Dear new graduate: Congratulations and hats off to you! Youâve come a long way and reached a major milestone in your life.
Maybe youâve been so busy finishing assignments and getting to graduation that you havenât taken much time to think about what comes next. (If so, youâre not alone!)
With that in mind, here are some of the biggest mistakes new graduates make:
â Putting too much pressure on yourself to have it all figured out right away.
â Committing too early to a career path without vetting it deeply and remaining open to new and better possibilities.
â Not clarifying whatâs important to you when it comes to work. (In addition to pay, for example, what about opportunities for learning and growth, a vibrant culture, chances to work with great people, or meaningful work?)
â Not doing nearly enough vetting of the organizations youâre considering working with (including their values and culture, your manager, and career path). (See my article, âHow to Find a Great Organization to Work For.â)
â Accepting other peopleâs definition of success instead of defining it for yourself.
â Living someone elseâs life.
â Defining yourself by comparison, as opposed to by your own core values and guiding lights.
â Defining self-worth by your accomplishments.
â Spending your best years and trading your precious life energy on dubious things.
â Succeeding at something that doesnât really matter to you.
â Not taking stock of your quality of life regularly.
âThe unexamined life is not worth living.â
-Socrates, ancient Greek philosopher
â Chasing status and prestige in your work because of how it will make you look in the eyes of others. (See my article, âThe Powerful Pull of the Prestige Magnet.â)
âAn easy way to pick the wrong career is to put your image above your interests and identity. A motivating job isnât the one that makes you look important. Itâs the one that makes you feel alive. Meaningful work isnât about impressing others. Itâs about expressing your values.â -Adam Grant, organizational psychologist
â Assuming that âclimbing the ladderâ is the point of work. (See my TEDx talk on LIFE entrepreneurship and âclimbing modeâ versus âdiscover mode.â)
â Viewing your career as a race against your peers. (See my article, âFeeling Behind? It May Be a Trap.â)
â Focusing too much on material comfort and financial gain and not enough on happiness, love, personal growth, and spiritual depth. (See my article, âBeware the Disease of More.â)
â Assuming that worldly success will fill you up.
â Giving too much of yourself or your time away to unreasonable bosses or unacceptable circumstances.
â Staying too long in a job thatâs not a good fit or with a bad manager.
â Letting your life get overly full and cluttered, with not enough white space.
â Letting work consume too much of your life.
ââŚthe problem isnât how hard youâre working, itâs that youâre working on things that arenât right for you.
Your goals and motivations arenât harmonizing with your deepest truth.â
-Martha Beck, The Way of Integrity
â Not honoring your commitments to those you belong to.
â Losing touch with your close friends.
â Playing it safe in your career and not taking enough risks early on while you have more time, freedom, and flexibilityâperhaps playing small out of fear.
âSo many of us choose our paths in life out of fear disguised as practicality.â
-Jim Carrey, comedian and actor
â Thinking youâre done learning now that you have a degree.
â Falling into bad habits that will cause you to waste a lot of time or drift away from your values.
â Not taking charge of your free time, perhaps because youâre so drained from work.
â Letting yourself become cynical and jaded. (See my article, âGuard Your Heart.â)
â Making decisions or taking actions that arenât in line with your core values and top priorities.
â Not giving more of yourself to others.
â Neglecting opportunities for fun and adventure in your life.
â Not daring to put your own distinctive stamp on your workplace, community, and world.
Conclusion
When it comes to navigating the early chapters of your career, itâs easy to focus on what other people expect of you and get lost in what our larger culture values. But itâs far better to get busy becoming who you really are.
Itâs easy to get caught up in playing the short game instead of the long oneâwith a broader perspective on whatâs important in life and what would be a life well lived.
Before you get too busy with the hustle and bustle of life and work, take the time to get to know yourself wellâincluding your core values, strengths, passions, and vision of the good life. And learn to trust yourself as you craft a life youâll be proud of.
Wishing you well with itâand let me know if I can help.
–Gregg

Tools for You
- Crafting Your Life & Work online course to help you design your next chapter and create a life and work you love.
- Traps Test (Common Traps of Living)Â to help you identify whatâs getting in the way of your happiness and quality of life
- Quality of Life Assessment so you can discover your strongest areas and the areas that need work, then act accordingly.
