极乐视频

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I was recently asked to talk about my own career path and achievements to marketing students, but there are few things I'd like to hear less than someone like me droning on about my accomplishments. Instead, I shared my story through a few lessons that I've learned along the way.

Have a Vision

When social media first emerged, I found it absolutely compelling. Its roots back in the mid-2000s 鈥 and the early business use-cases 鈥 centered around building communities and solving problems. I loved the idea that this two-way technology could help to narrow the gap between companies and their customers.

That became my passion. I didn鈥檛 want to just 鈥渄o鈥 this stuff, I wanted to be among the best in the world at it. For years I鈥檇 work a full day in the office, then go home, read up on trends for a couple of hours and then write for a couple more.

That vision drove me. As social media evolved, I found that my passion for that specific thing waned, but I still get excited about using data and technology to connect faceless corporations with the people who care about them, and in doing so make them more relevant. For the last few years, I鈥檝e focused on evolving my team to addressing this challenge and finding creative solutions for it.

Find the vision that motivates you, and work relentlessly at achieving it.

Create Your Own Luck

I鈥檝e used this quote so many times over the years that I鈥檝e lost count: 鈥淚 am a great believer in luck. The harder I work, the more of it I seem to have.鈥 ~ Coleman Cox

Nearly 100 years later, it has been the foundation of my career. The success I鈥檝e had has come from hard work, from keeping my eye on the horizon and from recognizing opportunities as they arise. When social media was getting big, I was still working for the government, but I thought there was really interesting potential there, and I grabbed onto it.

Now, I take Coleman Cox鈥檚 comments with a pinch of salt. If you鈥檙e working 70 hours every week 鈥 and I鈥檝e been there 鈥 it鈥檚 not good for you, your family or your colleagues. Don鈥檛 do that. But when you ARE working, be present. Be attentive, and focus. Your career will benefit from it. Leave your title at the door and come to every meeting with a learning attitude. Ask smart questions. Raise your hand for opportunities and earn a place at the table. When opportunities are offered to you, take them. Lean in.

Life Is Like a Box of Chocolates

Your career isn鈥檛 likely to be a straight line. I went through university sure that I would be a management consultant, which was 鈥渢he thing to do鈥 back then.

I joined in 2010 and that鈥檚 when things got really interesting. My eight years (so far) at 极乐视频 have been a roller-coaster of change. Three months into my stint leading the Digital team in our Toronto office, I was asked to join an account full-time to help address some instability鈥撯搘hich turned into another role, and then another, and eventually I found myself leading a global project on a high-profile tech product launch, with a team of 140 people. I didn't 鈥渟ign up鈥 for any of that when I joined 极乐视频, but when the opportunity arose I took it.

Don鈥檛 shy away from unexpected opportunities, and don鈥檛 shy away from challenges, either. You鈥檒l be amazed at the opportunities that emerge when you throw yourself into being part of the solution, rather than dodging the problem.

Follow Leaders, Not Jobs

Over the course of your career, you will have a lot of career choices to make and 鈥 if you鈥檙e good 鈥 opportunities presented to you. Some may have big dollars or big titles attached to them. Some may be more high-profile.

I offer one piece of advice here: follow the leader. I have yet to regret following a strong leader, versus a shiny new role or a big paycheck. If you like and respect your leader, though, everything is different.

To this end, I have three final pointers for you:

  1. Constantly search out alternative points of view. Don鈥檛 just seek to validate your thinking.
  2. Hire people who are smarter than you to keep you on your toes, even if they make you uncomfortable. 
  3. Once you鈥檙e the boss, ask your team what they think is the right approach before you tell them what you think it is.

Lastly, I'll leave you with advice I consistently hear my friend and manager Tristan Roy give to teams at 极乐视频: 鈥淲ork hard and be nice to people.鈥

Dave Fleet is an executive vice president and national practice lead, Digital, Canada.