Tag Archive for strategic career planning

It’s Your Career, You Direct It!

Waiting for your manager to map your future is the most expensive mistake you can make. The second most expensive is continuing to languish under the spell of your parents, teachers, guidance counselor, or anyone else from your past. No one knows better than you how you really tick, how you really work, what culture is a good fit for you, what could make you hate your job. None of this means your manager doesn’t matter. A great manager can open doors, advocate for you, and accelerate your growth in ways that are genuinely powerful. But here’s the distinction that changes everything: your manager can be a tremendous resource — she or he is not, and should never be, your career director. That job belongs to you and only you. Many women drift because they were taught early, they should be grateful for what they get in life, and they shouldn’t ask for what they want. To plan and direct their career would show they have ambition. We all know what society says about ambitious women, right? Not flattering! If you are still trying to live out someone else’s dream career—a parent, a grandparent—know that it’s YOUR turn. Perhaps you had an influential teacher or guidance counselor that underestimated your potential or who was functioning out of strict gender expectations. So many forces working against you directing your career, yet you deserve better, you deserve to have the career that is right for you!

Consider this: A Catalyst study found that women are more likely than men to wait to be tapped for advancement rather than actively seeking it. Meanwhile, research from McKinsey & Company’s Women in the Workplace report consistently shows that women ask for promotions and negotiate salaries at lower rates than men — and are often less likely to self-promote their accomplishments. The result? A career that drifts instead of drives.

So, what does it actually look like to get in the driver’s seat?

  • OWN YOUR VISION FIRST: Before you can direct your career, you have to know where you want it to go. That sounds obvious, but you’d be surprised how many talented women have never sat down and asked themselves: What do I actually want? Not what’s available. Not what I think I can get. What do I want? That question takes courage. It requires you to believe your ambitions are worth pursuing — which brings us straight into Power Professional Esteem territory. Imposter syndrome tells you to wait until you’re “ready enough.” Career ownership tells you to define the destination first, then build the readiness. Write down where you want to be in 3 years and in 7 years — be specific about title, scope, and impact. Identify the gap between where you are now and where you want to be. Skills? Visibility? Relationships? Treat this as a living document. Revisit it at least twice a year.
  • BUILD YOUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS: CEOs don’t answer to one person. They have a board. Your career needs one too. This means actively cultivating:
    • A mentor — someone who has navigated a path similar to the one you want and will give you honest guidance.
    • A sponsor — someone with influence who will speak up for you in rooms you’re not in. This is different from a mentor, and it is critical.
    • A peer network — women (and men) at your level across functions and industries who share intelligence, opportunities, and candid feedback.

The numbers don’t lie: According to a Harvard Business Review study, women with sponsors are 27% more likely to ask for a stretch assignment and 22% more likely to ask for a raise. Yet women are significantly less likely than men to have a sponsor at all. The lesson? Stop waiting to be discovered. Start building relationships that create opportunities.

  • HAVE THE CAREER CONVERSATION — DON’T WAIT FOR IT: How many women sit through annual reviews hoping their manager will bring up “what’s next” — and leave disappointed when they don’t? Here’s the reframe: you initiate that conversation. You walk in prepared with where you want to go, what you’ve accomplished, and what support you’re asking for. Your manager is a resource. Use that resource. Ask directly: “What would I need to demonstrate to be considered for [specific role or advancement]?” Then listen carefully, take notes, and hold both of you accountable. LinkedIn’s Workforce Confidence data shows that women who proactively discuss career development with their managers are significantly more likely to report career satisfaction and upward movement than those who wait for the conversation to be initiated from above.
  • A FEW THINGS TO STOP DOING: Directing your career isn’t only about what you start doing. It’s also about what you stop. Stop assuming loyalty is enough. Tenure and dedication matter, but they don’t guarantee advancement. Visibility and strategy do. Stop shrinking your ambitions to what seems “realistic.” That ceiling is often one you’ve built yourself. Stop waiting for permission. You don’t need approval to network, to learn, to raise your hand, or to ask for what you want. Stop outsourcing your career to chance. Luck favors the prepared — and the visible.

