Most careers drift not because people lack talent, but because they never decide where they’re actually trying to go. At some point, you’re responsible for deciding who and what you want to be.
Life’s small decisions are easy — dinner plans, weekend choices, the daily navigation of a busy existence. But the big decisions require attention, reflection, planning, and commitment. The stakes are enormous.
Baby Boomers and Gen Xers were guided through those choices by parents, teachers, counselors, and influential family friends. College was the dream our parents had for us because they missed out. Career choices mattered.
My own direction came from growing up in the 60s and 70s — the music, a young priest at the church where I volunteered as a Head Start teacher, and a family friend who showed me what a “personnel manager” actually did. That’s when I realized I wanted to help others.
Today the world feels more complicated and less certain. Where my generation wanted to work hard and make a difference, many young people worry there aren’t many differences left to be made. That’s where leaders have a role to play:
• When interviewing, zero in on what candidates are really looking for. Give straight answers about the job, and don’t hesitate to offer career advice they can use immediately.
• When supervising, listen to their questions, give real‑time feedback, coach them toward what they truly want, and mentor them in the parts of the work you love most.
• As a leader, be visible and accessible. Share the choices you made and help them discover the things that excite them.
Work isn’t just about job descriptions. Those describe tasks — not the meaning behind them. During onboarding and skills training, get engaged with your employees. Learn their preferences, coach them toward what they need, and tell them why you love what you do.
These are the little things that help people discover the big things about their life and work today.
Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (1832 – 1898), better known by his pen name Lewis Carroll, was an English author (Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and its sequel Through the Looking-Glass (1871), poet, mathematician, photographer and reluctant Anglican deacon.






