Chief Change Officer - Career Equation Author Erica Sosna: Rebounding from Physical Paralysis to New Heights – Part Two
Episode Date: November 15, 2024Part Two. In 2022, an accident left Erica Sosna, Author of The Career Equation, paralysed, facing months of recovery, and re-learning to walk. Yet, she is grateful, even through pain and uncertainty, ...to have rediscovered her own resilience and purpose. Over two years, she has fought her way back to walking, rebuilt her business, and found a new mission in helping others. Key Highlights of Our Interview: Speaking the Same Career Language: The Foundation of The Career Equation “The Career Equation is designed to create a common understanding between employers and employees around career development, much like having a shared accounting system. Without it, career conversations risk inconsistency and lack of clarity, but with it, we can truly align aspirations and strategies.” Building Career Conversations with Four Simple Components “The Career Equation focuses on four key insights: understanding strengths, uncovering passions, measuring success, and aligning with optimal work environments. These components create a common ground, enabling both employer and employee to understand what’s needed to thrive.” Insatiable Curiosity: Embracing Unconventional Paths to Healing "An insatiable thirst for novelty keeps me exploring, whether it’s acupuncture, microcurrent therapy, or spine-specific chiropractic techniques. I’ve discovered that healing requires openness to new possibilities, even when they fall outside the traditional model.” The Right Environment: The Crucial Factor for Success “From workspace to team dynamics, the environment is essential to performance. Knowing where a person does their best work and making adjustments as needed creates a space where strengths can flourish.” Visualizing the Outcome: A Plan Begins with the End in Mind “I start by envisioning the experiences I want—whether it’s dancing, running, or picking up my child—then map out the steps that would lead me there. By framing it with vivid goals, I find clarity and purpose in the smallest daily actions.” Connect with us: Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Erica Sosna Chief Change Officer: Make Change Ambitiously. Experiential Human Intelligence for Growth Progressives Global Top 3% Podcast on Listen Notes World's #1 Career Podcast on Apple Top 1: US, CA, MX, IE, HU, AT, CH, FI, JP 2 Millions+ Downloads 50+ Countries
Transcript
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Hi everyone, welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Our show is a modernist community for change progressives in organizational and human transformation
from around the world.
Today I'm speaking with Erika Sosner, a fellow podcast host and the author of The Career Equation, who, like me, is passionate
about careers.
But what makes Erica's story unique is her remarkable journey of resilience, purpose, and transformation.
In 2022, a life-changing accident left her paralyzed. of recovery. Through immense pain and uncertainty, Erica fought her way back.
Back to walking, back to work, and back to a renewed mission. After a year away
from her consultancy, Erica returned with fresh purpose, balancing her career on a three-day
work week, launching the podcast, and expanding her reach to create a bigger impact.
Yesterday, part one, Erica shared her career journey,
the twists and the turns,
and the accident that changed everything.
Today, in part two, she'll share the hard-earned wisdom
she gained from overcoming paralysis,
starting a new chapter, shaping a path to personal and
professional growth. Erica will also dive into the career
equation she created and how we can all work towards becoming better versions of ourselves in our careers.
Your experience and journey are exceptional. The challenges you've faced, both physical and mental,
are beyond what many of us could even imagine. I deeply applaud you for that resilience.
As I listened, I wondered, now that you're looking back
and you call yourself exceptional, which I think is entirely fitting,
what would you say is your superpower?
If you had to pinpoint exactly what it is that helped you sustain and succeed through all of those things, what would that be?
Is it a deep-rooted faith? Something within your career equation? Or an other quality? What do you think
that allowed you to endure all the pain and ultimately come back even stronger?
It's a really good question, Min. In many ways ways at the beginning, when people were saying, so inspiring,
because I was posting a bit on LinkedIn about my physio
and things, because that was my work at the time.
And I wanted to feel like I was in the world
and that people knew what I was up to.
Initially, when people started saying,
I was really inspired, I can't believe it.
How do you do it?
I can't imagine how I would do it.
I was a little bit dismissive.
I was, look, you don't know until you're in the situation.
Of course you would do the same.
If you thought there was any possibility
that you could recover your function, whatever it is.
I had a spinal injury, but plenty of people have
all kinds of debilitating health
and mental health conditions and all of that.
Of course you would just go for a hell for leather
for recovery, wouldn't you?
And it took me a while to realize
that the answer to that was not yes for everybody.
So then I started to ask myself exactly this question, which is what, so what am I doing
that perhaps might be useful and helpful for other people to get a grip on or that they could use?
And I suppose there are a couple of things. I think one of the things is,
I do have a strong faith. I have a faith in the kind of goodness and benevolent intention of the universe, I suppose, like that.
And that meant that I wasn't in resistance to what had happened to me.
I was once taught that when something rubbish happens to you, accept it as though you chose it. I found that to be a very helpful thing, whether that's you're being made redundant unexpectedly,
or you've had a loss or an illness, or it sounds crackers in a way to say accept that thing as though you chose it.
