I’ve recently been asked several times, mainly by younger people in their 20s, what do I actually do for work, and how did I end up doing what I do?
Regular readers will know that career development is a topic I have commented on many times in past articles, either as a result of my coaching and consulting engagements, or in response to the current state of the world.
This month marks 10 years since I started working in the crypto and digital asset industry. While it’s not a full-time job, and I serve as a freelance consultant, it’s now the longest period of continuous “employment” I have had in a single role, sector or organisation. Not a bad gig for something that started out almost by accident – it certainly wasn’t part of a well-planned, linear and structured career path!
If I look back on my career, there is probably one constant factor – that at heart, I am an editor, and by and large, I have always worked in “content”, whether in traditional publishing, on-line data, or new media. My specific roles and the organisations I have worked for have been varied, but the output or format has been consistent.
After graduating in law in the early 1980s, I spent a stressful and frustrating few years as a paralegal in local government, helping people with housing difficulties or facing homelessness. Within 5 years, I was burned out, and needed a change.
So I retrained, and completed an evening class in journalism and sub-editing, run by a couple of senior editors from Fleet Street. However, my aspirations of working for glossy titles or cultural magazines came to nothing, as by this time I was probably too old to be hired as a trainee journalist or on a graduate program. Luckily, I spotted an ad for “legal editors”, and putting my formal qualification together with my recent night school learning meant I was exactly in the right place at the right time.
That initial foray into publishing took me from London, to Hong Kong, and then to Australia, and along the way I transitioned into financial services, market data, international roles, business development, product management and digital assets. And I still use my legal knowledge every day, and “content in context” (hence the name of this blog) is relevant to everything I do.
Fast forward to 2026, and here I am running a media company serving the crypto industry. (More on that next week).
Looking back, there was no master plan, or grand strategy. My curiosity just kept pulling me from one industry or one role to the next.
1. Law taught me how to think.
2. Publishing taught me how to communicate.
3. Capital markets taught me financial infrastructure.
And when I walked into a Bitcoin pitch night in Melbourne more than 10 years ago, I felt at home (which is perhaps a little weird when you think about the somewhat impersonal, anonymous and 100% on-line world of crypto).
I appreciate that my career path looks messy from the outside, and it’s not for everyone, but it all fits in the bigger picture.
I didn’t become a lawyer, but I use legal thinking every day.
I left traditional finance 15 years ago, but that background is largely the reason I ended up working in crypto and digital assets.
If you’ve had a non-linear career, you will probably recognise the following:
Every skill you have picked up, every industry you wandered into, and every unplanned detour has been accumulating in the background.
You don’t necessarily connect the dots looking forward, you only ever connect them looking back.
But in the end, it all fits in the bigger picture.
Next week: My 10 Years in Crypto
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My thanks to Simian Giria for helping to initiate this topic.