Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously it depends on what you really want.
If you aspire to become a top exec, you have to pursue that all day every day.
If you're good making the kind of money you do and like the balance, i guess don't make any big moves.
I worked my ass off for 15-20 years, enduring stress and anxiety - lots of ups and downs, many late nights and weekends. Now I'm mid 40s and things have calmed down a bit. The investment paid off, though. I like what I do and I'm making quite a bit of money.
NP - out of curiosity, where are you now PP? Did you make top exec or land someplace that you're happy with below that? Trying to sort out myself whether to keep pushing or accept this is what it is.
Hi there - I became a partner in my consulting firm. I've learned a lot over the years and it makes the job a lot easier. Plus I actually like what I do.
I'd say if you actually enjoy the nature of the work you do, even if it's hard, keep going all out until you're at the top. In most cases, you get to a place where it's very rewarding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously it depends on what you really want.
If you aspire to become a top exec, you have to pursue that all day every day.
If you're good making the kind of money you do and like the balance, i guess don't make any big moves.
I worked my ass off for 15-20 years, enduring stress and anxiety - lots of ups and downs, many late nights and weekends. Now I'm mid 40s and things have calmed down a bit. The investment paid off, though. I like what I do and I'm making quite a bit of money.
NP - out of curiosity, where are you now PP? Did you make top exec or land someplace that you're happy with below that? Trying to sort out myself whether to keep pushing or accept this is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:My boss is 62, and I have 20 or so years until retirement myself. Yet when I talk to others the attitude seems to be that I'm too old for graduate school and not considered young enough to be a superstar for a big career (under 35 would be).
What are the best moves for me right now? I'm in a middle management position, make about $100k, and want work life balance.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously it depends on what you really want.
If you aspire to become a top exec, you have to pursue that all day every day.
If you're good making they kind of money you do and like the balance, i guess don't make any big moves.
I worked my ass off for 15-20 years, enduring stress and anxiety - lots of ups and downs, many late nights and weekends. Now I'm mid 40s and things have calmed down a bit. The investment paid off, though. I like what I do and I'm making quite a bit of money.
Anonymous wrote:OP - Field is PR which I got into accidentally. I'm a natural at networking and good at communication. I'm trying to figure out if I keep working, get an MBA (focusing on what exactly, marketing? Finance?) or job hop over time.
Anonymous wrote:You’re not too old at all to be a superstar. Wanting work life balance might get in the way of being a superstar, though.