But what's the alternative? The alternative is not to accept it, even though it's happening to you anyway,
or to be in battle with it when you can't change it.
Embracing the experience as though,
okay, this has happened and I'm just gonna accept it
as though it was on my list of things to do,
and then I'm gonna act in response to that
in a positive way.
So the first was accept it as though you chose it.
The second is that in your life plan and your career plan,
which is the program that
we run around the equation, I teach this modality of starting with the end in mind. So knowing
what it is that you want to accomplish, what you want to see and feel and experience, and
then working backwards from that to work out how you're going to get it done so that you
are left with a kind of, what do I need to do today or right now?
There is, if you like, a penny in the piggy bank of the future.
Whether the future is I want to walk again,
or I'd like to have a child,
or I'd love to move countries,
or whatever that thing is that you want to experience.
So I used, of course,
that modality because it's always worked for me.
You start by vividly imagining you having the experience.
And notice that I'm talking about experience rather than stuff.
So say you want the experience of traveling the world or managing lots of people.
If we get stuck on, I want to be promoted, it's quite difficult to envisage that as an experience.
So I would then ask, if you do want to get promoted, what experience would that give you?
Why do you want that? Is it more interesting work?
Is it more strategic opportunities? Is it greater prestige? But
no, you start by envisaging the experience. So for me, it was, I want to experience dancing
again, cycling again, yoga again, running again, picking my child up. And I really vividly
imagined how joyful and pleasurable those moments would be. And then I went backwards
from there to say,
what would need to happen the week before,
the months before, the year before,
and what are the things that I need to start doing?
And that then gave me the kind of pillars
of what actions I needed to take on my emotional recovery,
my physical recovery, and to keep taking action,
have a rhythm for taking action
every day, a little bit every day to move towards that.
I think the sad thing is I'm very open-minded and I love new things.
A friend once told me I have an insatiable thirst for novelty, which I
thought was a brilliant way of putting it.
I've always just really been very interested in new stuff that's new to me, it may be ancient,
but like new stuff to me or cutting edge or like just
things and places and experiences I haven't had before.
And until my injury, I'd spent very little time, I was very
lucky to spend very little time within the sort of medical
model of Western medicine at all really. I hadn't really needed
any help from modern medicine. And so I was very
interested in what might exist in terms of alternative paths to healing. And I read a
huge amount about that. I watched loads of videos, I read loads of blogs, I talked to lots of people.
And some of the things that I introduced were things like acupuncture, something called
mactimony, which is a very gentle, supportive form of chiropractic. No click clacking, it's really a kind of spine mechanic work that's
very delicate and effective. Something called frequency-specific microcurrent, which is
100-year-old technology for jump-starting the body by using electricity. Because for
me, like a spinal injury is all about electric connections and stuff.
So I tried some different things.
So I think those are probably the three things.
I'm very determined.
So once I accepted it as though I chose it,
I knew that it was something that I had to do.
And so I was going to follow that to the nth degree.
Then I made a plan that started with the end in mind,
visualizing vividly and viscerally what I wanted to experience,
and then thinking, if I'd already done that,
what would be the story I would tell about how I did that?
And from that, I devised my plan.
And then the third was the willingness to be open and try things that were unconventional,
perhaps less known about,
perhaps outside of the medical model,
and to just keep going.
We have this model as well in the equation
about the hero's journey, and it basically says
that anything worth doing is gonna be difficult
and it's gonna suck at some point.
But the time to stop is either before you decide to do it
or when you've exhausted all possibilities.
That in fact, when you're in the middle in the thick of it,
when it's feeling really difficult and unpleasant,
and you're thinking, well, like,
why did I ever take this on?
It will never go the way I planned.
That is not the time to give up.
That is the time that is the darkness before the dawn.
And so again, knowing that map of transformation
existed inside of me and that I knew it to be true,
having seen it in my own life and other people's, just helped me to have that tenacity to keep going when
it really sucked. So I hope those are practical and useful for anyone in transformation and
transition. But I guess those are the fundamental qualities that make the biggest difference
to me, I think. That's the lived experience that really matters.
My podcast is about real, raw, lived experiences,
not polished success stories.
Now, I'd like you to dive into your book,
The Career Equation.
I've skimmed through it myself.
A notice you focus on helping employers better support the career growth of their employees.
Many career books are aimed at individuals taking charge of their own career paths, but you've chosen to speak directly to employers.
Since we have a few minutes left, I think it would be great to web up with this.
How do you help employers enhance the career experience for their teams?
What steps can they take to create an environment where employees feel not just more productive,
but truly motivated and committed?
This is a relevant question to many people out there feeling stuck in the workforce,
looking for a way to feel more engaged and valued.
Yeah, it's a great question. Thank you for asking it.
So let me start with this. The purpose of the career equation is for both the employer and the individual to have a frame of reference and a way of talking
about careers that both parties understand. And without that, organizations can say that they
have career conversations or I could say I'd like to have a career conversation with you, my boss,
my HR, whatever. But there's no consistency. There's no consistent language or shared understanding.