Related Articles & Resources
- âCareer Tips for Young Professionalsâ
- âTips for New Graduates on Life, Work, and Big Decisionsâ
- âBig Questions for New Graduatesâ
- âThe Best Books for New Graduatesâ (Alex Budak)
- âAre You Trapped by Success?â
- âIs This It? On the Disappointment of Successâ
- âThe Conformity Trapâ
- âThe Trap of Deferring Dreams and Postponing Happinessâ
- âThe Trap of Caring Too Much about What Other People Thinkâ
- âFeeling Behind? It May Be a Trapâ
- âThe Comparison Trapâ
- âAre You Playing the Long Game?â
- âThe Powerful Pull of the Prestige Magnetâ
- Gregg’s TEDx talk on “LIFE Entrepreneurship” (and “climbing mode” vs. “discover mode”)
Postscript: Inspirations for New Graduates
- âBig career decisions donât come with a map, but all you need is a compass. In an unpredictable world, you canât make a master plan. You can only gauge whether youâre on a meaningful path. The right next move is the one that brings you a step closer to living your core values.â -Adam Grant, professor
- âOne of the things is putting pressure on having that perfect solution lined up. While we should dream big, sometimes we need to make smaller moves and small experiments to build confidence and gather data and grow more organically in a new direction. In reality, what works is getting anchored in existing strengths and experiences and have a general feeling of success. There is no real way to know the answers up to the front of what to pursue next in our careers unless weâre running small tests and learning from them.â -Jenny Blake, author and podcaster
- âOne of the best pieces of advice for young people is, Get to yourself quickly. If you know what you want to do, start doing it.â -David Brooks, The Second Mountain
- âThe deepest vocational question is not âWhat ought I to do with my life?â It is the more elemental and demanding âWho am I? What is my nature?ââ -Parker Palmer, Let Your Life Speak
- ââŚthe secret of career satisfaction lies in doing what you enjoy most. A few lucky people discover this secret early in life, but most of us are caught in a kind of psychological wrestling match, torn between what we think we can do, what we (or others) feel we ought to do, and what we think we want to do. Our advice? Concentrate instead on who you are, and the rest will fall into place.â -Paul D. Tieger, Barbara Barron, and Kelly Tieger, Do What You Are
- âYour work is to discover your work and then with all your heart to give yourself to it.â -Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha)
- âIf the ladder is not leaning against the right wall, every step we take just gets us to the wrong place faster.â -Stephen R. Covey, educator and author
- âGo to work for an organization or people you admire. It will turn you on. You ought to be happy where you are working. I always worry about people who say, âIâm going to do this for 10 yearsâ and âIâm going to do 10 more years of this.â Thatâs a little like saving sex for your old age. Not a very good idea. Get right into what you enjoy.â -Warren Buffett, investor
- âYour work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do.â –Steve Jobs, co-founder, Apple
- âShadow Career is the term used to describe people who go on an alternative path from their true dream because theyâve given up on themselves.â -Dr. Benjamin Hardy, Be Your Future Self Now
- âI donât have a problem with what you do, thatâs your choice. What I have a problem with is you lying to yourself about why youâre doing the things youâre doing. You have a choice.â -Jerry Colonna, co-founder and CEO, Reboot
- âIn our time, we workers are being called to reexamine our work: how we do it; whom it is helping or hurting; what it is we do; and what we might be doing if we were to let go of our present work and follow a deeper call.â -Matthew Fox, Episcopal priest and theologian
- âWe spend far too much time at work for it not to have deep meaning.â -Satya Nadella, CEO, Microsoft
- âDonât aim at successâthe more you aim at it and make it a target, the more you are going to miss it. For success, like happiness, cannot be pursued; it must ensue⌠as the unintended side-effect of oneâs personal dedication to a cause greater than oneself.â -Victor Frankl, psychologist, author, and Holocaust survivor
- â…God is calling you to serve Him in and from the ordinary, material, and secular activities of human life. He waits for us every day, in the laboratory, in the operating theatre, in the army barracks, in the university chair, in the factory, in the workshop, in the fields, in the home and in all the immense panorama of work. Understand this well: there is something holy, something divine, hidden in the most ordinary situations, and it is up to each one of you to discover it.â -Josemaria Escriva, Conversations
- âUnhappy is he who depends on success to be happy. For such a person, the end of a successful career is the end of the line.â -Alex Dias Ribeiro, former Formula 1 race-car driver
- âWhat shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?â -Mark (8:36)
- âDiscovering vocation doesnât mean scrambling toward some prize just beyond your reach, but rather accepting the treasure that you have been given. But make no mistake about it, well-meaning people around youâfriends, family work associates, and othersâwill push you to run someone elseâs race.â -Nicholas Pearce, pastor and professor
- âToday I understand vocation quite differentlyânot as a goal to be achieved but as a gift to be received. Discovering vocation does not mean scrambling toward some prize just beyond my reach but accepting the treasure of true self I already possess. Vocation does not come from a voice âout thereâ calling me to become something I am not. It comes from a voice âin hereâ calling me to be the person I was born to be, to fulfill the original selfhood given me at birth by God.â -Parker Palmer, Let Your Life Speak
- ââŚI (like many others) felt a wrongness in the world, a wrongness that seeped through the cracks of my privileged, insulated childhoodâŚ. Life, I knew, was supposed to be more joyful than this, more real, more meaningful, and the world was supposed to be more beautiful. We were not supposed to hate Mondays and live for the weekends and holidaysâŚ. We were not supposed to be kept indoors on a beautiful day, day after day.â -Charles Eisenstein, The More Beautiful World Our Hearts Know Is Possible
- âYour career is like a garden. It can hold an assortment of lifeâs energy that yields a bounty for you. You do not need to grow just one thing in your garden. You do not need to do just one thing in your career.â -Jennifer Ritchie Payette, author
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Gregg Vanourek is a writer, teacher, and TEDx speaker on personal development and leadership. He is co-author of three books, including LIFE Entrepreneurs: Ordinary People Creating Extraordinary Lives (a manifesto for living with purpose and passion) and Triple Crown Leadership: Building Excellent, Ethical, and Enduring Organizations (a winner of the International Book Awards). Check out his Crafting Your Life & Work online course or get his monthly newsletter. If you found value in this article, please forward it to a friend. Every little bit helps!
