What I Gained from Choosing the Rocky Road
With summer jobs on the horizon, professionals recall the first jobs that launched their careers. Read more, then write your own #CareerLaunch post.
Early in my career, I had the incomparable opportunity to serve in a post where there were more tasks than hands on deck. That allowed — even forced — me to stretch in new directions and take on challenges I would not have learned to surmount under more comfortable conditions.
I had graduated from the diplomacy programme of my country, the Republic of Korea, with the opportunity to select my first assignment from among any of the capitals where we had embassies. As an entry-level junior professional, I deliberately chose what I saw as an important and adventurous posting, in New Delhi.
At the time, the Korean embassy was small — but that was precisely its appeal to me. With far fewer fellow officials than in other major hubs, I could pay my dues and still handle the policy issues that had attracted me to diplomacy in the first place.
My choice paid off. I did make plenty of copies and run errands in New Delhi — but I also had the chance to write briefs, generate analysis, meet with officials, and apply the education I had been fortunate to receive starting on Day One.
I developed a strong affinity for the region that went far beyond what it gave me professionally. India and South Asia as a whole have a very special place in my heart. My second child, a son, was born there, my daughter married an Indian man, and I like to joke that my favourite Korean-Indian joint venture is the grandchild she added to our family.
Visiting my landlady of 40 years ago in 2015
To this day, when I evaluate candidates to serve at the United Nations, I consider what they have done to be far more important than whether they have served in a high-profile position.
When you are young, the future is open — and so is the world. Now is the time to choose the rocky road instead of the paved path. You may have to move many obstacles on your journey to success, but when you arrive you will be much stronger for the effort.
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More posts on this topic:
- “Here’s the Scoop: Why My First Job Mattered” — President Barack Obama
- “How Winning This Contest Changed My Life” — Oprah Winfrey
- “My First Job Lasted One Summer — But It Changed the Way I See the World” — Katie Couric, Yahoo Global News Anchor
- “Dream Big But Be Humble: Lessons That Led Me from the Factory Floor to the Executive Floor” — Ralph de la Vega, Vice Chairman of AT&T, Inc.
- “Before I Became a Stylist, I Sold Shoes at the Mall. Here's What I Learned.” — Rachel Zoe, CEO, Rachel Zoe, Inc.; Editor-in-Chief, The Zoe Report
- “What Designing a Shampoo Bottle Taught Me About Business” — Meg Whitman, CEO at Hewlett Packard Enterprise
- “Just Starting Out: The Life-Shaping Potential of Our First Jobs” — Arianna Huffington, President and Editor-in-Chief at The Huffington Post Media Group
- “What I Lacked in Qualifications I Learned to Make Up with Courage” — Suze Orman, television host and motivational speaker
- “Practice Makes a Career” — Bernard Tyson, Chairman and CEO of Kaiser Permanente
- “Summer Jobs Are Your First Shot at the ‘Grown-Up World.’ Soak Up as Much as You Can.” — Adena Friedman, President and COO at Nasdaq
- “Everyone Should Have Access to That First Job” — Valerie Jarrett, Senior Advisor to President Obama
- “Remember Your First Job?” — Tom Perez, Secretary of Labor at U.S. Department of Labor
- “Employers: Young Workers Are Your Diamonds in the Rough” — Maria Contreras-Sweet, Administrator at US Small Business Administration
Co-founder, Nutrimillets Foods Pvt Ltd
7yWe can make our mark on less traded road. So true. Thanks!
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8yGorevinde Basarisiz karar vermekten aciz guclulerin golgesinde vaktini ve cebini doldurmayi bilen yapacagi isi bilmiyen siradan yonetici......!