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The Most Underrated Skill in Today’s Digital Careers: Perspective

Success depends not just on skill or speed, but on the ability to see the bigger picture

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In the age of algorithms, analytics, and automation, there’s one human quality that technology can’t replicate — perspective. It’s the quiet skill that helps professionals connect dots, understand context, and make decisions that go beyond the immediate. Yet, in today’s rush to master new tools and trends, perspective often gets overlooked.

Having perspective means seeing how individual efforts fit into a larger story. It’s about understanding people, purpose, and possibilities — not just processes. For digital professionals, this can be the difference between content that simply fills space and ideas that truly resonate.

Pakhi Bindal, a Bachelor in Journalism and Mass Communication graduate (Batch 2023) from Apeejay Stya University, now a Social Media Manager at WhizCo shares, “When I started working, I realised that it wasn’t just about creating content, it was about understanding audiences, tone, and timing. Perspective came from experience and observation, and that’s what shaped my creative decisions.”

Her words reflect an essential truth — perspective doesn’t come from textbooks or tutorials. It comes from curiosity, empathy, and reflection. It’s the lens that allows individuals to interpret the world around them and contribute with greater meaning.

Why Perspective Matters

Brings Depth to Creativity: It helps creators think beyond trends and craft content with intent and emotion.

Builds Empathy: Understanding diverse viewpoints strengthens communication and teamwork.

Enhances Decision-Making: Seeing the bigger picture prevents impulsive choices and encourages thoughtful strategies.

Encourages Adaptability: A broader outlook makes it easier to adjust to change without losing direction.

How to Develop Perspective

Seek experiences outside your field: Attend workshops, read widely, or collaborate with people from different backgrounds.

Reflect often: Ask yourself what you learned from each project or challenge.

Stay curious: Question assumptions — both yours and others’.

Listen actively: Sometimes the best insights come from conversations, not conclusions.

Meet Mahima, a Correspondent at Apeejay Newsroom, and a seasoned writer with gigs at NDTV, News18, and SheThePeople. When she is not penning stories, she is surfing the web, dancing like nobody's watching, or lost in the pages of a good book. You can reach out to her at [email protected]