IAM Group Limited Singapore Comment “Hard Work is not Necessarily a Virtue”A Story by nanetteFirst, let me make clear that I am not saying that laziness is a virtue.I work moderately hard, always take my job seriously and
deliver the required results here and there. I also take pride in achieving as much as possible with as
little effort as possible. I am always searching for opportunities to automate
tedious and repetitive parts of my job, and I try to completely avoid taking on
projects that have a low return compared to their workload. Out of principle, I never work longer than a 40 hour week
unless it's a real emergency. So far I've done OK. I'm a project manager and most of my
jobs are 1-2 year contracts for large corporations. I'm not high up the
corporate ladder but the salary is high enough to cover all my material needs. 1-
I know that if I worked a lot harder, I would
have the chance to be promoted to a director position, but I don't see the
point. The net wage would be 20-30% higher, but I would have to sacrifice more
than 30% of my time and energy for the corporation. 2-
I cannot take my achievements to the grave. To
me, life is not about achievements but about experiences. Achievements are just
a means to an end, which is having awesome experiences. There is a case to be
made that social status itself is an "experience" worth pursuing, but
corporate titles don't really impress the people closest to me. They only
impress people I don't like and don't care about. 3-
There certainly are situations where hard work
is worth it, but working for a corporation is not one of them. Most of the
fruits of your labor will go to the shareholders and not to your salary. For an
employee, the returns diminish very sharply in the corporate word. 4-
A higher position can mean more autonomy, but it
also means managing people which is not something I enjoy. And since I do
mostly contract work I already have some autonomy in choosing the projects I
will work on. 1.
Having said all that, I cannot get rid of the
feeling that I'm somehow letting myself down. Rationally it all makes sense,
but emotionally there is still my dad's voice in my head telling me that I
should work hard. Is it worth listening to that voice? I think the common feeling is that hard work isn't
necessarily a virtue on its own, but preferable to entitlement. That you should
feel better about having worked for something on your own, rather than having
it given to you. The idea that you should work efficiently is shared among
most of society, hence the saying "Work smarter, not harder." I think
a lot of value is placed in getting the most results with the least amount of
actual effort (as long as that doesn't just mean shuffling the effort onto
someone else, of course). © 2015 nanette |
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Added on January 3, 2015 Last Updated on January 3, 2015 Tags: iamgroup, iamgroupltd, iamgroupltdyokohama, iamgroupyokohama Author
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