The Compass and the Radar: The Art of Building a Rewarding Career While Remaining True to Yourself
By Paolo Gallo
()
About this ebook
With a creative and engaging mix of coaching practice, management theories, case studies and personal story-telling, this book helps readers to identify both their own compass – which relates to integrity, passion and internal value systems – and radar – which helps them to understand organizational complexity and 'read' workplace dynamics and situations.
The Compass and the Radar is founded on a series of searching questions that will enable anyone to find their compass and radar to achieve personal success:
· How can I find out what my real strengths and talents are?
· Do I love what I do?
· How can I find a job with a company that truly reflects my values?
· What is the price I am willing to pay for a meaningful and rewarding career?
· How should I define a successful career?
Key chapters offer practical tools, as well as insights on the trade-offs and difficult choices that everyone will need to make at some point in their career – all of which will underline the importance of having the most robust moral compass.
In the midst of a volatile and uncertain world, one in which technology, AI and digital resources are transforming working environments, The Compass and the Radar allows readers to pause, reflect, and consider who they are, what they stand for, and how to remain free.
Paolo Gallo
Paolo Gallo is a keynote speaker, executive coach and author on the topic of personal and professional development, leadership, and the future of work and learning. He is Adjunct Professor in Leadership & Organizational Behavior at SDA Bocconi University in Milan. Paolo has served as Chief Human Resources Officer at the World Economic Forum in Geneva, Chief Learning Officer at The World Bank in Washington DC, and Director of Human Resources at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development in London, with prior experience at the International Finance Corporation in Washington DC and at Citigroup in London and Milan. He has worked in 80+ countries and has authored the award-winning book The Compass & The Radar: The Art of Building a Rewarding Career While Remaining True to Yourself, published by Bloomsbury in 2018 and translated into several languages. He lives in Genève with his wife Lalia and daughter Sadika.
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The Compass and the Radar - Paolo Gallo
The Compass
and the Radar
To Lalia and Sadika.
Please tell me: how can I be so lucky?
Book titleContents
Acknowledgements
Foreword by Dave Ulrich
Message from Adam Yearsley
Introduction
Part One Passion
1 The hidden treasure
The treasure and the journey within
Creativity
Reflection and confidence in ourselves
Personal and professional identity
What do we believe in?
In the zone
The others helping our growth
Part Two The Compass
2 Before setting off. Understanding which is the right Village for us
What is culture?
How to understand the culture of an organization
From theory to practice
How do the interviews take place?
What language do they speak?
Who is hired and promoted and why?
What happened to the person who did the job before us?
What are the incentive systems?
What are the five numbers to pay attention to?
What are the rules of the game, written and unwritten?
3 Destination identified. Arriving at the Village that’s right for us
An encouraging story
The Internet and social media
Evaluate the chances of success
Write a CV or tell your story?
Who can help us?
Interviews: necessary but not sufficient conditions
Emotional intelligence
Interview techniques
Discovering Pinocchio
Employment contract?
4 Entering the Village. How to gain trust
Trust, a fundamental lever in organizations
Negotiation of the contract
Timing and methods
Building trust in organizations
The formula of trust
5 Meeting the locals. Understanding the rules of the game
Welcome to the jungle
Remember the names of the people we meet
Ability to listen
Asking questions to learn
Using emotions to build positive relationships
Entering the Village to understand the organization
Meeting the locals
Political intelligence
Individual or organizational orientation
We can be heroes … We can all be heroes
6 The pact with the devil. The price you pay for your career
The price you pay
How much is enough?
How much land does a person need?
The rat race
One lunch together, in 28 years
The price of power
Organizations as frog farms
Trip to China
Three millennia of wisdom and authenticity
The orange taxi
The pact with the devil
Disobedience or choice?
What would we have done?
Reflections on freedom
Part Three Freedom
7 Success inside the Village. How to build a career and remain a decent person
Steps to building a career
Do we still believe in Santa Claus?
Understanding who holds the power
Managing the relationship with our boss
How to survive the new boss
Never outshine the master
Summary of types of leaders
Saying what is strictly necessary
Investing in our relational capital
Affiliation but with caution
Presence
8Should I stay or should I go? Deciding whether to stay in the organization or leave
Go towards or run away
Superstar with a gun
What did I learn at Davos?
