TEXT C For Phillip "P. J."
Stambaugh, the glamour and gold of the dotcom boom swept him from Ithaca, N.Y.
to California’s Silicon Valley in 1999. And when Trishna Shah selected a job at
an e-commerce strategy group after graduating from college last year, it was
part of a carefully planned path to "success". Both were
beneficiaries of the technology boom of the late 1990s, and both are now among
its victims. Yet for many, losing a job is proving more of a beginning than an
end. Painful and frightening as the process may be, individuals
caught in the dotcom downdraft say they are making fundamental changes-the kind
that could, in total, alter the outlook and values of many in their
generation. One thing is already certain. The character portrait
of the dotcom generation, spoiled, self-centered, and unacquainted with the real
world, is rapidly disappearing. In its place, a culture is emerging that puts
greater emphasis on growth and opportunity at work, and less on salary and stock
options. And for many, there is a deeper questioning of the meaning of life and
career, say career guidance experts. This is a far cry from the
work-is-everything, sleep under-the desk, never-log-off, get-it-while-you-can
mentality that has permeated the Internet culture. Ms. Shah
graduated from University of California Berkeley’s business school last year and
found a waiting court of recruiters. She selected work at an e-commerce strategy
group, and the pieces were all fitting together. But when Shah was laid off
earlier this year, "it was a real wake-up call," she says. "In college
you’re constantly planning for the next phase of life, your job and your career,
"she explains. "But now I’m feeling different. I’m not living just for the next
step." At about the same time Mr. Stambaugh was still thriving
at his job in Redwood City. He worked in business-development department of a
start up that created Internet map technology. But that wasn’t
what he had in mind when he entered Cornell University and successfully
pursued a degree in landscape architecture, a field that connected with
his love of the outdoors and plants. After graduation in 1999, though,
Stambaugh headed to Silicon Valley, persuaded by friends who were quickly
landing jobs and making good money. But by last fall, Stambaugh was sending
pained e-mails to his sister back east. In one, he complained that his
work to create better and better Internet products had become "absent of the
things I value." The economy, in a sense, put an end to his
disillusionment, forcing his dotcom out of business a few months ago.
These days, Stambaugh has less money, but an out door tan and high
spirits. He is project manager for a landscape firm, spending most of his day
meeting with customers and discussing their gardening and landscape dreams. "I’m
a different individual now," he says. "I’m happy on a real high
level." Of course there are many still employed in the Internet
world, and loving it. But even among the employed, there is a new uncertainty.
The unemployment rate in Santa Clara Country for April jumped sharply, a
reminder that the flow of pink slips could continue to accelerate.
Even for many of those who continue to work in technology, attitudes seem
different. Says Mr. Epperheimer: "The pendulum has moved back to a more balanced
approach to work and life." The experience of Ms. Shah and Mr. Stambaugh is described mainly to show that______.
A.they are victims of the blowup, of dotcom bubble B.the dotcom generation reviews its values C.one should be far-sighted in choosing one’s career D.prosperity may prove to be a curse in disguise