How to set career goals?

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The Myth of the Ladder

We are taught to view a career as a linear ascent—a ladder where each rung is clearly defined, leading toward a singular, shimmering "top." But the ladder is a lie. It assumes the world is static and that your desires will remain unchanged for forty years.

In reality, a career is more like a wilderness. There are no pre-cut paths, only directions. To set career goals isn't to pick a destination; it’s to build a compass. It is the process of defining your "Why" before you commit to the "What."


The Audit of Ambition

Most of us inherit our career goals. We chase titles because they sound impressive at dinner parties, or we seek salaries to fund lifestyles we don't have time to enjoy. To set a goal that actually sustains you, you must first strip away the external noise.

The Curiosity Ledger

I spent years chasing a "Director" title because I thought it was the natural next step. When I finally reached it, I realized I hated the work. I had optimized for status instead of craft.

Now, I use a different metric: The Curiosity Ledger.

  • What are the problems you find yourself solving for fun?

  • What topics do you read about when no one is watching?

  • When does time "disappear" for you?

Your career goals should be built around these intersections. If your goal doesn't involve a high degree of curiosity, you are merely signing up for a well-paid slog.


The Three Pillars of Career Architecture

A robust career goal isn't a vague statement like "I want to be successful." It is a structural commitment. We can break these goals down into three distinct types:

Goal Category Focus Example
Craft Goals Mastery of a specific skill or tool. "Mastering systems architecture."
Network Goals The quality and depth of your professional community. "Finding a mentor in the sustainable tech space."
Lifestyle Goals The conditions under which you work. "Transitioning to fully asynchronous work."

Most people focus exclusively on the first pillar. But without the other two, you end up as a highly skilled person who is lonely and exhausted.


Deconstructing the "Five-Year Plan"

The "Five-Year Plan" is a relic of a slower era. In today's landscape, five years is an eternity. Instead, we need to set goals that are Directionally Accurate but Tactically Flexible.

The Horizon Approach

  1. The North Star (5+ Years): This is your "Identity" goal. It’s not a job title; it’s a state of being. “I want to be a recognized authority in design ethics.”

  2. The Landmark (1 Year): A tangible achievement that moves you toward the North Star. “Launch a research project on AI bias.”

  3. The Next Step (Now): A micro-action you can take this week. “Buy the domain for my portfolio.”

This structure allows you to pivot when the world changes (and it will) without losing your sense of purpose.


The Resistance and the "Safe" Path

The greatest obstacle to setting meaningful career goals is fear—specifically, the fear of being a "beginner" again. We often set goals that are slight iterations of what we are already doing because it feels safe.

But safety is a slow-acting poison for a career.

If your goals don't make you feel a slight tremor of nerves, you aren't aiming for growth; you’re aiming for maintenance. To grow, you must be willing to trade your current expertise for future potential. You must be willing to be the "dumbest" person in the room for a while.


Conclusion: The Work is the Reward

We often treat career goals as something to be "achieved" so that we can finally relax. But the goal is not the trophy. The goal is the opportunity to do more meaningful work.

If you set a goal to become a CEO just for the title, the day you get it will be the most disappointing day of your life. But if you set a goal to lead people because you care about the culture of work, the daily practice of leadership becomes the reward.

Stop looking for the end of the road. There is no end. There is only the next stretch of wilderness, and the quiet satisfaction of knowing you are headed in the right direction.

Set your compass. Then, start walking.

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