An academic career can flourish by leveraging the university's platform for credibility and teaching opportunities while actively avoiding its internal bureaucracy. The speaker found his career took off when he minimized time spent on campus politics and administration, focusing instead on teaching and external ventures.
The primary function of setting professional boundaries isn't to reject external opportunities. Instead, it's a proactive strategy to protect your time and energy for what you've defined as most important, ensuring you remain present and aligned in your own life.
While acknowledging the benefit of having mentors, Herb Wagner has found that the process of being a mentor is even more educational. Teaching and guiding others forces a deeper understanding of one's own principles and provides fresh perspectives from the next generation, offering greater personal and professional growth.
To accelerate your career, focus on developing 'agency'. This means moving beyond assigned tasks to proactively solve unspoken, systemic problems. Instead of chasing high-visibility projects, look for the unaddressed issues that keep leaders up at night. Solving these demonstrates true ownership and strategic value.
Employees who strictly adhere to their job description are likely to remain in the same role for years. Going above and beyond, such as cleaning a boss's station to simply be in their orbit, builds a reputation and relationships that lead to unexpected opportunities.
Ambitious graduates shouldn't join the organization doing the most good in year one, but rather the one that best equips them with skills and networks. This builds "career capital" that prepares them to achieve far greater impact in years 10, 20, and 30 of their careers.
The speaker intentionally reduced her workload and income to reclaim her time. This freed-up capacity allowed her to learn, strategize, and hire a coach, leading to an unexpected scaling of her business from six to seven figures. Working less created the space for working smarter.
A business school professor's expertise is validated by the free market, not just the university. If they are truly skilled, they should command a seven-figure income from external opportunities like books, speaking, and consulting. Their university salary should only represent a small fraction (15-20%) of their total earnings.
Don't wait for a promotion or new job opening to grow. Proactively identify other teams' pain points and offer your expertise to help solve them. This proactive helpfulness builds relationships, demonstrates your value across the organization, and organically opens doors to new skills and responsibilities.
Well-meaning professionals often take on "glue work" like improving onboarding or team culture. While valuable, this work often doesn't align with promotion criteria for senior roles. Audit your energy and focus on activities directly tied to the expectations of the role you want.
When considering a major career change, it's easy to get trapped by the "sunk cost" of your existing industry expertise and identity. The key to making a successful long-term pivot is to consciously ignore what you've built in the past and focus on what will bring fulfillment and growth over a multi-decade career.