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Doctor Who and the portfolio career

Kevin Fong advises academics to scale the silo walls occasionally to regenerate their careers

Published on
October 23, 2014
Last updated
May 22, 2015

I鈥檓 back from my adventures, once again secure within the walls of the university after a six-month sabbatical with Kent, Surrey and Sussex Air Ambulance Trust. It鈥檚 neither the most nor the least random career segue I鈥檝e ever made although it is the first time any employer has required me to wear fireproof underwear.

It used to trouble me greatly, this itinerant existence. As time went by my career looked less and less like any of those I鈥檇 earlier coveted. None of it had any of the traditional structure, none of it had the checks, balances and benchmarks by which any conventional career could be measured.

But I鈥檝e come to accept that this is how my shtick works: I pop up in random locations, never quite sure of what the next destination might be, with no one more surprised than me when I finally do arrive. It鈥檚 what I imagine being Doctor Who must be like. (Minus the bow ties, sonic screwdriver, brilliant assistants or intellectual capacity.) I do of course travel in time, in one direction, at a rate of one second per second. And while I have no Tardis, my base of operations is a university building whose external facade cunningly misrepresents the extent of its internal volume (it鈥檚 smaller on the inside than it looks like it should be from the outside). But the main attribute I鈥檇 like to think I share with the Doctor is his approach to the portfolio career: the idea that you need to keep moving and learning, occasionally regenerating completely, but always carrying something of your past forward with you.

Abandoning everything you know and taking a leap into the unknown is not for the faint-hearted. But the hardest move is the first one

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Portfolio careers have been all the rage for nearly a decade now. They were at first simply a product of the Great Recession, a way of future-proofing yourself against job insecurity. If one job fell through you could always fall back on one of the other three. But for many people they have now become a way of life.

Americans call these people 鈥渢he slashers鈥 because they鈥檙e the folk who, in response to the question 鈥淲hat do you do?鈥 might say 鈥淚鈥檓 a primary school teacher/baker/farmer鈥 or in more metropolitan locations 鈥淚鈥檓 a politician/comedian/celebrity sociopath鈥.

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Perhaps 鈥渟lashers鈥 is also a nod to the fact that they are tearing up the old concept of what a career ladder should look like. (Or perhaps it鈥檚 because, unless they鈥檙e very careful, 鈥渟lashers鈥 run the risk of looking like they鈥檙e just peeing about with lots of different things.)

There was a time when a job for life meant you鈥檇 made it, when companies could snare undergraduates in the milk round with an outside chance of keeping them for the whole of their working existence. But all that鈥檚 changed. Recently we鈥檝e come to accept that in a lifetime of work a person might experience several evolutions. More than that, we鈥檝e realised that there are distinct advantages to moving between disciplines. We鈥檝e spent so long specialising and sub-specialising in every walk of life that there is probably as much to be gained from going across as there is in continuing deeper.

For me it鈥檚 just what happens to work. My university and hospital periodically release me, on the end of a long but high tension bungee cord, and when it snaps me back I bring a little bit of wherever I鈥檝e been back with me.

I was recently asked to give a talk to a room full of postdocs about the merits of a portfolio career. I was surprised. I had always assumed that academia proper would be the last sanctuary for wannabe lifers. But it appears even higher education has begun to shred the rulebook. I did my best to oblige. The organisers wanted to imbue this particular crop of research scientists with a sense of the possibilities that lie in wait within and without the walls of the academy.

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It鈥檚 hard not to make the whole escapade sound utterly terrifying. Abandoning everything you know and taking a leap into the unknown is not for the fainthearted. But the hardest move is the first one. After that first transition nothing is ever quite so unknown again. And of course you don鈥檛 really leave everything you once knew behind.

One of the major drawbacks is that it is extremely difficult trying to get people to understand precisely what it is that you do or have done for a living. Even those close to you. I was trying to explain my meandering career path to one of my oldest friends. He frowned for most of the conversation but after a while I was sure that he was beginning to understand. 鈥淚 see,鈥 he said, 鈥測ou kind of lollop around randomly through events in modern history. Rather like that bloke鈥︹

鈥淵es! Yes!鈥 I exclaimed, pleased that he got it and quietly proud that he, too, saw the same canny parallels.

鈥淵es,鈥 he continued, 鈥渞unning from place to place, with no design for life, never knowing where you鈥檙e going to end up next鈥︹

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鈥淵es! Yes! I thought so too!鈥 I agreed.

鈥溾ust like Forrest Gump,鈥 he said.

鈥淵es,鈥 I said. 鈥淓xactly like him.鈥

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