So just like it would be ludicrous for a company to
have 10 different accounting systems and nobody really be
talking the same language financially, so it also really
makes sense to have one model for all the conversations that
happen around careers in an organization.
And yes, we absolutely focus on building capacity for the employer,
the person who's going to take that insight and do something with it.
But we also want to retrofit the ability for the individual to be prepared for that conversation,
to have a good conversation that they are ready for.
So the equation is fundamentally about how do I understand the best ways to
nourish and nurture the person in front of me so that they love working here and
feel excited to stay and continue their future career here and so that I really
get the best value out of them and the organization gives them the best
opportunities to thrive.
And for both parties, the equation solves this very quickly and simply.
And it does it by asking four things that are useful for everybody to understand about
the person in front of them.
Number one, what are you naturally good at?
This is an unremarkable insight that we all, when we play to our strengths, we are happier,
fulfilled, more successful, we have more enjoyment at work. So the first is, do I understand
what this person is naturally good at, that they want to be applying to the
workplace? The second is about passion, like what do they enjoy, what gives them
pleasure and energy? So people do best when they are applying their skills to
something that they care about.
And that care could be that they feel strongly about something.
It could be that they love that subject area, love geeking out on it.
Or it could be a way of being, like for example solving complex problems or connecting people,
that just gives them that burst of joy when they're engaged in doing it.
So do you understand what gives the person in front of you that burst of joy when they're engaged in doing it. So do you understand what gives the person in front of you that burst of joy?
What is that sweet spot where they just feel
wonderful that they're able to spend their time and energy doing this thing?
The third thing is how do they measure success?
We call that impact. So it's easy to assume that everyone defines success by more money,
more power, more status, but I can tell you from
thousands of conversations over and over that this is
not how most people define a successful life and a successful legacy.
They might use those things to keep score.
They might use those as a measure, but that isn't actually how
they define success itself.
So do you understand what a successful week, month, year life looks like to this
person, because it's going to really help you to make sure that you tailor your feedback,
your development opportunities and the activities that they're doing
to that definition of success.
And then the last thing is where do they do their best work?
So we say in the equation that environment makes the difference.
Environment is the factor that can make or break.
And that at the home office, at the government, at my first job. That's what it was for me.
The work was really interesting, I loved the impact it was having, I got to use my skills
in research and dialogue and all of those things, but the environment was
really stifling. It was really slow, it was very political, you had to be
terribly diplomatic, which I was just awful at.
And a lot of the time, your work was just wasted because it was glacially progressing,
and then the government would change, and it was all a waste of time.
And I just couldn't stand any of those things.
It was really suffocating for me.
And even the environment, you couldn't open the windows.
That also made me feel literally really suffocated.
So do you understand the environment in which that person does their best work?
And to what extent can you set up your environment to reduce the frictions
that impede them and to enhance the environment that helps them be successful?
And environment is everything from are they specialists?
Are they generalists?
Do they like working indoors, outdoors?
Do they like working at speed?
Do they like having a lot of space?
Do they like to be at home?
Do they like to be in the buzz of the office?
Environment is all of those things,
the IT, the coffee, the lot.
So to what extent can both the individual
and their employer gain insight and understanding
about these four components, skills plus passion
plus impact, divided by reducing the amount
of levels of friction
between the ideal environment and the environment that they've got.
That's basically the equation.
The tools and the training that we use that are adopted by people like Amazon,
and Nomura, and a number of other significant global firms,
is all about how do you have a conversation that focuses on these key components?
And how do you make it easy to look through the lens of the equation
when you're trying to uncover what isn't quite working,
what isn't quite fitting for an individual coming to work?
Because all of us want to do our very best
and we want to feel that our talents and skills are used in the very best way.
And the equation says, look, there's a sweet spot for that.
There are some things that you are exceptional at,
that you care about a lot, that make a difference.
And if you focus your working attention on those things,
then both you and your employer will have a win.
Both sides need to know what those are,
and they need to check in regularly
because some of those things change as the person changes. So it's really about equipping the entire
organization to use the equation as its lens for dialogue and to use the very simple tools that sit
around it so that everyone can have a conversation where both parties quickly understand what's going
on and can therefore co-design development plans
and career paths and opportunities
to make for that win on both sides.
And of course the results are longer tenure,
lower sickness absence, greater loyalty,
higher employer engagement, better productivity,
greater internal mobility,
greater diversity at senior levels.
All of those things arise from a very simple technology and a very easy to learn conversation.
But it's the simplicity that makes it powerful.
It takes just five minutes, as I've taken with you to explain it,
and you can immediately start to apply it.
And of course, if you want to see how that works, check out the podcast,
because that's a series of career coaching conversations
using the equation just over and over again to give people the insights they need about
the tweaks that they need to really refine their career, to sit in their sweet spot more
and more often.
Thank you so much for joining us today. If you like what you heard, don't forget, subscribe to our show, leave us top-rated reviews,
check out our website, and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.