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Why You Don’t Need It All Figured Out to Succeed

Raise your hand if you have ever felt like you were supposed to have your whole life figured out by nineteen. Major chosen, career mapped, every step planned in detail. If that is you, you are not alone, and you are not wrong for feeling that pressure.

But here is the truth. That idea is a total myth.

That is exactly what Bryan Brenner shared when he joined our CEO Unscripted Speaker Series. Back in his own college days, he thought success required a flawless plan. “I thought you had to know exactly what you wanted to be and chart out every step,” he admitted.

Spoiler alert. It did not work out that way, and that turned out to be a very good thing.


The Myth of the Perfect Roadmap

We grow up hearing messages like this:

  • Pick the right major
  • Land the perfect internship
  • Follow the path exactly or risk messing up your future

No wonder students feel stressed. Bryan used to believe this too, but real life taught him otherwise. Careers are not highways with one lane. They are more like hiking trails. Twists, turns, and sometimes even detours end up shaping where you go.

And those detours can become the most important parts of your journey.


What Actually Builds Success

So, if a perfect plan is not the key, what is? Bryan credits three things:


Consistent effort. Not overnight wins, but the daily commitment to showing up and doing the work.
Meaningful connections. Building relationships with professors, mentors, and peers who open doors and offer perspective.
Staying open to opportunities. Being curious enough to say yes when something new comes your way, even if it was never part of the original plan.

It was this mix, not a carefully mapped timeline, that helped him carve out a career and eventually become a CEO.


Why Students Need to Hear This

If you are a student right now, you have probably asked yourself: what if I do not know what I want to do yet? Am I already behind?


Bryan’s story is proof that you are not behind. You are right where you are supposed to be. Success is not about being certain on day one. It is about building step by step, learning from each experience, and letting those experiences guide your direction.


Uncertainty does not mean failure. It means opportunity.


How SCLA Fits into the Picture

At SCLA, we see this every day with our members. The ones who thrive are not the ones with everything figured out. They are the ones who:

  • Stay curious about new ideas and industries
  • Push through challenges with perseverance
  • Connect the dots across classes, jobs, and leadership experiences

That is why we offer resources, mentorship, and a community designed to support students who are still exploring. Leadership is not about knowing all the answers. It is about being willing to learn and grow, and that is the mindset we cultivate.

 

Three Takeaways You Can Use Today

Here are three ways to ditch the myth of the perfect plan and start building success your way:

  1. Give yourself permission not to know. You do not need to have a five-year plan right now. Focus on the next right step, not the entire staircase.
  2. Be consistent. Even small efforts like showing up to class prepared, applying for an internship, or joining a campus organization stack up over time.
  3. Say yes to new experiences. The opportunity you never planned for may be the one that shapes your career.


Final Thoughts

Bryan’s journey reminds us that the real key to success is not certainty. It is curiosity, perseverance, and the courage to keep going even when you do not have it all figured out.


And that is great news. It means you do not need the perfect plan to get started. You just need to start.


🎥 Want to hear Bryan share this lesson in his own words? Watch the first clip here.
 🎧 Or dive into the full conversation on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, and Spotify.


At SCLA, we are here to remind you. Success is not about having the answers on day one. It is about becoming the kind of leader who learns, adapts, and grows along the way. That is a journey worth taking.