
就业市场日益收紧、人工智能迅速崛起以及挥之不去的经济不确定性,让许多Z世代劳动者,无论是刚毕业还是仍在求学,都无从确定如何、甚至从何处开启职业生涯。
托尼·罗宾斯对此深有体会。
在成为白手起家的亿万富翁、畅销书作者以及全球最知名的励志演说家之一之前,罗宾斯曾经是一名每周收入仅40美元的清洁工,既没有上大学的打算,对未来也毫无头绪。20岁出头时,他四处寻找机会——如饥似渴地研究成功人士的经验,主动寻找导师指点,并在现实中不断试验各种想法。24岁那年,他凭借励志演讲赚到了人生第一个百万美元。
数十年后的今天,罗宾斯意识到,当下的年轻人正在面临着同样令人迷惘的时刻。但他认为,通往成功的路径并未发生本质变化。罗宾斯曾经担任顾问的客户包括对冲基金亿万富翁保罗·都铎·琼斯和美国前总统比尔·克林顿。
在罗宾斯看来,最成功的并不是那些能够精准预测未来的人,而是那些善于掌握事物发展规律的人。他表示,在当今动荡的经济环境中,有三种基于模式的关键技能,决定了谁能脱颖而出,谁会停滞不前。
1. 模式识别
罗宾斯表示,第一步是学会识别模式,跨越行业、职业甚至信念体系找出规律。
他近日在《The School of Hard Knocks》节目中说:“共通的模式是什么?共同的信念体系是什么?识别模式能让你摆脱恐惧。”
对年轻的职场人士而言,这可能意味着研究成功领导者的建议,从中找出反复出现的主题;或是观察哪些行业和岗位在经济下行压力之下仍然充满机遇。
2. 模式运用
但仅仅发现模式还不够,真正的优势在于学会如何将这些模式加以运用。
罗宾斯补充道:“如果你观察金融领域的佼佼者,就会发现他们不仅懂得识别模式,更擅于运用模式。”
模式运用是将洞察转化为收入的关键。在现实中,这可能意味着借鉴成熟的商业模式,学习高绩效人士的成功习惯,或是及早识别市场周期并顺势采取行动。
即便犯错也没有关系,这本来就是成长过程的一部分。事实上,罗宾斯坦言,25岁时,他曾经听信一位开劳斯莱斯的女士的建议,投资了低价股。
他在2014年回忆道:“我听从她的建议,把钱投进了那些股票,结果血本无归。”
3. 模式创造
最后一项、也是最强大的技能,是创造属于自己的模式。
罗宾斯表示:“当你创造出属于自己的模式,你就会成为特定领域里的传奇人物,这是你通往巅峰的必经之路。但我总是告诉人们,人生来不是为了应对环境,我们生来就是创造者,要成为自己人生的创造者。”
对Z世代来说,这或许意味着开辟全新的职业道路,融合跨学科的技能,或是主动创造机会,而不是等待传统的晋升阶梯重新出现。罗宾斯认为,在这个瞬息万变的世界里,终极优势在于学会塑造未来,而不是被动应对未来。
零工经历奠定成功基础
罗宾斯在一个充满暴力的家庭环境中长大,但他并未让这些经历定义自己。相反,他曾经表示,这些经历反而成为驱动力,促使他不懈追求成功、并努力理解他人。
罗宾斯在2016年接受美国消费者新闻与商业频道(CNBC)采访时说:“如果母亲是我理想中期待的那种母亲,我就不会如此奋发努力,也不会这么渴望成功。我不会经历那些痛苦,也许就不会像现在这样关心他人的痛苦。这些经历让我痴迷于理解人性,并帮助促成改变。”
为了尽早实现经济独立,罗宾斯在课余和周末做过各类零工,曾经帮人搬家,还做过清洁工。其中,清洁工这份工作对他影响深远,这并非因为工作内容本身,而是因为这让他能够自由支配时间。
罗宾斯称:“我选择那份工作,并不是因为我喜欢当清洁工,而是因为我可以在晚上10点到凌晨2点之间完成工作。这让我有充足的空闲时间去思考和充实头脑。”
并非只有罗宾斯一人,能将年少时那段艰辛而平凡的打拼岁月,转化为日后的成功。
例如,英伟达(Nvidia)的首席执行官黄仁勋曾经表示,他最早在当地一家Denny’s餐厅做过洗碗工,这段经历让他明白,任何一项工作都值得认真对待,绝无高低贵贱之分。
亚马逊(Amazon)的创始人杰夫·贝佐斯少年时期曾经在麦当劳(McDonald’s)翻烤汉堡。他坦言,这段经历让他学会了责任感、自律和团队协作能力。
Spanx的创始人莎拉·布莱克利在打造自己的塑身内衣帝国前,曾经多年挨家挨户推销传真机,最终成为白手起家的亿万富翁。
布莱克利在去年说:“我最初就是靠卖传真机攒下的5,000美元起步,且在接下来的21年里完全自筹资金。我曾经扪心自问:是拿这5,000美元去度假,还是为自己的梦想放手一搏?”(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
就业市场日益收紧、人工智能迅速崛起以及挥之不去的经济不确定性,让许多Z世代劳动者,无论是刚毕业还是仍在求学,都无从确定如何、甚至从何处开启职业生涯。
托尼·罗宾斯对此深有体会。
