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We’ve all heard the advice: follow your passion and your dream job will appear. It sounds right. It feels inspiring. And for many people, it quietly does the opposite. Instead of clarity, it creates pressure. Instead of direction, it creates frustration. In this video, I question the idea that passion should come first in our careers. I talk about why following your passion is often bad career advice, especially early on, and why so many people feel lost after graduation. I share how I believed in this idea myself, and how reading So Good They Can’t Ignore You forced me to rethink what actually leads to meaningful work and job satisfaction. In this video, I talk about: 00:00 Why the passion advice sounds good but often fails in real life 01:36 How we misread the stories of successful people 04:03 Why most people aren’t meant to turn hobbies into careers 06:03 How passion actually develops over time 07:16 The difference between the passion mindset and the craftsman mindset 08:00 What career capital is and why it matters early on 10:00 Funny trial&error If this video made you rethink something, leave a comment. And if you want to see how I’m approaching work, skills, and career building, subscribe for the next one. Further readings: 📚Newport, C. (2016). So good they can't ignore you. Hachette UK. 📑 Sutherland, M., Naidu, G., Seabela, S., Crosson, S., & Nyembe, E. (2015). The components of career capital and how they are acquired by knowledge workers across different industries. South African Journal of Business Management, 46(4), 1-10. 📑 Xu, Q., Hou, Z., Zhang, C., Yu, F., & Li, T. (2022). Career Capital and Well-Being: A Configurational Perspective. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(16), 10196.