Rod Adams
PwC
Hartford, CT USA
"None of the decisions you make have to be lifelong decisions. They might be! But they don’t have to be."
Career Roadmap
Rod's work combines: Business, Numbers, and Problem Solving
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Advice for getting started
There's this idea that you have to work, work, work to get ahead and accomplish your goals. There are times that putting in the extra work and effort is necessary, but I've learned to not let that be my normal way of operating. It took having kids for me to really understand that I don't need to sacrifice everything else in my life to be successful at work. Hold onto the things that fuel you outside of work because they're key to your happiness.
Here's the path I took:
High School
Bachelor's Degree
Accounting
Illinois Wesleyan University
Life & Career Milestones
My path in life took a while to figure out
1.
I’m originally from North Carolina, but moved to Chicago when I was young—I would become the first in my family to really enter corporate America.
2.
I wanted to pursue accounting from the time I started college—my goals were reaffirmed when even the FBI spoke at my school and revealed that accounting was one of the top majors they hired from.
3.
I’ve been with PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) throughout my whole career, starting in audit.
4.
My favorite aspect of audit was building relationships with clients, so my coach referred me for a role that interacted heavily with the human resources department.
5.
I stayed in audit for about three years before moving into what I call the “people space”—I’ve worked in deployment, recruiting, diversity, human resources, and then back in recruiting.
6.
I moved to Los Angeles, California, for a few years when I first started working in recruitment for PwC, but I eventually moved back to Chicago.
7.
I currently lead the recruitment team at PwC for the United States and Mexico—I’ve been in this position for four years.
8.
In my community, I serve on the Posse Foundation Chicago Advisory Board—the Posse Foundation recruits and trains scholars with extraordinary leadership potential.
Defining Moments
How I responded to discouragement
THE NOISE
Messages from Society in general:
Work should be your main priority if you want to be successful.
How I responded:
There's this idea that you have to work, work, work to get ahead and accomplish your goals. There are times that putting in the extra work and effort is necessary, but I've learned to not let that be my normal way of operating. It took having kids for me to really understand that I don't need to sacrifice everything else in my life to be successful at work. Hold onto the things that fuel you outside of work because they're key to your happiness.
Experiences and challenges that shaped me
Working in corporate America and balancing my family responsibilities can get hard, but communication is key. I make an effort to really explain to my daughters if I can't be there and try to commit myself fully to them when I am able to be present.