在成为白手起家的亿万富翁、畅销书作者以及全球最知名的励志演说家之一之前,罗宾斯曾经是一名每周收入仅40美元的清洁工,既没有上大学的打算,对未来也毫无头绪。20岁出头时,他四处寻找机会——如饥似渴地研究成功人士的经验,主动寻找导师指点,并在现实中不断试验各种想法。24岁那年,他凭借励志演讲赚到了人生第一个百万美元。
数十年后的今天,罗宾斯意识到,当下的年轻人正在面临着同样令人迷惘的时刻。但他认为,通往成功的路径并未发生本质变化。罗宾斯曾经担任顾问的客户包括对冲基金亿万富翁保罗·都铎·琼斯和美国前总统比尔·克林顿。
在罗宾斯看来,最成功的并不是那些能够精准预测未来的人,而是那些善于掌握事物发展规律的人。他表示,在当今动荡的经济环境中,有三种基于模式的关键技能,决定了谁能脱颖而出,谁会停滞不前。
1. 模式识别
罗宾斯表示,第一步是学会识别模式,跨越行业、职业甚至信念体系找出规律。
他近日在《The School of Hard Knocks》节目中说:“共通的模式是什么?共同的信念体系是什么?识别模式能让你摆脱恐惧。”
对年轻的职场人士而言,这可能意味着研究成功领导者的建议,从中找出反复出现的主题;或是观察哪些行业和岗位在经济下行压力之下仍然充满机遇。
2. 模式运用
但仅仅发现模式还不够,真正的优势在于学会如何将这些模式加以运用。
罗宾斯补充道:“如果你观察金融领域的佼佼者,就会发现他们不仅懂得识别模式,更擅于运用模式。”
模式运用是将洞察转化为收入的关键。在现实中,这可能意味着借鉴成熟的商业模式,学习高绩效人士的成功习惯,或是及早识别市场周期并顺势采取行动。
即便犯错也没有关系,这本来就是成长过程的一部分。事实上,罗宾斯坦言,25岁时,他曾经听信一位开劳斯莱斯的女士的建议,投资了低价股。
他在2014年回忆道:“我听从她的建议,把钱投进了那些股票,结果血本无归。”
3. 模式创造
最后一项、也是最强大的技能,是创造属于自己的模式。
罗宾斯表示:“当你创造出属于自己的模式,你就会成为特定领域里的传奇人物,这是你通往巅峰的必经之路。但我总是告诉人们,人生来不是为了应对环境,我们生来就是创造者,要成为自己人生的创造者。”
对Z世代来说,这或许意味着开辟全新的职业道路,融合跨学科的技能,或是主动创造机会,而不是等待传统的晋升阶梯重新出现。罗宾斯认为,在这个瞬息万变的世界里,终极优势在于学会塑造未来,而不是被动应对未来。
零工经历奠定成功基础
罗宾斯在一个充满暴力的家庭环境中长大,但他并未让这些经历定义自己。相反,他曾经表示,这些经历反而成为驱动力,促使他不懈追求成功、并努力理解他人。
罗宾斯在2016年接受美国消费者新闻与商业频道(CNBC)采访时说:“如果母亲是我理想中期待的那种母亲,我就不会如此奋发努力,也不会这么渴望成功。我不会经历那些痛苦,也许就不会像现在这样关心他人的痛苦。这些经历让我痴迷于理解人性,并帮助促成改变。”
为了尽早实现经济独立,罗宾斯在课余和周末做过各类零工,曾经帮人搬家,还做过清洁工。其中,清洁工这份工作对他影响深远,这并非因为工作内容本身,而是因为这让他能够自由支配时间。
罗宾斯称:“我选择那份工作,并不是因为我喜欢当清洁工,而是因为我可以在晚上10点到凌晨2点之间完成工作。这让我有充足的空闲时间去思考和充实头脑。”
并非只有罗宾斯一人,能将年少时那段艰辛而平凡的打拼岁月,转化为日后的成功。
例如,英伟达(Nvidia)的首席执行官黄仁勋曾经表示,他最早在当地一家Denny’s餐厅做过洗碗工,这段经历让他明白,任何一项工作都值得认真对待,绝无高低贵贱之分。
亚马逊(Amazon)的创始人杰夫·贝佐斯少年时期曾经在麦当劳(McDonald’s)翻烤汉堡。他坦言,这段经历让他学会了责任感、自律和团队协作能力。
Spanx的创始人莎拉·布莱克利在打造自己的塑身内衣帝国前,曾经多年挨家挨户推销传真机,最终成为白手起家的亿万富翁。
布莱克利在去年说:“我最初就是靠卖传真机攒下的5,000美元起步,且在接下来的21年里完全自筹资金。我曾经扪心自问:是拿这5,000美元去度假,还是为自己的梦想放手一搏?”(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
A tightening labor market, the rapid rise of artificial intelligence, and lingering economic uncertainty have left many Gen Z workers—whether newly graduated or still in school—unsure how, or even where, to begin building a career.
