The 8 Stages of Career Transformation: Which One Are You In Today?
What stage of career transformation are you in today? It's important to know if you want to move forward

The 8 Stages of Career Transformation: Which One Are You In Today?

Part of Kathy Caprino's series "Creating Your Own Career Breakthrough"

Some time ago, I?had the pleasure of working with a client I deeply enjoyed and respected – let’s call her Sheryl – who had recently left a high-powered and lucrative management consultancy role to reinvent her career and focus on what she’s passionate about in a new way that will allow her to live and work as she truly wanted to.

Sheryl is like many of my clients who are highly accomplished, driven, talented, brilliant, and longing for a way to be of service in the world that fits her values more closely.?She enjoyed certain aspects of her previous job and career but chose to move away from it because a number of key dimensions simply didn’t fit where she wanted to go in the future.

As we discussed the emotions and challenges she was experiencing, she asked me,

“Kathy, what is the typical process that people go through when they’re making this type of career shift or reinvention??How do folks normally disengage from one career and create a new, more rewarding one?”

To answer those questions, I brought to mind my own career change and reinvention process many years ago, from very unhappy (and chronically ill) corporate VP to marriage and family therapist, then to career coach, writer, speaker and educator. I thought back on interviews and coaching work with hundreds of women and men around the world, and also recalled the helpful model from William Bridges in his groundbreaking book,?Transitions.?Mr. Bridges and I share some common ideas about the transition process, but my model – focused on career transformation – diverges from his in some key ways.

From what I’ve observed and experienced, there are eight typical stages we go through when we’ve decided to leave (or have been forced out of) a career that we've heavily identified with but no longer “fits,” and move toward reshaping our professional life to something more closely aligned with our highest visions and goals for who we wish to be in the world.

The 8 stages of successful career transformation as I see them are:

1.?Disengagement

When we first decide to make a big change from a career or role we believe is closely connected to our "identity," the disengagement process involves disentangling ourselves from a structure that we previously worked very hard to be a part of.?Whether you liked or disliked your previous career, it’s jarring and deeply unsettling at first to move away from the very thing that, for years, represented a semblance of order, sense, and structure. We’re full of conflicting emotions (including fear and anxiety) as we embark on this disengagement process, and an experience of loss and grieving often creeps in, as we realize that what was once is no more (and most likely will never be again).

2.?Disidentification

As we disengage, we start to understand that the identity we formed being a part of this former structure also needs re-assessment and revision.?The ways we defined ourselves previously, and how we achieved our self-esteem or evaluated “progress” and accomplishment, for example, no longer hold up without the surrounding structure in place to support it.?We’re startled at the realization that our “self-concept” – the identity we strove so hard to construct in order to “win” or survive in the former structure – is in fact, not one we wish to sustain.

3.?Disorientation

At this stage, we often feel disoriented and confused.?We’ve detached from the former structure or identity, but haven’t yet replaced it with something of meaning, something that fits and excites and motivates us.?This period finds us befuddled and anxious, longing for clarity and movement but somehow knowing that rushing through this to attach prematurely to a new, unvetted direction will not end well.?Many feel desperate to just move past this feeling of "swirl" and confusion and jump into something else quickly. During this period, most people grasp the notion that they must allow the process to unfold, and we need to let ourselves evolve and grow...to “become.”?But this “becoming” can feel like a limbo full of uncomfortable unknowing.

4.?Letting Go

In this stage, we begin to realize that in order to free ourselves to move forward toward something more fulfilling and satisfying, we have to?let go.?We see more clearly how we co-created or even "attracted" many of our former problems, and that we were an active contributor to the challenges we faced in our previous situation.?We realize that we have engaged in some habitual patterns, thinking, and behaviors that no longer serve us, and perhaps even hurt or thwart us, and these will need to be released and revised if we want to grow to the fullest and experience happier, healthier and more fulfilling lives and careers. We see, finally, that it wasn’t just the job or?career?that got in the way of our happiness, but in some core way, it was?ourselves. We begin the work of “getting hip to our trip,” and letting go of what no longer works.

