I’ve been thinking a lot lately about careers and luck.
I do believe there is a healthy element of luck in most career success stories. I also believe, that many people misinterpret luck as their own capabilities (perception and data are often misaligned).
If we agree that luck is important, then we should learn to invite luck into our lives.
I believe you can absolutely attract or repulse good luck with your focus and your actions. I’m not saying it’s magical, I’m just saying it’s logical. The more you engage and work toward an outcome, the more likely that outcome will happen.
Or in internet meme form

So what are some practical tips i have seen that work to bring professional luck your way?
Share your goals – the more you talk about your goals with others, the better your odds of finding someone who can help you achieve them. Warning: if you only share to feel good about yourself, you miss the point (and the results) of this one.
Keep your head up –pay attention to what is going on around you. You are likely to see opportunities that bring luck your way, if you you are actively looking.
Embrace failure – Mindset matters here — knowing that “yet” is the vocabulary of progress. We all have a CV of failures critical to our visible career success.
Invest in your network – Having a strong network is the most common source of career luck. You build a strong network by giving (not taking), so invest in your luck karma, by being generous and helpful to your network.
Practice saying yes – Give yourself permission to get outside of your comfort zone, saying yes to things that stretch you toward your goal.
Preparing for success invites success. Not overnight of course, but taking steps in the right direction, consistently, purposefully, intentionally moving yourself toward your goal.
More on the topic here.
Authors note: After a blogging break of more than a year, I began a blog today I titled “Creating luck” only to find I had an unsaved draft of the above titled blog from 4 years ago. Note sure if this is an observation on the importance of this topic to me, or how long it takes to complete a thought.
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