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    Home»Money Tips»How to Find Work You Love (Even Later in Your Career)
    Money Tips

    How to Find Work You Love (Even Later in Your Career)

    online.bizshow@gmail.comBy March 15, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
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    Benchmark Capital managers photographed in the San Francisco office on Monday September 16, 2013, in San Francisco, California. Photograph by David Paul Morris
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    What does it take to find work you actually love—not just tolerate, not just survive, but genuinely love? And is it even possible if you’re in your 50s and still don’t know what that is?

    In this conversation, I talk with Bill Gurley, general partner at Benchmark Capital and author of “Runnin’ Down a Dream: How to Thrive in a Career You Actually Love.”

    Bill walks us through the principles from his book about building a career around fascination rather than passion, why continuous learning is non-negotiable, and how to live on “the edge” of your field to stay relevant.

    We discuss why the number one regret people have at the end of their lives is inaction, how to know when it’s time to make a career shift, and why being dismissive of new technologies like AI might be the worst thing you can do for your career.

    Bill also shares stories of people who found their dream jobs—from a lawyer who became a Michelin-starred chef to a hairstylist who built a beauty empire—and explains why the path to work you love rarely follows a straight line.

    Listen Here

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    Key Takeaways

    Follow fascination, not passion—passion is an overloaded word that creates pressure, while fascination is the test of whether you’d study something in your spare time instead of watching Netflix, and it’s the fuel that makes continuous learning feel effortless rather than like a grind.

    Continuous learning is the non-negotiable foundation of career success—you must be fascinated enough with your field that learning feels free and natural, because the people who thrive are those who study their craft like artisans, constantly exploring nuance and staying on the edge of their domain.

    Live on the edge of your field to stay relevant—the edge is where new technologies, techniques, and possibilities emerge first, and being the most informed person in your organization about what’s changing makes you the most valuable employee, not the most vulnerable to disruption.

    Regrets of inaction haunt us more than mistakes—Daniel Pink’s research shows people are remarkably good at forgiving themselves for things they tried and failed at, but the things we never attempted grow larger in our minds over time, making boldness the antidote to end-of-life regret.

    Financial flexibility is the key to career optionality—if you’re spending every dollar you earn, your ability to explore, shift careers, or take risks is severely limited, so controlling spending (especially early in your career) is essential for maximizing your freedom to pursue work you love.

    Resources

    Runnin’ Down a Dream by Bill Gurley
    The Power of Regret by Daniel Pink
    Designing Your Life by Dave Evans & Bill Burnett
    One Up on Wall Street by Peter Lynch
    Atomic Habits by James Clear
    Afford Anything Episode #638 – Interview with James Clear
    Afford Anything Episode #206 – Interview with David Epstein

    Chapters

    Note: Timestamps are approximate and may vary across listening platforms due to dynamically inserted ads.

    (0:00) Introduction
    (02:17) The “30-Year Rule” for gauging long-term fulfillment
    (08:45) The “Conveyor Belt” Trap: Stepping off the safe path
    (16:10) Confronting Career Regret: The 6-in-10 statistic
    (24:22) Reinventing at 40/50+: Why it’s never too late
    (31:55) Financial Flexibility: The secret to career “optionality”
    (42:30) How to find your “Fascination” vs. just your passion
    (55:12) Bill’s Journey: From Computer Engineer to Wall Street Analyst

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