How are we really evaluated?
Comfortably numb or roaring lions?
Why do we leave?
What motivates us?
Protecting our work identity and leaving gracefully
9 Taking stock of the journey. What really matters?
The broken toy
What really matters?
Conclusions
10 The future of jobs and the jobs of the future
Megatrends in the job market
Questions from Frankenstein
Appendix: Wingfinder
Notes
Index
Book titleAcknowledgements
I have to confess something: it wasn’t me who wrote this book, it was written by you.
I’ve simply collected stories, tales, examples, teachings taken from different sources. I feel like a child who has finished a jigsaw puzzle with a million pieces or like a medieval storyteller who travels from town to town sharing stories which are increasingly richer and more fascinating after having learned new things at each stage of the journey. This is why I’m grateful to many people who, at different times and in various roles, have helped me not only with the book The Compass and the Radar, a journey that has lasted years, but also as a person.
My full gratitude goes to Dave Ulrich, my intellectual Maestro over the years, for his insightful forewords and support and to Adam Yearsley from Red Bull for his important contribution to The Compass and The Radar.
Writing a book made me reconsider how much gratitude, respect and love I have for my father, who has always stayed with me ever since he passed away so soon, and also the six women in my family. For Anna-Maria, Francesca, Bianca and Dana, respectively mother, twin sister, niece and aunt, who continue to fight, smile, get angry, hope and move forward, despite everything.
To Lalia, my companion and the true love of my life who keeps saving my life, practically every day. I asked her – or rather, I told her to marry me the day after meeting her: since then we’ve spent 23 years together, waiting for the next 100. Finally to Sadika, my daughter: she came like a shining star into our life and everything changed, everything made sense. Her joyful existence fills me with infinite love, unbridled joy and gives deep meaning to my life and that of all those who know her. Nothing gives me more joy than watching her grow and laugh and listening to her sing the songs she invents every day.
This book is dedicated with love to them, Lalia and Sadika. When I see them together, mother and daughter, I witness the miracle of Absolute Love: many years have passed and I still can’t believe how lucky I am.
And yes, Dad: you were right as nothing else matters.
Paolo Gallo
Geneva, July 2020
Book titleForeword
By
Dave Ulrich
Rensis Likert Professor, Ross School of Business,
University of Michigan
Partner, The RBL Group
dou@umich.edu
When teaching executives, I used to ask questions about careers:
•How many of your parents who worked spent most of their career in a single firm? Often 70 - 80 per cent would say ‘yes.’.
•How many of you will likely spend most of your career in a single firm? The numbers generally dropped to 50 - 60 per cent.
•How many of your children will likely spend most of their career in a single firm? The numbers almost always dropped to less than 10 per cent.
I no longer ask the question since it is now a given that almost everyone will have career mosaics across time (people anticipating the ‘100-year life‘ redefine retirement), firms (people move companies and even industries much more frequently), geographies (people work throughout the global village), and specializations (people acquire multiple types of specialist or generalist experiences) . My colleagues and I used to advise individuals how to manage career stages; now we advise how to navigate the more complex career mosaic.
Paolo’s exceptional insights offer true guidance on navigating a career mosaic. The compass metaphor helps individuals consciously recognize where they want to go with their career; the radar metaphor directs them on how to get where they want to go. Combining the compass and radar with research-based ideas, interesting stories, and useful tools, this book becomes an idea-mentor/guide for anyone (and everyone) seeking a rewarding career.
A few years ago, I was privileged to offer a commencement address to graduating students. Since I don’t have a compelling ‘rags to riches’ story nor do I represent the iconic success of most commencement speakers, I chose to coach graduates on making more informed career choices. I organized my career guidance into four questions. Paolo’s insights (in italics below) would have informed how graduates answer these questions, which are even more relevant today! Let me frame these questions as advice to those entering or in the midst of a career.
1. What do you want?
Careers begin by you being clear about your purpose which means that you recognize and accept the values, passions, orientations, and strengths that form your purpose. When you know what you want, you are more likely to love what you do. Your focus and passions create your personalized career pathway. Without owning your career path, your career decisions will likely be made by others or at random. When you are clear about your purpose and love what you do, you will claim your career rewards.