Your manager may be wonderful. I hope she or he is. But even the most supportive manager in the world is managing their own priorities, their own pressures, and their own career. You are the only person in your organization — in your entire professional life — who is 100% invested in your future. Act like it. The corner office doesn’t go to the woman who waited. It goes to the woman who planned, prepared, and made herself impossible to overlook.

Have you been a drifter? Are other people still screaming in your ear what your career should look like? It can be daunting to go from drifting to directing. Need another Board Member, in the form of a career strategist? Let’s do a complimentary 45-minute consultation to turn you into a director! Email Kay@highheeledsucess.com to schedule.

Be Smart When Taking Risks

We all know that taking risks – the kind that will pull you into the C-suite or grow your business or simply change your outlook on risk-taking as a woman – is a defining characteristic for those who are successful.  When deciding whether this risk or that risk is the right thing to do, you should be aware of some basic concepts to help you examine your options and ask yourself the most important question, “Is this a Smart Risk?”

The risk can potentially be the kind that will give you the courage to jump to new levels, to go beyond what you thought was possible.  Many women tend to be cautious by taking baby steps, yet jumping levels is exciting.  Picture grasping the brass ring, the position you’ve always dreamed of having.  At this stage, ask yourself:

  1. “Do I have the skill set behind me to do the job?”
  2. “Can I gain the skills to do the job?”

If either answer is yes, it’s time to take the big step.

Men have no trouble thinking and believing that they are qualified for the next level.  In fact, a man will often believe he’s competent enough to advance having acquired one or some of the skills necessary for the next level.  While a woman will believe she’s qualified or ready to advance, if she has mastered ALL the skills in the job description.

For example, a woman often needs to be invited, and sometimes more than once, to take on a new and unfamiliar role, whether it’s being committee chair, advancing to the chief level at work or running for public office.  Have you ever heard a man say, “Oh, I couldn’t do that?”  Well, women, you shouldn’t either!

As a woman, whatever risk you’re considering will likely be a challenge to the way things have always been done.  Women have had to buck history for centuries, so don’t let the way things have been done in the past be your albatross for taking a risk.  Women also suffer from wanting to be liked, so please put that need on a shelf and look at your situation with new perspective.  When you do, you’ll realize you’re probably ready to take the risk.

Unfortunately, risk-taking has been suppressed in women since they were girls.  Think about it this way.  Parents, family members and school teachers more commonly discourage girls from taking risks, both academic and physical.

Personally, I was an only child and my parents were terrified something bad would happen to me.  My mom was always telling me to “be careful, be careful!”  Thus, I didn’t learn to ride a bike until I was 12 years old, taught by my best friend in secret.  This issue requires consideration from two angles, how it affects our own decision-making and risk-taking as an adult professional, as well as how we may be doing our own daughters a disservice if we’re telling them to be careful all the time.

You will take smart risks when you have made sure your self-esteem is not wanting.  If you believe you’re struggling with low self-esteem, I have a must-read for you: Women and Self-Esteem: Understanding and Improving the Way We Think and Feel About Ourselves, by Linda Tschirhart Sanford and Mary Ellen Donovan.  Many women worry that they don’t deserve success; harbor fears that they are not bright enough, not talented enough, just not good enough.  This book examines how women’s harmful attitudes about themselves are shaped and offers concrete help to help build higher self-esteem.

When deciding whether to take a risk, assess the reality of the situation.  Remember, there continues to be a double standard for men and women in the workplace.  Failure is perceived differently for a man vs. a woman.  When a man fails, the failure is viewed as something that will be fixed and he is given another chance.  Unfortunately, when a woman fails, that failure hangs with her and she might be judged by it for much longer.  Like so many things, failure is viewed through a different lens for a man, than it is for a woman.

Risk-taking doesn’t always have to be in the workplace to empower you.  It’s possible to take a risk that helps you overcome a fear in your personal life.  With a lifelong fear of swimming, snorkeling in Jamaica made me feel incredibly empowered to take risks to advance my business.  Every time I look at the t-shirt, “I snorkeled the Cali wreck,” it empowers me to take additional risks!  Taking a step forward in terms of risk doesn’t always mean a workplace risk.  Anything that helps you flex your muscles will move you in the right risk-taking direction.

Read Kay’s Corner to find practical tips for SMART risk-taking.

©Copyright 2017.  Kay Fittes.  All Rights Reserved.