The Quest for Job Satisfaction – Choose Your Own Adventure

What does job satisfaction mean to you?

-Really-

Have you ever thought about it? Is it the wage you earn or the vacation you accrue? Is it winning arguments with colleagues or landing that huge business opportunity? Is it directing a team or nurturing individuals in their roles? Are you proud of work accomplishments?  Is it the value you provide to the operation/team/public?

Is it all of the above?

True job satisfaction doesn’t seem to follow a formula or template. If it does, I certainly have been looking in the wrong places. My personal adage is simple and goes something like this:

Job satisfaction is not something that anyone can give to you, be it the boss, your colleagues, or your friends. You have to want it, you have to recognize what adds to (or subtracts from) it, and most importantly, you have to feel it.

The quest part represents the fact that we never stop growing, and therefore the source of your personal job satisfaction may evolve over time. Tasks or responsibilities that were once daunting start becoming less of a challenge. The environment you’re in may shift and offer new and exciting opportunities of which you may want to take advantage.

The new pharmacy landscape will offer plenty of potential niches to fill, ledges to reach for, wide open spaces to explore, and peaks to ultimately summit. This quest, should you choose to accept it, requires an open mind and an awareness of current personal or logistical limitations, as they may impact the first direction you choose to go. You may also need a few things:

1) Mentors – folks you look up to and make you think. It’s in their nature to push you places you may not go otherwise.

2) Leaders – Provide a vision for where pharmacy is going. Well-respected in the community and among their peers, they motivate and set the tone for how we may approach perceived barriers (i.e. – public acceptance of pharmacists providing flu shots).

3) Supporters – Colleagues, peers, friends, family. This network forms the glue that keeps your aspirations focused and achievable.  If you need a boost, they’re right behind you and really mitigate the negative slides.

4) Resources – Could be people, but more often it is information. Ask questions, read whatever interests you. Whether it’s renal failure or cancer research, mental health or menopause, stoking those passions will provide insight into what really gets you out of bed in the morning.

So choose your own adventure. Just like the book series, take it a day at a time and when you have a choice to make, be convicted and accept the consequences on the random page you end up flipping to. I for one am looking forward to exploring all the possible endings. Are you?

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About Devin Covey

A proud member of the pharmacy profession since 1997, I have a passion for people and helping them thrive. Interests include writing, singing, musical theatre, and biking around my home province of Nova Scotia, Canada.

2 thoughts on “The Quest for Job Satisfaction – Choose Your Own Adventure

  1. alapbs's avatar alapbs says:

    It’s also important to distinguish between a satisfied employee (individual, contractor, owner, pharmacist, etc) and a motivated one. One’s determination and perseverance play a role as well.

    Though I have worked for the better part of the last 2 decades on the benefit administrator, benefit provider, and insurance side of your pharma world, I will accept your adventure and turn the page. I think the opportunities that lie ahead in a world dominated by technology will radically change how we choose care providers, pharmacists, insurers, medications and more. It’s already changed how we eat, drive, chat and educate ourselves.

    So in addition to satisfaction (which I would define as the feeling that you are indeed content with what you do daily), and even motivation (the inspiration from within or without that drives you to seek and try more), there is determination…

    Inspiration gets you to buy the book (maybe even dissatisfaction – gasp!). Motivation gets you to the starting line (open the book, read the first page, choose the next adventure). Determination gets you to actually turn the page, keep reading and turning until you have arrived at the point where you don’t want another adventure, and lo! you might even be content.

    The key, as you have nailed, explore all the endings… go back a few steps and try another option if you don’t like the one you’ve found. These endings are temporary. There are dozens and if you can find the right one, you’ll be successful, happy, productive, and engaged in your family, community, and enterprise.

    If you want to find an adventure, turn to page 13
    If you think you’re not quite ready, turn back a few pages and find a comfortable next step.

  2. KLS's avatar KLS says:

    Food for thought! Enjoying the weblog so far. Keep it up 🙂

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