2. Whom do you serve?
In an increasingly interdependent world, building positive relationships is a cornerstone of your career success. As an individual you contribute your expertise, but as a teammate, you are more likely to achieve sustainable results. Your positive relationships with others will likely come as you develop trust in them and as they build trust with you. In your career, look around and find those whom you can serve. Service means that your career rewards come less from what you personally accomplish and more from how you help others accomplish their goals. Those you serve may be inside the company (subordinates, peers, bosses) or outside the company (customers, investors, partners). As you serve others through positive relationships and trust, you will magnify your career rewards.
3. How do you build?
In our work predicting business results, we found that the ‘organization’ had four times the impact on business outcomes than the ‘individual.’ Individuals play the game; teams win the championships. Part of your personal career success will occur when you participate in and create an organization that will outlast you. Organizations succeed and have impact when they have zengility or the ability to adapt to their circumstances, when they continually learn about how to improve over time, when they have a positive reputation, called brand or identity that they are known for. These four elements of ‘building’ (impact, zengility, continually learn, reputation) not only apply to the organization where you live and work but to you and your personal brand.
4. Where am I?
Ultimately, your career success is an ongoing journey that is continually changing. Throughout your career mosaic you should have astute awareness to see how you are doing and monitor what is working and what is not. This awareness allows you to adapt your career to the circumstances you face. As you monitor where you are on your career journey, be astutely aware of cura personalis or caring for yourself as an entire person – your physical, emotional, social, intellectual, and spiritual well-being. The juggling acts of each of these elements of your life will have you find and navigate your personal career journey.
Paolo’s ten insights flesh out my four questions and offer anyone in a career and those responsible for helping mentor or guide people to discover a more rewarding career.
The specific tools: for assessing oneself and the organization, entering an organization, creating a personal reputation, making career trade-offs, becoming a contributing member of the organization community, and choosing to stay in (or leave) your organization - these turn career aspirations into actions.
What I find particularly helpful is that these ten insights (around four questions) and numerous tools not only apply to a professional career in a work setting, but to the processes of engaging with any organization … hobby, neighborhood, or church group.
Today, when I teach executives about careers, the question is: how have you learned about compass (direction) and radar (action) so that you can create your personal career story?
All in all, Paolo has lived up to his father’s aspiration: ‘if you’ve managed to help others: nothing else matters.’ Well done!
Dave Ulrich
Alpine, Utah, USA
July 2020
Book titleMessage from
Adam Yearsley,
Global Head of Talent
Management at Red Bull
We live in a world where the answers to our questions are only as far away as our phones, and yet companies search with much effort to employ those who are creative and driven at what they do to find the right person in any given role. The challenge of today's world is not to know the answer to questions, but first to understand what question to ask. In this book Paolo in his personable style provides you with meaningful and powerful questions. The questions of a coach with many years of experience, that give you both the freedom and the responsibility to find your answers. The reason this book is successful in many languages is that people finding meaning and aligning work to their values is one of the more universal and urgent topics of our time. Paolo will engage you in a personal exploration as you define your ‘Compass’ and grow your talent and develop your Radar
that helps you to avoid obstacles and identify opportunities.
Career-based social networks estimate that anywhere between 45 per cent and 60 per cent of those on their platform are dissatisfied enough with their current jobs to want to consider other opportunities. Of course, many people thrive in their jobs and make pivotal contributions to their organizations. But for each employee who does, there are many who are underemployed, underperforming, or do not feel fulfilled at work. We spend so much of our life at work, and it is an opportunity to find meaning and grow that can benefit both employee and employer.
In this book, Paolo takes the very big first step of equipping you with self-awareness. A book may seem an old-fashioned medium for this journey in a world where big data and artificial intelligence hold fantastic power to understand the relationships between things. One day they may be able to help match the right person to the right job but at this point in time this is yet to happen with the sort of accuracy that you would hope for one of life’s more important decisions (what sort of work should I do and whom should I do it with?). For now, the most efficient and accurate method of matching the right person with the right role, or succeeding in their current role, starts with someone being self-aware and understanding the sort of future they would like to create. Self-awareness can be seen as a mirror — if you care how you present yourself to the world, self-awareness can be a very useful tool as it will determine your success in working with people. Paolo skilfully explores not just an awareness of yourself but also explores the environments that might fit your values. A book is the perfect medium to have that conversation evolve with yourself. The Compass and the Radar also provides the conceptual framework and the tool of ‘wingfinder’, - developed by Red Bull - trusting that may be helpful and relevant to readers and intellectually curious minds.
