
In "The Search," bestselling author Bruce Feiler dismantles the "three lies about work" driving the Great Resignation. Amid today's workquakes, where millions seek meaning over money, this book offers 21 questions to rewrite your success story. Ready to join the meaning-based economy?
Bruce Feiler, New York Times bestselling author of The Search: Finding Meaningful Work in a Post-Career World, is a leading voice on life transitions and modern identity.
A Yale and Cambridge-educated writer, Feiler merges firsthand storytelling with sociological research, drawing from interviews with hundreds of Americans to map nonlinear career paths.
His expertise spans personal development, family dynamics, and cultural narratives, showcased in prior bestsellers like The Secrets of Happy Families and Life Is in the Transitions.
Feiler’s work extends to PBS documentaries, a recurring New York Times column, and three TED Talks with over four million views. His book Council of Dads inspired an NBC series, reflecting his ability to translate personal crises into universal lessons.
The Search continues his tradition of blending rigorous analysis with actionable guidance, solidifying his reputation as a bridge between academic insight and mainstream relevance.
The Search: Finding Meaningful Work in a Post-Career World explores how modern workers navigate frequent career disruptions ("workquakes") and reject traditional linear career paths. Bruce Feiler emphasizes aligning work with personal values through frameworks like the "21 questions" exercise and "meaning audit," offering tools to craft fulfilling, non-linear professional journeys in today’s volatile job market.
This book suits professionals facing career transitions, gig workers, caregivers balancing multiple roles, and anyone seeking purpose beyond traditional success metrics. It’s particularly relevant for those rebuilding their work identity after layoffs, burnout, or lifestyle shifts.
Yes, for its actionable strategies to reframe career challenges as growth opportunities. Feiler’s data-driven insights from the Work Story Project, combined with exercises like the "meaning audit," provide a fresh toolkit for finding fulfillment in unstable work environments.
Workquakes are major disruptions—job loss, caregiving demands, or existential shifts—that force career reevaluation. Feiler argues these events are now commonplace, requiring resilience and adaptability to transform upheaval into reinvention opportunities.
The book offers a "21 questions framework" to assess values, motivations, and work identity. By analyzing past experiences and future goals, readers craft personalized narratives to navigate transitions intentionally rather than reactively.
A reflective exercise where individuals inventory what gives their work purpose—such as creativity, income, or impact—and identify misalignments. This helps prioritize roles and activities that resonate with core values.
Feiler rejects the "balance" metaphor, advocating for integrating "care jobs" (family responsibilities), "hope jobs" (side hustles), and "ghost jobs" (personal challenges) into a cohesive work story. This approach acknowledges modern workers’ multifaceted lives.
Critics argue Feiler overlooks systemic issues like healthcare dependency on jobs and gig economy exploitation. Some note the focus on personal agency risks blaming individuals for structural problems, lacking broader labor market critiques.
Unlike habit-focused guides, The Search prioritizes storytelling and values alignment over productivity hacks. It shares Designing Your Life’s iterative approach but emphasizes workplace volatility and non-traditional career paths.
With AI and contract work reshaping careers, Feiler’s emphasis on adaptability, multiple income streams, and purpose aligns with trends like remote work and the "quiet quitting" movement. The book addresses post-pandemic workforce disillusionment.
He shifts focus from upward mobility to "meaning-based success," where fulfillment comes from crafting a work story that integrates personal values, relationships, and societal impact—not just financial or title milestones.
These highlight embracing disruption and self-authored purpose.
Erlebe das Buch durch die Stimme des Autors
Verwandle Wissen in fesselnde, beispielreiche Erkenntnisse
Erfasse Schlüsselideen blitzschnell für effektives Lernen
Genieße das Buch auf unterhaltsame und ansprechende Weise
Forget the ladder; embrace the smorgasbord.
sometimes the dreams that come true are even better than the ones that don't.
Zerlegen Sie die Kernideen von Search in leicht verständliche Punkte, um zu verstehen, wie innovative Teams kreieren, zusammenarbeiten und wachsen.
Destillieren Sie Search in schnelle Gedächtnisstützen, die die Schlüsselprinzipien von Offenheit, Teamarbeit und kreativer Resilienz hervorheben.

Erleben Sie Search durch lebhafte Erzählungen, die Innovationslektionen in unvergessliche und anwendbare Momente verwandeln.
Fragen Sie alles, wählen Sie die Stimme und erschaffen Sie gemeinsam Erkenntnisse, die wirklich bei Ihnen ankommen.

Von Columbia University Alumni in San Francisco entwickelt
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Something fundamental has shifted in how we work. Every single week, roughly a million Americans walk away from their jobs-not because they're lazy or entitled, but because they're searching for something deeper. Brijette Pena's story captures this moment perfectly. After enduring sexual harassment at her gardening job and losing her brother and mother in separate accidents, she made a choice that would have seemed reckless a generation ago: she quit to start San Diego Seed Company. Her leap wasn't an isolated act of courage. Right now, one-third of the workforce leaves their jobs annually, while another third redesigns their current positions for greater flexibility and meaning. We're witnessing a seismic shift from a means-based economy-where work was simply about survival-to a meaning-based economy, where purpose matters as much as paychecks. This transformation affects what researchers call "workquakes": career-disrupting events that, at any given moment, impact 80 million Americans. These aren't minor tremors. They're fundamental ruptures in how we understand the relationship between who we are and what we do.