What’s The Best Advice for New College Grads?

What’s The Best Advice for New College Grads? Leslie Grossman

Ninety percent of college commencement speakers advise graduates to follow their passion. Are they right or wrong? This premise was questioned by Michael Smerconish on CNN this past week.

Smerconish asked NYU Professor Scott Galloway his opinion. Galloway, also a serial entrepreneur, said the best success strategy is to experience failure and to quickly get up and move on.

In my opinion, the best advice is to combine the two strategies. Do something you are excited by or somewhat passionate about, and take risks with the knowledge you may fail, but go for it anyway. Learn from your mistakes and give it a go again. The next time do it differently - whatever that happens to mean.

Following one's passion is a temporary thing for most of us...because as we experience more of life and learning, our passion often changes. My first passion (or so I thought) was advertising. That was the time of the book "The Hidden Persuaders". It was the "Mad Men" age. l It was glamorous, with martini lunches, and so forth. What college grad wouldn't be passionate about it? Today, it's probably technology, social media or the metaverse. Glamorous, right?

Passion early in a career is simply something that excites us at that moment...and in many cases after a few years a new passion arrives in one's life due to experience and success. We may have many passions in our lives, and many failures as well. So maybe following one's passion is good advice and so is recovering from failure.

Leslie Grossman

For two decades, Leslie Grossman has been a trailblazer in leadership, professional development and career development for women. She is an accomplished executive coach, keynote speaker, highly regarded researcher, and former serial entrepreneur.  Leslie’s latest book, “Circles of Collaboration” published this year, has evolved from her personal experiences, her research of the success of C-suite women leaders and her own collaboration with her co-author, Christine Merser, a marketing strategist and novelist. 

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