich” in the title to be taken literally. Although the book offers monetary advice, the “rich” mostly relates to a mindset.

And it is not just aimed at employees either.

Typical James. Very commercially smart title to broaden the audience for the book. It suggests richness is also achievable for the employees. And of course there are many more employees than non-employees (probably implying entrepreneurs). And these employees are craving to be rich. In many ways.

antifragile

I am thinking how you would summarize his main idea. Independence comes to mind. Make yourself independent from your employer. Make your value independent from where you work. Make sure you have plan B and C. Prepare for disaster.
Become antifragile, comes to mind (Nassim Taleb).

Even become independent of your own streams of thought, I mean do not let them dominate you. Get on top of them.
That is probably a very buddhist idea

If you have read James’ post you may have seen a lot of the content already.

Start a business on the side.

Influence - cialdini

Refers to Cialdini a couple of times. Read that one some time ago. Influence. Recommend that too.

Read about this idea muscle, how important it is to train it. And then how lazy i am writing down the stuff racing through my mind during the day. Ideas I then forget because I don not write them down. I think starting to even write down ideas you have even how stupid they may sound is a great idea.

One of these is an idea for an internet media company. Any media but video. Well, also video, but not just. Podcasts, radio, whatever.
I do not understand why cable companies do not heavily invest in this. The carrier is commodity. Content is king. That is what they said in 2000 about the internet, refering to web sites, when the carier was still important (or rather: limited. It was important because badnwidth was so scarce). And today it is even more true, now all deregulation of cables has been realised. Sorry, I mean with the disappearance of the big state owned telephone / cable companies.
That was one of my ideas today.
It probably exists already, but I am too lazy to go find out now.

Another idea, for Amazon kindle. You can put books purchased elsewhere on your Kindle (using Calibre for that great stuff), but notes will not be sync-ed with your kindle.amazon.com. Provide it. I guess it is a stupid measure to make sure you purchase your books on amazon. Is there already a service extracting notes from your kindle? O I googled and found Calibre might be able to. Will check that out.

Another one: be able to search books and add to wishlist from Kindle.

Another one: integration with Evernote (typing this in evernote).

James tosses the idea of choose yourself meetups. Chooseyourself.me. AA type gatherings. Might work, but definitely not for me. Nor James I am sure. Too shy.

References in the back great: to Fedora training creation – O now I have a new business idea for courses. I can turn any business problem from my job, generalise it and create a (micro) course out of it. In the media company too? Was just talking to my wife last night how out of date the current system for higher education is, with all the new media courses (for free) coming online.

That’s it.

Nice read.