How to make your career ‘future forward.’
The world changes—and so must your habits, if you want to stay successful. Here’s how.
There's a paradox at the heart of building expertise: we use everything we've learned in the past to navigate the future. Sometimes that's a superpower. Sometimes it's a trap.
Understanding the difference is what separates careers that evolve from careers that stagnate.
The Comfort of the Familiar
The most powerful way our past shapes our present is through habits. Every habit is essentially a deal you made with your past self: when you encounter this situation, do this thing. It's efficient. It's low-effort. And for the most part, it works — because much of the world stays consistent enough that yesterday's solutions still apply today.
The same logic extends to preferences. You have a go-to restaurant. You have a trusted workflow. You have a way of handling difficult conversations. These aren't bad things. They're the accumulated wisdom of experience.
The problem starts when the world changes — and you don't.
The Hidden Cost of the Status Quo
Technology shifts. Industries reorganize. Competitors find angles you never anticipated. And through it all, your habitual responses keep firing — quickly, quietly, and often before you've even realized there was a choice to make.
The costs of staying the same are often invisible. The benefits of continuity are immediate and tangible (comfort, predictability, efficiency), while the downsides are slow-moving and easy to rationalize away.
Kodak is the textbook case. The company didn't just fail to adopt digital photography — they invented it. They had the technology, the talent, and the market position. What they lacked was the willingness to challenge their own success. The status quo felt too good to disrupt. Until it wasn't.
The question worth asking yourself: What's your version of digital photography — and are you ignoring it?
Three Ways to Get Unstuck
1. Actively imagine what could go wrong.
It takes deliberate effort to think critically about the path of least resistance. Carve out time to ask hard questions: Who might move into positions you're aiming for, while you're busy doing what you've always done? What skills are quietly becoming less relevant? What opportunities have passed you by while you were optimizing for yesterday?
Discomfort is the point here. The status quo feels comfortable precisely because you're not examining it.
2. Keep learning — even when it seems irrelevant.
The most underrated career move is learning things that don't obviously connect to your current role. Every new skill or piece of knowledge shifts how you see the world. You start noticing things you were blind to before. You start questioning approaches that once seemed self-evidently correct.
New learning creates productive dissatisfaction. It makes your old habits feel insufficient — and that friction is exactly what opens the door to growth.
3. Force yourself to explore.
Exploration is higher-effort and less predictable than exploitation. That's why most people avoid it. But the antidote to being stuck is simple, if not easy: do something different.
Volunteer for the project outside your lane. Join a conversation you're not required to be part of. Take on a responsibility that stretches you past your current abilities. Not every experiment will pay off — some will be outright failures — but the habit of exploration keeps you oriented toward what's coming rather than what's already passed.
The past is a resource, not a destiny. The experts who thrive over the long arc of a career are the ones who draw on their experience without being imprisoned by it. They know when to exploit what they know — and when to let go and explore what they don't.
That's a skill worth developing.
