๐ Earlywork #69: The 4 Step Framework to Rethink Your Career Path
How the Earlywork team stumbled on a valuable career paradigm from a failed business idea
Ello ello Earlyworkers!
Sliding in your DMs isย Earlywork #69, a weekly cheeky newsletter sent every Tuesday that provides free resources + interviews on the careers of tomorrow, for 6K+ young Aussies & Kiwis in the tech, startup & social impact landscape.
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Not many folks know this, but back in 2020 when Earlywork was just a newsletter, launching a community wasnโt the first โproductโ idea we tried.
After research with 150+ students & graduates across our newsletter audience, we found that the average graduate was willing to pay $3000 to guarantee their dream graduate role, with some going as high as $10,000-$20,000.
We had also encountered a super low literacy around job application & interview processes for tech & startup roles in Australia.
Based on these two insights, we launched a job search coaching service to help students and graduates land roles in tech & startups.
If we could help someone land a job, incrementally, we would be landing them tens of thousands of dollars and a ton of upside in terms of future learning and career progression.
In doing so, we also wanted to democratise โjob search as a skillโ and level the playing field. Notably, for our beta cohort, we opted for a pay-what-you-want, no-win, no-fee model, so that anyone regardless of income level could access the service.
Leveraging our newsletter, social media presence, and campus network, we tested our coaching model with dozens of young people from a diverse range of academic and professional backgrounds, with structured sessions around:
What Career Pathway to Choose + How to Discover Top Startups in Australia
How to Create a Killer LinkedIn, Resume & Cover Letter
How to Leverage Cold LinkedIn DMs
Behavioural Interview Tips & Tricks
But we made a ton of f*ckups along the wayโฆ ๐คฆ
With no upfront cost, limited screening, and no formalised coaching agreement, our beta cohort attracted candidates with a mixed bag of needs, urgency and motivation levels.
Folks would have one or a couple of sessions, but they would:
Drop off to focus on other areas of life like uni and current work
Already have landed their own interviews with companies before starting sessions
Stop sessions and later use the initial insights & skills learned to land a job independently
Not yet have the right foundational skills to land the jobs they wanted
We didnโt have a rigorous system of collecting product feedback and hadnโt formalised a neat way to request payment, so we struggled to capture the value from folks who eventually landed jobs with our help.
After this initial beta cohort, we were on track to launch a more structured, cohort-based career coaching program to help students & graduates land startup roles in early 2021.
But we asked ourselves: โWhy should we focus on helping ten people when we can help thousands?โ
So in April 2021, we turned our LinkedIn group of early newsletters fans into a dedicated community on Slack: the Earlywork community.
From those intimate one-on-one coaching experiences navigating career stories, one valuable thing that did emerge was a set of four key factors that determine whether a role is the right fit for someone, which we termed the PEGS framework:
Problem
Environment
Goals
Skills
To this day, the PEGS framework is still the introductory paradigm I use when mentoring students and recent graduates who are unsure about what role to take on.
Hereโs how to use it:
#1: Problem ๐คฌ
What problems piss you off?
Choosing a career in the tech & startup space, given its fast pace and high level of ambiguity, can come with a lot of ups and downs.
When I look back at the roles I enjoyed the most, a common thread was that I was working on a problem that pissed me off i.e. a problem worth solving.
Working on something you give a shit about makes the harder days worth it, so when youโre evaluating what โindustryโ to work in long-term, come back to a broad lens view of the world around you.
What big problems personally frustrate you, excite you, or capture your curiosity?
โFollow your passionโ comes from a good place in chasing what youโre curious aboutโฆ
โฆbut when it comes to choosing a career, not all passions come with equal opportunities.
The sweet spot is finding where your curiosity intersects with the pain points and unmet needs of others.
If youโre struggling with an answer here, thatโs okay! Start somewhere, and the more problem spaces you explore, the stronger your answer will be.
#2: Environment ๐ก
What does your ideal working environment look like?
You can take one problem, say, the transition to renewable energy, and tackle that in many different environments:
Multinational corporations
Fast-growing startups
Government departments
Consultancies & agencies
Investment firms
Not-for-profits and charities
The environment you choose can have a huge impact on the learning, responsibility, culture and impact you get, so choosing the right one is arguably as important as the problem space itself.
Here are some key dimensions to consider as a way to segment different environments and understand where you can best thrive:
a) Are you primarily looking for mentorship or ownership?
b) Do you thrive in structured or unstructured environments?
c) Do you prefer independent or collaborative work?
d) Do you want to go broad or go deep?
e) How comfortable are you with risk & change?
A lot of these questions often wedge on the total headcount of your workplace, so itโs worth getting exposure to big and small companies to help you get clearer here.
Our earlier piece on Corporates vs. Startups may be helpful in the general strengths & weaknesses of each of these environments.
#3: Goals ๐ฏ
What do you want out of your role, and career more broadly?
The role your friend chooses may be a terrible fit for you, even if both of you are interested in similar areas.
Fundamentally, people choose careers with different underlying drivers. Itโs important to reflect on what these are for you, both short-term and long-term.
