logo
Ever wanted to ditch the 9-to-5 and teach snowsports? We followed people who did it for 10 years

Ever wanted to ditch the 9-to-5 and teach snowsports? We followed people who did it for 10 years

RNZ News08-05-2025
By Marian Makkar, Ann-Marie Kennedy and Samuelson Appau of
A young athlete freestyle skier having fun while running downhill in beautiful landscape on sunny day during winter season.
Photo:
Mandic Jovan / 123RF
Workplace burnout - a state of emotional, physical, and mental exhaustion - and the Covid pandemic have sparked a rethink of the traditional 9-to-5 job.
It's been estimated
30 percent
of the Australian workforce is experiencing some degree of burnout, raising serious concerns about the possible impacts on mental health.
Is it possible - and if so, wise - to take addressing burnout into your own hands? Some responses to the problem, such as "micro-retirement", have enjoyed recent popularity on social media.
But a small number of people take an even more radical approach - dumping the 9-to-5 path entirely for careers that prioritise meaning, enjoyment and personal growth. We sought to find out how this move played out for one group in particular - snowsports instructors.
Our
research
- published in the
International Journal of Research in Marketing
- covers a 10.5-year study of snowsports instructors who left their 9-to-5 jobs for a meaningful career on the slopes of Canada, Japan, the United States and New Zealand.
We looked at instructors' journeys into the lifestyle, how they managed their new careers, and what led some to eventually return to the 9-to-5.
We interviewed 13 snowsports instructors aged 25 to 40 (seven men, six women), collected image and video artefacts, followed social media accounts and surveyed snow school reports. Our lead researcher also participated in the lifestyle herself.
All our participants had at least a bachelor degree and previous steady careers in fields such as education or information technology.
During our decade-long field work, we found instructors earned just enough money to maintain this lifestyle, often travelling with their possessions in one or two bags.
Beyond the adrenaline and beauty of a life in the snow, we found people were first motivated to enter this career to escape the corporate world and ties of modern life. One participant, Lars, said: "If you just get a job, you get maybe 20 days off a year for the next 40 years, and once you stop, once you've got a job and a house and a mortgage and a kid … you're trapped."
At the centre of our research was the idea of building a career around the ancient Greek concept of "eudaimonia". This term is sometimes translated to "happiness" in English, but its broader connotations mean it's closer to "
flourishing
" and involves a sense of purpose and living a life of virtue.
That's in contrast to the related concept of "
hedonism
" - which centres on the pursuit of pleasure for its own sake.
Eudaimonia is meant to make us reflect on life's purpose, potential and meaning.
As our participants mastered the sport and career, they moved from mere enjoyment or hedonism of being in the snow to finding meaning and purpose in their jobs.
They felt a sense of accomplishment and appreciation of snowsports as a sport and job requiring dedication, care and commitment.
New Zealand skier Alice Robinson at a competition earlier this year.
Photo:
PHOTOSPORT
However, with every career there are demands that shape how people manage work and purposeful pursuits. Instructors must bear financial costs such as buying their own equipment, paying for certifications and accommodation.
Eventually the lifestyle was not sustainable for some due to precarious working conditions and minimal wages. Relying on the weather to produce snow, unfair compensation and fixed-term contracts wore many down.
An unhappy participant confessed: "You think about money all day everyday … working out the costs, staffing and lesson prices! Yet they (ski resort managers) tell me as an instructor that I shouldn't think about my monetary work. Well, if it wasn't about the money, you wouldn't charge as much for lessons."
In the period we studied, six returned to a regular 9-to-5 job.
The late American anthropologist David Graeber coined the phrase "
bullshit jobs
" to describe jobs that comprise meaningless tasks that add no real value aside from providing a salary.
Our study offers a window into the lives of those who sought an alternative, trying to build something they love into the daily work they do to earn a living.
For many, despite challenges the ability to ride slopes daily remained more appealing than a desk job. One told us: "At university my first management lecturer said, 'you could go on to be a CEO, earn $300,000 a year and have a month off every year to go skiing', and I said, 'or I could go skiing every day and still afford to eat and pay my rent'. It's all I really need."
But things didn't work out for all of them. The experience of those who left suggests choosing meaningful work can be difficult and can force people out if the surrounding organisational system is not supportive.
* Marian Makkar, Senior Lecturer in Marketing, RMIT University; Ann-Marie Kennedy, Professor of Marketing, University of Canterbury; Samuelson Appau, Assistant Professor, Melbourne Business School
- This story originally appeared on
The Conversation
.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Vape Messaging Targets Young People Via Social Media
Vape Messaging Targets Young People Via Social Media

