HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesHello World | The future of work is about match quality, not specialization

Hello World | The future of work is about match quality, not specialization

Match quality, as David Epstein explained in his book 'Range', is a term economists use to describe the degree of fit between the work someone does and who they are—their abilities and proclivities.

November 03, 2021 / 11:45 IST
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Zhang Yiming, the co-founder of TikTok owner ByteDance, switched from electrical to software engineering in college.
Zhang Yiming, the co-founder of TikTok owner ByteDance, switched from electrical to software engineering in college.

Note to readers: Hello world is a program developers run to check if a newly installed programming language is working alright. Startups and tech companies are continuously launching new software to run the real world. This column will attempt to be the "Hello World" for the real world.

Matthew Brennan’s book Attention Factory is about Bytedance, the company that owns TikTok and other apps that raked in $37 billion in revenue in 2020. A passage on Zhang Yiming, the company’s founder, offers a powerful insight into how people in their early career should look at work or academic pursuits. It goes like this: 

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“In college, he initially wanted to study biology, a subject that at the time was deemed to be ‘the bellwether of the 21st century’. Unfortunately, his scores weren’t high enough. He opted instead to enroll in electrical engineering, but before long had switched to software engineering. Electrical engineering, he reasoned, provided ‘few chances to apply textbook theory to real-life applications’ whereas the cycle of computer programming was far shorter and the results could be seen faster.”

We’ve talked about careers in this column before. As the late management guru Clayton Christensen had said: your happiness with your career depends on two factors. Hygiene factors like money, a decent workplace, co-workers, and so on. And motivators like is this work meaningful? Does the job give me a chance to develop? Am I learning, being recognized for achievements and given responsibility? Motivators, as you’ve probably guessed by now, have more of an impact on your happiness than hygiene factors.