Over the 1.5 years of running Earlywork, these are the most common career goals Iโve encountered in early-career job seekers:
Learn as much as I can
Run my own business
Earn a high salary
Have a good work-life balance
Work flexible hours
Work on lots of different areas
Work on something with massive scale
Make a positive social impact
Work on cutting-edge technology
Travel across the world for work
Of course, itโs not easy to get all of these factors in one role, and you may not even want some of these factors, so itโs worth defining your own drivers and understanding their comparative priority.
Use this list as a starting point and try to rank what factors are most important to you both a) In your next role and b) Long-term.
As a general pattern, weโve seen folks in the community prioritise Learning and Culture as the most important factors when evaluating a job offer, over Compensation and Impact:
That allows you to narrow down the vast array of career options out there, and weigh up competing possibilities.
In formulating my own career framework as a university graduate, I came to the 3 pillars of Learning, Impact & Camaraderie as the most important things for me to optimise for right now. Hereโs a previous piece I wrote outlining this approach in greater detail.
#4: Skills ๐จ
What skills do you want to use to solve the problem you care about?
Letโs say your dream company knocked on your door today and said โHey mate, take any role you want.โ
What job do you take?
Focus less on the title and more on the underlying skills youโll get to use, whether โhardโ quantitative skills or more qualitative, interpersonal skills.
To understand where you can have the greatest leverage:
a) Map out a list of skills you have today
These can be both specific skills youโve honed from education or work experience, as well as more general talents and strengths.
Often, these are the sorts of things your friends would say youโre great at or things you picked up easily as a kid.
Understanding your current skillset in totality helps you to get a sense of the type of roles youโre best positioned to fill in a company.
Shilpa Mohan from ProcurePro gives some great examples of how to translate non-tech experiences into skills related to tech roles in one of our previous pieces here.
b) Segment your skills by how much you enjoy them
The act of utilising and honing some skills will give you energy and joy. Pay attention to this intersection.
As Naval Ravikant (Angel Investor and Founder of AngelList) often remarks:
โDo what feels like play to you, but work to othersโ
If you try a job and hate it, great, you learned something about yourself that helps you to narrow down your options!
Just because youโve built up a baseline ability in an area, doesnโt mean you have to go down that path.
I tried my hand at a Computer Science degree, but aside from a brief stint in WordPress development, recognised that this area didnโt capture my curiosity or give me as much energy as others.
c) Define what skills youโd like to build but donโt yet have
Understanding your desired skills helps you to prioritise roles based not just on how much youโll learn, but the relevance of what youโll learn to your goals.
Ultimately, what we care about, what weโre good at, and what the world needs all change over time.
Treat this framework less as a one-time prescription and more as a sparring buddy to help you navigate times of uncertainty as your career progresses.
๐ ๐ฐย Early Morning Herald
Australiaโs dedicated newspaper for hardly-hitting journalism on tech, startups & careers
TAKE A SEAT? Graduate software engineer Vivian Jackson has been rattled by a WFH furniture collection notice from her former employer, B2B software giant Canvassian, after leaving to join a startup that remarkably is not Eucalyptus or Dovetail.
The young dev originally picked up a flagship Herman Miller Aeron chair from the Canvassian office during lockdown, thinking she had secretly scored a perfect chair to sit on during standups and play League of Legends at 4pm.
"It's devastating; here I was thinking I had worked at a company that invests in employee wellbeing for the long-term," she says.
Sources say she was last spotted frowning at the office chair section in IKEA. The whereabouts of the 3 computer monitors she borrowed from the office are unknown.
1๏ธโฃ ๐ ๐ชย One Minute Hustle
We are back once again withย One Minute Hustle,ย a bite-sized interview with an emerging Australian young startup founder or operator.ย
This week, letโs get inside the noggin of a young founder changing the way we return things we buy onlineโฆ
Jacob Kononiuk, Founder @ Readily
โ๏ธ What are you working on?
Quit weaving through traffic & post office queues to return it โ
Quit waiting weeks to get your refund back ๐ โโ๏ธ
Readily collects your return from your home & refunds you instantly! No more fuss, no more sore tongues, no more time waste ๐
๐ฑ Howโd you get started?
When I waited 3 weeks to receive my refund for a pair of pants, I felt that this was 3 weeks too long.
Considering the incredible pace at which technology and markets are moving, I was gobsmacked that the online returns process is stuck in 2006.
I hate the pain of returning items online so much that I've created the solution.
๐ค Why do you do what you do?
The fundamental mission for Readily is twofold:
Create a consistent and seamless post-shopping experience that customers can trust and rely on
Create a carbon-neutral returns network that eliminates single item returns
I am a passionate landscape photographer and I have a great connection with the environment.
If I am not contributing positively to future generations, I've missed the point.
Oh, and Readily just launched! ๐
If you value your time and wish to waste it no longer on tedious returns, try out their service.
Keen to share your story, or know a young founder, side hustler, or creator we should feature next?
Share your deets below or forward this to a mate, and weโll get in touch!
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Ciao for now,
Team Earlywork (Dan, Jono & Marina)
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