The carpet in the lobby of the Grand Meridian was exactly 11 shades of beige too dark for a five-star establishment, and Stella Y. was currently on her hands and knees, pretending to look for a lost contact lens while actually measuring the pile height with a specialized gauge. Her official job description, a glossy document she’d signed 201 days ago, called her a “Senior Strategic Guest Experience Architect.” It promised she would lead high-level initiatives to redefine the landscape of luxury hospitality, drafting 5-year visions that would be presented directly to the board. In reality, Stella spent her Tuesday mornings timing how long it took for a bellhop to notice a deliberate smudge on a brass railing. She was a glorified mystery shopper, a data-entry drone trapped in the body of a visionary.
The job description is a work of fiction.
I’m writing this while still nursing the sting of a failed return at a big-box retailer. I tried to bring back a $61 espresso machine that had decided to stop heating water after exactly 31 uses. I didn’t have the receipt. The woman behind the plexiglass didn’t care that the serial number was clearly within the warranty period; she didn’t care that I was a human being with a caffeine deficiency. She cared about the ‘Documented Return Protocol.’ It’s the same energy that goes into a corporate job description. We think they are invitations to a career, but they are actually just sets of parameters for a potential lawsuit. They aren’t meant to tell you what you’ll do; they’re meant to tell you what you can’t sue them for if they make you do everything else.
Cascading Failures of Expectation
Stella’s week was a cascading failure of expectations. On Monday, she had a ‘Strategic Planning’ call that lasted 101 minutes. She had prepared a deck outlining a 41-page plan for integrating biometric check-ins to reduce friction. Instead, the meeting was spent discussing why the 2nd-floor vending machine was still selling expired protein bars. She spent the rest of the day manually entering 511 survey responses into a legacy software system that looked like it was designed by a committee of people who hated computers. Where was the ‘cross-functional leadership’? Where was the ‘architecting’? It was buried under the tactical debris of a business that doesn’t actually want strategy-it wants its fires extinguished without having to buy a hose.
There’s a specific kind of exhaustion that comes from being overqualified for your daily tasks but under-resourced for your actual goals. You were hired to be the captain of the ship, but you spend your whole day bailing out water with a thimble. And the worst part-the part that really gets under your skin like a splinter you can’t quite reach-is that you’ll be promoted for how well you used that thimble, not for your ability to navigate by the stars. The tactical execution becomes the only metric of your worth, even though the job description swore you’d be judged by the horizon.
The Illusion of Transparency
We see this contrast everywhere. In an era where corporate transparency is often just another buzzword, finding something that actually does what it says on the tin is a shock to the nervous system. Most companies hide behind 11 layers of PR and legalese, promising ‘revolutionary innovation’ while delivering the same old lukewarm results. It’s why something like Calm Puffs feels so disruptive without even trying to be. They aren’t writing 31-page manifestos about ‘disrupting the snack space’; they’re just making a snack that doesn’t lie to you. The ingredients are there. The result is there. There is no ‘other duties as assigned’ in a bag of clean snacks. If only our careers had that kind of ingredient list, maybe we wouldn’t all feel like we’re trying to return our lives without a receipt.
The Unrecognized Labor
Stella Y. eventually found her contact lens, which wasn’t actually lost. She stood up, brushed the beige dust off her $401 suit, and went to her room to write a report that she knew only 1 person would read. That person would likely ignore her suggestions about the ‘experience architecture’ and instead focus on her note about the elevator chime being 1 decibel too loud. This is the gap where unrecognized labor goes to die. It’s the space between the JD’s promise of ‘transformative impact’ and the reality of ‘did you send that follow-up email?’
Strategic Initiatives
Tactical Execution
Why do we keep falling for it? Because we want to believe in the strategy. We want to believe that our work has a shape beyond the immediate. We tell ourselves that the tactical grind is just a season, a 1-year initiation period before we get to do the ‘real work.’ But the season never ends. The legal protection offered by the job description ensures that as long as they can point to one sentence that says ‘assists with administrative tasks as needed,’ they own every hour of your day for whatever fire is currently burning.
We are all mystery shoppers in our own lives.
The Point of Friction
I think back to my blender return. The friction was the point. The policy wasn’t there to facilitate a return; it was there to prevent one. Job descriptions are the same. They aren’t there to help you do your job; they are there to prevent you from claiming you weren’t told you’d have to do the miserable stuff. It’s a defensive crouch disguised as a career opportunity.
No Receipt
Policy Block
Job Description
Legal Shield
If we want to fix this, we have to stop hiring for ‘vision’ when we actually need ‘volume.’ We have to stop pretending that every role is strategic. There is dignity in tactical work-in the 11-step process of cleaning a room or the 51-line spreadsheet that tracks inventory. The dignity is lost when we call it something else to lure people in. It creates a workforce of Stellas, people who are looking at the stars while they’re being told to scrub the floor.
Clean Labels for Careers
I didn’t get my $61 back for the blender, by the way. I ended up giving it to a neighbor who thinks he can fix it with a soldering iron and optimism. He’s currently in that ‘honeymoon phase’ of a project, much like the first 11 days of a new job. He sees the potential. He sees the strategy. I just see a piece of plastic that promised me espresso and gave me a headache.
Honeymoon Phase
Optimism & Potential
Reality Check
Headache & Regret
We need to start demanding ‘clean labels’ for our careers. If the job is 91 percent data entry and 1 percent strategy, say that. Don’t call it ‘Digital Transformation Leadership.’ Call it ‘The Person Who Makes Sure the Numbers Match.’ At least then, when we’re on our hands and knees on a beige carpet, we’ll know exactly why we’re there. We won’t be looking for a lost vision; we’ll just be doing the job we actually signed up for.
The Exit Strategy
Is there a way out? Probably not through the HR department. The exit is usually found in the realization that your job title is a hat you wear, not the head it sits on. Stella Y. eventually quit the hotel circuit. She didn’t find a better job description; she started a consultancy where she only takes projects with a 1-page contract. No ‘other duties.’ No ‘strategic’ fluff. Just: ‘I will find 11 ways you are losing money, and you will pay me.’
It’s the most honest she’s ever been. It’s the most honest anyone has ever been with her. And in a world of 41-page lies, that 1-page truth is the only thing worth holding onto. If you’re currently staring at a JD that feels like a trap, remember that you aren’t the title. You’re the person doing the work despite it. And maybe, just maybe, it’s time to stop trying to return your career to a system that doesn’t have a record of the transaction anyway.