5.?Re-engagement

Once we’ve had time to adjust to the loss of our former structure (and who we were in that structure), and we own that we are co-creators of our own lives and begin to work on the aspects of us that contributed to our challenges, a light breaks through and there’s a dawn of re-engagement.?We become more excited about working through change, and about the possibilities ahead.?We begin to heal. We start to understand that we are indeed capable of creating a more fulfilling, joyful and successful future and career than we ever thought possible.?And we’re ready to do the real work of inner and outer change.

6.?Discovery

During this process, we embark on an exploration of who we are at a deeper level.?We delve into the question of what is truly possible.?We explore what matters most, and what aspects of ourselves and our legacy we wish to endure after we’re gone.?We discover lost parts of ourselves and bring to the surface vital dimensions of our personality and persona that went underground to make the old structure work. This stage is about discovering ourselves again – reclaiming what was lost, healing what was wounded, and remembering what we wish to honor, support and strengthen in ourselves going forward.

7.?Clarity

Finally, clarity emerges.?We glimpse at a new picture of what we can become and feel more engaged and enlivened than ever before.?We allow ourselves to connect to what we truly long to be and do.?We’ve wiped away the cobwebs that clouded our view from the prior experiences and are ready to embrace a new identity that makes full use of our natural talents and experiences, but in a new way that yields more fruit, now that we know ourselves better, and have identified what we want in a clearer, more expansive way.

8.?Integration

This stage is about bringing it all together – our new insights, knowledge and experiences – to create a new career reality for ourselves.?We've done the work and closed our power and confidence gaps, and realize we have capabilities that the world needs and we're finally ready to apply those in work that matters to us. We see clearly what we’re capable of, and what held us back before, and are ready to commit to building a more exciting and rewarding next chapter of life and work that reflects the best of what we’ve learned and experienced.

* * * * * * * * *

How long these stages take is fully up to the individual, but one thing is certain: Walking away from a previous career and reinventing yourself requires time, and a good deal of courage, strength, patience, self-love, and faith.

But for most of us who have embarked on and achieved successful career transformation, it wasn’t a choice. We were called to do it, and once we started on the journey, we realized there was no turning back.

Which stage of career transformation are you in today?

To learn more about the career stage you're in today, download my free Career Path Self-Assessment and complete it thoroughly. It will help you gain much more self-awareness of who you are and where you'd like to go in the future. And feel free to reach out if you'd like hands-on coaching help. Finally, take my Power Gap Survey to identify which, if any, of the 7 damaging power and confidence gaps are keeping you from experiencing the success and happiness you long for.


Kathy Caprino is a career, executive and leadership coach and the author of?the book, The Most Powerful You: 7 Bravery-Boosting Paths to Career Bliss. Through her trainings, courses, coaching and career resources, she helps professional women and men build successful, rewarding careers of significance. For hands-on help, join Kathy in her Career & Leadership Breakthrough?programs, Amazing Career Project and Most Powerful You courses, her speaking/training programs, and Finding Brave podcast.

Regina Huber

I help Trailblazing Leaders thrive & driven people create the life they truly desire. Leadership & Freedom Coach | I work in EN, DE, PT & ES | RISE TO LEAD Podcast Host | Speaker | Author

1 年

Great points here, Kathy Caprino! Totally key to acknowledge that positive change often starts with frustration or confusion.

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Everything works if you let it .

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Arlene Jocelyn Larsen

Operations and Regulatory

1 年

This totally resonates with me. Happy to say to say that I'm on stage 8 now.

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Deb Dziena

Founder & Owner, DD Hospitality & Events ?? Hospitality Experience Consultant | Board Member??Curating Memorable Experiences & Fostering Teams For Over 20 years.??

1 年

This is great, thank you for sharing! I have been on a VERY intentional professional "pause." While very powerful, scary, but absolutely bringing so much clarity to personal/professional reinvention!

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