Professional athletes practice five times a week and perform in competitions often just once a month. The rest of us perform every day and practice maybe once a year. We spend so little time on ourselves and understanding both our compass and our radar. To stop and ask yourself if you are achieving what you want to in life, and whether there is there a better way, is invaluable. In my professional life working around the world I have seen those who have a clear mission achieve much more than those who don’t. A recent example was a colleague, Walter Kohler, who influenced the UK government’s laws on ivory with his film The Ivory Game and created action around a crime-led environmental extinction with Sea of Shadows. Yes, he makes films but he shifts opinions as he has a bigger mission. Or my partner Sandra Schartel, who is a photographer who creates memories by seeing, capturing and sharing the beauty she sees in the world. People who have invested the time to become more purposeful in their career surround you and the journey is more fun and interesting if you can travel with them and with your purpose while remaining true to yourself.
The easiest thing is just to keep doing it the way you have always done it in the past, to get stuck in loops. However, companies cannot keep repeating what they have done in the past, our environment cannot sustain it, and the younger generations at work will rightly not tolerate it. This shift in thinking happens at an individual level, and The Compass and the Radar allows us to take bold steps to reflect on what matters to us and how we can create a future in a respectful way on the topics that give us meaning and passion.
Adam Yearsley
Global Head of Talent Management @ Red Bull
Introduction
The first day of school
My father made a difficult promise to me and my twin sister: he would be there for our first day of school. He worked for Olivetti in São Paulo, Brazil and came back to Italy only twice a year, in August and at Christmas. The big day finally arrived, but when we woke up our father was not at home. We felt hugely disappointed, but the blow was softened by the excitement of starting school. The first day went by quickly; when the school bell rang at the end, my father was waiting for us at the gates. Seeing him was a moment of overwhelming joy for me and, together with my sister, I jumped into his arms. On the way home, we inundated him with our stories: what we had done, the names of our new classmates, the teacher, the blackboard with all the coloured chalk, the map of Italy on the wall.
At home, while we all sat down for lunch, our stories continued. At the end of the meal my father wanted to first talk to my sister and then to me, so I followed him into the living room, where he asked me to sit down in front of him. He was silent for a few seconds, then he looked me in the eye and said: ‘Paolo’; it was the first time he had called me by my name, everyone in the family always called me Paolino. ‘Paolo, starting tomorrow, don’t talk about what you did, but ask yourself if you love what you do, what you have learned and if you’ve managed to help others: nothing else matters’.¹ He put his hand on my shoulder, looked me in the eye again, as if I were an adult, and stood up. A few hours later, he took a plane back to Brazil: he had kept his promise.
Among the millions of words I have heard and read over time, that sentence spoken by my father, on 1 October 1969, is the one that has influenced my life the most. What did I learn from that sentence? I learned not to think about the right answers but the right questions: do I love what I do? Am I learning something? Am I helping someone?
Nothing else matters.
For many years I have been working in the field of Personnel, also called Human Resources. While carrying out my work, I have been able to confirm how it is much more important to start by asking the right questions, rather than trying to guess the answers. I have been able to follow hundreds of careers and I have asked myself: ‘How come only some of us are successful, many are limited to just getting by and many, too many, fail?’ Have we chosen a job based on our passions and our talent? What are we good at? Did we understand the rules of the game, the organizational culture, to avoid being lost in translation? Have we learned something new every day? Have we managed to build trust and whom can we trust? What price are we willing to pay for our career? When is the right time to leave? How do we evaluate professional success? How do we stay free? What really matters? What would we do if we were not afraid? Which legacy do we want to leave? What does having a successful career mean?
This book attempts, by using questions, to provide meaningful reflections, helpful tools and practical suggestions to have, or rather ‘be’ a successful career, defined according to parameters established and decided by ourselves, not by others, and certainly not just based on profit and building a career at all costs, without reflecting on the consequences. There are two tools I use: the Compass, an instrument focused on our inner and deepest values that allows us to maintain a certain direction on our journey, and the Radar that helps us discover the obstacles, the dangers as well as the opportunities we will encounter.
