Note: Back from graphing social patterns, which was a great conference, but more on that later.
Let’s face it, getting a job is a piece of cake compared to “building a career”. There’s a big difference between the two. A job pays you today, while a career pays you tomorrow through better positions and opportunities. It’s like investing in yourself.
However, it can be devilishly hard to plan out what the right moves are for getting where you want to go, or even where you want to go to begin with. But alas, like most things, the internet provides a great resource.
LinkedIn is not only a good place to network, but also to learn about the journey’s some of the valley’s best and brightest took to get where they are today. Lets look at some different career goals and see the paths people took to get there: Venture Capitalist, CEO, and Marketing Guru.
VC
Salil Deshpande - currently partner at Bay Partners, Masters in EE from Stanford, Hardware Engineer - Hewlett Packard, Software engineer - Sun, Project Lead - Enterprise Integration Partners, CEO - CustomWare, Director Professional Services - Borland, CEO - New CustomWare company, (skipping some more), EIR at Bay Partners, Principle at Bay, Partner at Bay.
Katherine Barr - currently partner at MDV, Stanford Masters, Senior Product Manager - HSA, Negotiator/Senior Consultant - Vantage Partners (Boston based firm), Partner - MDV.
CEO
Gina Bianchini - CEO - Ning, Stanford MBA, Financial Analyst - Goldman Sachs, Director of Biz dev - CKS group, Co-Founder and CMO - Harmonic Group, Co-Founder CEO - Ning
Heather Harde - CEO - TechCrunch, Harvard MBA, Financial Analyst - Brown Brothers, SVP M&A - Fox Interactive, CEO - TechCrunch
Marketing Guru
Dave McClure - BS - John’s Hopkins, Consulting - Various large companies, Founder/CEO - Aslan Computing, Startup Consultant - 500 hats, Director of Marketing - PayPal, Director of Marketing - Simply Hired, VP Evangelism - SimplyHired, adviser to dozens of other companies
Jeremiah Owyang - Business and marketing - SFSU, Intranet designer - Exodus Communications, UI Designer - Extranet, Intranet Architect - World Savings, Manager Global Web Marketing - Hitachi, Dir Corp Media Strat - Podtech, Senior Analyst - Forrester.
So What Can We Learn?
After looking at a lot of profiles I’ve noticed a couple of things. These people didn’t spend that long at a single job (2 years usually). That means don’t waste time at a job you don’t like. Jeremiah jumped through a bunch of positions before he found his calling.
They also went to some pretty good schools. Howard Hartenbaum of Draper Richards told me that pretty much every VC at the firm went to Stanford for their MBA (he was the exception and got involved with the firm because of his European expertise, and natural talent too, I’m sure).
Finally, studying these profiles is a way of familiarizing yourself with who you should approach for mentorship. I got lucky and had the opportunity to work under Michael Arrington. When looking for someone to get career advice from, know their career, know what questions you’re going to ask when you approach them, find people on their way up (people who have made it are sometimes just too busy), and engage them where they engage others (twitter, FBook, LinkedIn, Blogs). I’m sure you’ll find most people in the valley more than happy to give some guidance. Just ask.