Don't worry about the plot to take over the world. Just do what is in front of you, and do it well. Working on your grand plan is like shoveling snow that hasn't fallen yet.
David Carr
UC Berkeley School of Journalism Commencement 2014, 2014
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Carr's advice section was deliberately framed as 'ten bits of graduation advice you won't see on any BuzzFeed listicle.' This piece — his second tip — cut against the Silicon Valley ethos of disruption and world-changing ambition that permeated the Bay Area where his audience lived. The snow metaphor was quintessentially Carr — homespun, funny, and devastatingly precise. You can't shovel snow that hasn't fallen. You can't solve problems you haven't encountered. You can plan for the future, but the plan itself is not the work. The work is whatever is right in front of you. Carr connected this to the practice of journalism itself: 'Journalism is like housekeeping. It's a series of small, discrete acts performed over and over. It's really the little things that make it better.' This was advice from a man who typed for a living and knew that great careers are built not from grand strategies but from the accumulated quality of thousands of small acts. The metaphor also contained an implicit criticism of the personal-branding culture he saw among young journalists: 'Don't worry about branding yourself. It's more important that you fit in before you stick out.'