The case for the ‘good enough’ job

Episode 498 | Host: Emilie Aries | Guest: Elizabeth Lotardo

Reclaim your power while in a job that’s just “good enough”.

The Perfect Job—the one that fuels your passion, sets up your catalytic career rise, and pays handsomely—isn’t nearly as common as LinkedIn and aspirational Instagram accounts might have us believe. Most people spend their working hours somewhere in the messy middle, in a job that’s okay but not great, pays fine but not spectacularly, and provides some but not unlimited opportunity. 

But here’s the good news: That’s the very spot where you can thrive if you embrace the art of “leading yourself.” This is where Elizabeth Lotardo, a consultant, instructor, and the author of the new book Leading Yourself, argues you can absolutely excel if you stop pursuing perfection and begin embracing “good enough” as a goal.

In this episode, Elizabeth breaks down the concept, and we explore its empowering and inspiring possibilities. She’s been sharing her approach through workshops for a number of years, and the book couldn’t come at a better time. There’s still a lot of expectation to find your dream job, but now it’s up against some more realistic perspectives—ones myself and others share—accepting that most people don’t ever find the needle in that particular haystack, and maybe you shouldn’t get all your self worth and passion from your job, anyway.

What does it mean to “lead yourself”?

Elizabeth is all about banishing the idea we’ve been sold for so long that if we are content in a job that isn’t fueling our deepest purpose and passion, we’re selling out. What if, she dares to ask, we shift the lens through which we see the job we have? 

Leading yourself means owning your work experience, regardless of your position in the company or the level of control you have. It means you’re committed to making where you’re at work for you, and Elizabeth outlines a few approachable strategies from her book for doing exactly that.

Transform your performance reviews

Performance reviews, as many of us know them, surfaced around WWII, and they often affect employees in exactly the opposite way that they were intended. The anxiety-inducing sit-down with your boss was supposed to improve productivity, but it turns out that being talked at for an hour about the things you could do better and the metrics you failed to meet actually leaves people feeling less productive and more disengaged. Go figure.

In her book, Elizabeth explains how to transform performance reviews into an opportunity to set your own goals, define what’s in your control, and create more realistic parameters. And it doesn’t require asking your boss to drastically adjust the whole process. 

Rather, Elizabeth encourages coming to the table armed with key metrics you actually control, focused around whatever preordained target you’re given. If you have a specific sales goal, for example, track your total number of outreaches and how quickly you respond to customers, as well as review client calls to identify what’s working and what isn’t. In keeping tabs on these metrics—in addition to the ultimate end goal—you’re showing initiative and remaining focused on that which you control. At the next review, whether you meet the sales goal or not, you can confidently point to targets you did achieve—the ones that should leave you feeling capable and proud.

Bring the energy you want

Elizabeth believes you have to create the energy you want to find, not just expect those around you to provide it. Maybe you can’t light the office with ambient lamps in lieu of fluorescents or replace the fabric cubicles with classy wood dividers, but Leading Yourself encourages you to identify the environmental aspects of your job that you can change. 

Usually, you have control over the music you listen to while you work, the conversations you have with your co-workers, the nutritional value of the lunches you bring, and the amount of sleep you get at night. Stop focusing on the things that drain your energy—that just gives them more power. Instead, shift the lens to what you can modify.

Should you stay or should you go?

Some people take great pride in “sticking it out” at a job they hate because they don’t identify as a quitter. Others clean out their desks at the first boring assignment or rude comment from a coworker. While you’re welcome to do this, these are exactly the kinds of situations Elizabeth encourages us to reframe rather than reject outright. 

All the talk about “purpose” and jobs that fuel your passion surged in the Great Resignation of 2020 and 2021. People left their mediocre gigs in droves when the transition to remote work made it crystal clear that stripping away the social engagements and the office perks left work that felt meaningless and transactional. 

Not surprisingly, organizations quickly responded in kind, changing their job search marketing to sell themselves as world-changing and people-driven. Unfortunately, data from this huge shift showed that, by and large, workers felt they were better off at their old jobs. The incredible opportunities they were promised tended not to manifest. 

As Elizabeth points out, we are often led to believe that purpose is something our employer should be providing for us instead of something we need to create for ourselves. Far too often, quitting results not in landing your dream job but in scoring another mediocre nine to five.

When to phone it in

I know that so many of my listeners and readers are like me—high-achievers who care a lot about their work. So when I got to Elizabeth’s chapter about learning to embrace doing a little less, I felt seen.

While she acknowledges that work matters a lot and we really care about it, Elizabeth points to a phrase that resonates deeply with her: unless you’re a literal life-saver, “no one is going to bleed out on the table” if you need to push a deadline or leave some planning til next week. Take a step back from perfection. Sometimes, we need to be okay with “good enough” in our own performance, too.

Elizabeth reminds those of us with six hundred things on our plate at any given moment that if you don’t pick something to phone in sometimes, the universe will pick it for you, and it’ll be your health or dropping the ball on something really important. Reset your expectations of yourself (and temper others’ expectations of you) by accepting that you won’t always be able to give 110%.

Elizabeth hopes everyone who reads her book and listens to this episode comes away recognizing that while so much feels out of our control these days—economically, politically, globally—you can continue to empower yourself by identifying these small shifts and embracing “good enough.” 

How do you navigate between pursuing your “dream job” and making the best of your current work? Let’s talk about it over in the Courage Community on Facebook or in our group on LinkedIn.

Related links from today’s episode:

Leading Yourself: Find More Joy, Meaning, and Opportunities in the Job You Already Have (Despite Imperfect Bosses, Weird Economies, Lethargic Coworkers, Annoying Systems, and Too Many Deliverables)

Elizabeth’s website

Follow Elizabeth on LinkedIn

Drop the Ball: Achieving More by Doing Less by Tiffany Dufu

LEVEL UP: a Leadership Accelerator for Women on the Rise

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

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