I know some people will think I’m crazy or, even worse, spoiled and choosy and will remind me that it is already a miracle just to have a job. These arguments are understandable: even if you only think about choosing a job, given the extremely high unemployment rates, it may seem like a utopian mix between the luxury of the past and an unrealistic, if not impossible, dream. I, on the other hand, am convinced of the exact opposite: only by choosing and building a career aligned with our values, our goals and our deepest motivations, will we be able to do great work and consequently have success and rewards.
If we consciously choose the right job and culture for ourselves, we will not do a job but we will be the job we do. I attended a retirement party for a person who had spent twenty-eight years in the same organization. His last sentence was ‘I came to the office for almost thirty years, but I always left my heart at home.’ This is a tragic tale, a professional life thrown to the wind, a wasted talent, so many years of mediocre performances, and what’s more, paid pretty badly. Was it worth it?
If we choose a career on the basis of criteria that are incorrect or established by others, we’ll eventually be forced to perform in a squalid comedy written by others in which we only have an insignificant bit part. When we go to a restaurant who chooses what we eat? We do, right? Well, if we’re perfectly able to make autonomous decisions for marginal issues like a dish at the restaurant, that’s even more reason why we have a duty to choose our career. In this regard, Viktor E. Frankl, author of the book Man’s Search for Meaning,² has left us with a fundamental lesson: they can take everything away from us but not the possibility of making autonomous choices, even in the most desperate situations.
The book is composed of storytelling, stories taken from various sources, such as Greek mythology, sport, US politics, history, short corporate and personal cases, short case studies, news and selected management and coaching concepts and theories, along with many quotes from books, movies, songs, articles, videos, speeches and web pages that have contributed to the narrative.
I’ve worked and lived abroad since 1992: twelve years in Washington, nine in London and four in Geneva, where I live now. I’ve been lucky to work with extraordinary people, in more than 80 different countries. This experience has certainly contributed to my particular perspective, including the lenses through which I observe Italy, which, as Leonardo Sciascia said, from afar hurts less.³ My professional experience and above all my human experience has convinced me that everyone has at least one particular talent just waiting to be discovered, encouraged and used. I’m certain that I can help, offer support and persuade you not only to not give up but also to use strategies and paths that you didn’t know existed. The stories you’ll read are all true: I’ll reveal secrets, I’ll show you tricks, I’ll offer you tools, hoping they can be useful, pragmatic and even fun.
At the same time, I’d like to make it clear that I won’t be the one to provide you with The Answer you are looking for, nor to tell you what you should or shouldn’t do. What right would I have to do that? My role is to help you formulate the right question and to accompany you on the journey by making the Compass and the Radar available. Nobody can provide us with the correct answers; we must find them within us. Professional success isn’t a miracle or a stroke of luck. If we fail to achieve this success, we can’t blame someone else: we’re the ones who guide our lives; we always have choices to make, as free people, knowing that happiness comes from the journey, not the destination. We’ll never be alone on the journey; it’ll be up to us to choose our companions of fortune and the right tools: the Compass and the Radar.
The book is divided into three sections: Passion, The Compass, and Freedom.
The question that characterizes the first chapter is: ‘How do we find out what our Passion is?’ I discovered it from a street artist, Gerardo, who painted watercolours on the main street in Antigua, a beautiful colonial village in the highlands of Guatemala. On this road there were lots of artists who painted landscapes, but the works of Gerardo stood out: they had a particular light. During a day of torrential rain, I noticed that there were no artists on the street except Gerardo, who continued to paint undisturbed under an umbrella. I went up to him and asked if I could buy one of his watercolours, but he only had the picture he was painting. I asked him how much it would cost, he replied: ‘fifty dollars’. I tried to get a discount because it was not finished. Gerardo replied that he usually sold his watercolours for twenty-five dollars, but for the one I wanted to buy I would have to pay fifty. I didn’t understand. Gerardo told me: ‘I’m charging you double because you’ll deny me the joy I get from finishing a job I love’. I gave