Tony Robbins knows that feeling well.
Long before he became a self-made billionaire, best-selling author, and one of the world’s most recognizable motivational speakers, Robbins was a janitor making just $40 a week with no plans to go to college and little clarity about his future. By his early 20s, he was scrambling for opportunity—studying successful people obsessively, seeking mentors, and testing ideas in real time. By 24, he had made his first million as a motivator.
Now, decades later, Robbins—whose past coaching clients include hedge fund billionaire Paul Tudor Jones and former President Bill Clinton—recognizes today’s young people are facing a similarly disorienting moment. But he argued the path forward hasn’t changed as much as it might seem.
According to Robbins, the most successful people aren’t those who predict the future perfectly, but those who learn to master patterns. And in today’s volatile economy, Robbins said three pattern-based skills separate those who thrive from those who stall.
1. Pattern recognition
The first step, Robbins said, is learning how to recognize patterns—across industries, careers, and even belief systems.
“What’s the common pattern? What’s [the] common belief system?” he recently told The School of Hard Knocks. “Pattern recognition takes you out of fear.”
For young workers, that might mean studying the advice of successful leaders to spot recurring themes, or tracking which industries and roles are growing in opportunity despite economic headwinds.
2. Pattern utilization
But just spotting patterns isn’t enough—the real advantage comes from learning how to apply them.
“If you look at somebody’s good in finance, it’s because they learn how to not see the pattern, but use the pattern,” Robbins added.
Pattern utilization can be the key to turning insight into income. In reality, this might mean adapting proven business models, borrowing successful habits of high performers, or recognizing market cycles early enough to act on them.
And if you make a mistake, that’s OK—it’s all part of the process. In fact, when he was 25, he admitted he once took the advice of a woman driving a Rolls Royce to invest in penny stocks.
“I took her advice and put my money in those stocks,” he said in 2014. “And I lost everything.”
3. Pattern creation
The final—and most powerful—skill is creating your own patterns.
“That’s when you come the greatest of all time in your particular category. That’s how you get there,” Robbins said. “But I always tell people, we’re not made to manage circumstances. We’re made to be creators. We were created, designed to be creators; become the creator of your own life.”
For Gen Z, that could mean inventing new career paths, blending skills across disciplines, or building opportunities rather than waiting for traditional ladders to reappear. In a world that’s constantly changing, Robbins suggested the ultimate advantage is learning how to shape the future instead of reacting to it.
Odd jobs have fueled the success of Tony Robbins, Jeff Bezos, and Jensen Huang
Robbins grew up in an abusive household, but rather than allowing those circumstances to define him, he has said they became a catalyst for his relentless drive to succeed—and to understand other people.
“If my mom had been the mother I thought I wanted, I wouldn’t be as driven; I wouldn’t be as hungry,” he told CNBC in 2016. “I wouldn’t have suffered, so I probably wouldn’t have cared about other people’s suffering as much as I do. And it made me obsessed with wanting to understand people and help create change.”
To gain independence early, Robbins took a series of odd jobs after school and on the weekends, from helping people move to working as a janitor. The latter in particular proved formative—not because of the work itself, but because of what it allowed him to do with his time.
“I picked that job not because I like janitoring but because I could do it literally from 10 to 2 in the morning,” Robbins said. “I also had the free time to think and feed my mind.”
And Robbins isn’t alone in translating an early—and humble—grind into success.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, for instance, has said one of his first jobs was washing dishes at a local Denny’s—an experience that taught him to treat no task as beneath him.
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos also famously flipped burgers at McDonald’s as a teenager, an experience he has credited with teaching him responsibility, discipline, and how to work on a team.
And Spanx founder Sara Blakely spent years selling fax machines door to door before rebuilding her shapewear empire—and becoming a self-made billionaire.
“I started it with five grand from selling fax machines and self-funded the entire 21 years,” Blakely said last year. “I sat down with myself and I was like, you wanna spend your five grand on a vacation? Or do you wanna try to bet on yourself?”