Scoop

time3 days ago

  • Scoop

Vape Messaging Targets Young People Via Social Media

A leading e-cigarette brand's global Instagram account is promoting vapes to vast audiences, including in New Zealand, where regulations prohibit vape marketing to young people. Partnership deals with Formula One racing, and glamorous young influencers are promoting vapes to vast global audiences. Many countries, including the UK and New Zealand, have brought in regulations to prevent marketing vapes to young people. Social media platforms also have policies for this purpose. A new study published in Health Promotion International has found Vuse, the world's leading e-cigarette brand, is using a global social account to enter into paid partnerships, including a Formula One racing team, to promote vapes to massive audiences. 'Collaborations with music festivals and inuencers show that the company is targeting young people and may be using social media's global reach to bypass local bans,' says Dr Lucy Hardie, a population health researcher at Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland, who led the international study. 'Fast cars and beautiful women are a tried-and-true marketing strategy used by the tobacco industry,' Hardie says. The study reviewed more than 400 Instagram posts associated with the internationally leading e-cigarette brand, Vuse, owned by British American Tobacco, between August 2023 to July 2024. Hashtags like #VuseInsider were used to promote brand ambassadors and festival experiences. Vuse has partnerships with social media influencers who produce stylised 'Get Ready with Me' videos linked to music festivals. 'You see a beautiful young influencer choosing fashion and makeup set to cool music, a type of clip popular with young women. It finishes with her popping a vape into her handbag as she heads out the door to attend a music festival,' Hardie says. Vuse also sponsors Formula One race team McLaren, meaning the company's branding and logos are used in posts that are promoted to its nearly 14 million followers. Despite the platform's policy, these are seldom disclosed as paid partnerships, the study finds. The researchers warn that Vuse's global Instagram marketing strategy allows it to bypass national advertising bans, such as those in New Zealand and in the UK, effectively exploiting legal gaps and weak platform enforcement. 'Social media is borderless and so is this type of marketing,' Hardie says. 'We urgently need global agreements restricting e-cigarette marketing on social media, and platforms need to enforce breaches of platform policy. 'There needs to be greater scrutiny and accountability for brand partnerships that target vulnerable audiences with highly addictive substances.' The long-term health effects of youth vaping are not yet known, but associations are emerging in research that link vapes to heart and lung conditions, as well as well-established issues related to nicotine addiction. Another related study just published in Tobacco Control reveals how one New Zealand-based vape company uses environmental schemes to maintain a presence at youth-oriented music festivals in New Zealand, despite a strict sponsorship ban since 2020. The study, also led by Hardie with colleagues from the University of Otago and the University of Sydney, revealed that leading vape company VAPO has established a recycling initiative, VapeCycle, that can sponsor major festivals like Rhythm and Vines attended by more than 20,000 young people. The company's branding still features at the festivals on recycling bins. Hardie says the studies point to a need for stronger regulations and enforcement to better protect young people.

The colour black: A longstanding Kiwi fashion staple
The colour black: A longstanding Kiwi fashion staple

RNZ News

time05-08-2025

  • RNZ News

The colour black: A longstanding Kiwi fashion staple

It's long been a fashion staple, and it only takes a look to many of our sports teams or fashion designers to see New Zealanders have long had a love affair with the colour black. In our capital's recycle boutiques - black is the colour above all else that dominates. It even appears to be more popular than usual. Mary Argue reports. To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store