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Should I generalize or specialize in my career?

Reagan Quote


“I believe designers are all designers not just one type. An organization does this (narrow a designers scope) to help better define the individual and role but in reality a designer should understand many roles”


I think it mostly comes down to personality. We have two things here. The first is who you are, as a person. What are your interests and skills. What do you have to offer and what makes you happy.

Then the second thing is what the world needs. Or rather, what do the people that you know what have money need. It’s easier to hire a specialist at a big company. A small company can use a generalist more.

To it really comes down to you, what can you do, and what do you want?

I’ve got some specific talking points here that we can argue over.

  1. It’s Easier to Specialize

    • Less to learn, remember, and keep up on.
    • Doesn’t take as long to be useful in just one thing, generalizing takes time.
  2. Income generation

    • Pro specialize

      • Competitive field? You might be better off specializing, corner a niche market and only focus on that specific field.
      • Specialists can work faster, move on to the next thing and make more money.
      • Higher quality work / charge more per piece. Do you buy a rolex at walmart?
    • Pro generalize

      • The more possibilities you have for generating income, which increase as you generalize, the less you will suffer during economic hard times, and the easier it will be to generate income. When the specialist is tapping a dried well.
      • Sell add-ons (Design AND Build the website)
  3. Job Security

  1. Personal Satisfaction

_Outtro