Worried You Aren't Ambitious Enough? Ask Madeleine
Madeleine Homan Blanchard
Chief Coaching Architect at Blanchard | Coaching Visionary and Innovator | Author | Keynote Speaker
Dear Madeleine,
I am a veteran employee of a large, very healthy organization. I like the company and my co-workers. I’ve had plenty of advancement opportunities and I think my comp package is fair.
I have been managing people for a long time and feel that I am skilled. I am not just tooting my own horn—I get great feedback from my people and my boss is happy with my work. I would go so far as to say that I have had a fantastic career. I only have a few years left before I retire, which I look forward to—lots of grandkids to take fishing, golf, hiking, volunteer work for my local homeless shelter—and really thought I would stay here until I retire.
However, I get calls from headhunters. All the time. I get emails, voice mails, and now, somehow, they have my cell number so I have stopped picking up numbers I don’t recognize. I did have one conversation with someone who tried to convince me that I could have a shot at a senior executive position and a lot more money if I were to consider going elsewhere.
My wife thinks I am nuts not to explore the possibilities, but it feels like Pandora’s box to me. I like things the way they are. What would be the point of starting over someplace new? But then I worry that I might regret it if I don’t at least take a look at what’s being offered.
If it Ain’t Broke
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Dear If it Ain’t Broke,
Don’t fix it.
Sorry you handed that to me on a silver platter. But seriously, don’t.
There are two questions here:
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But what you really?don’t?want is to make a big leap to start over someplace else, only to find that you miss what you had. Wouldn’t that be a kick in the pants?
As a coach, I have a duty to help people get crystal clear about their values (what is most important to them), their needs (what they must have to fire on all cylinders), and their wants. In that order. For people to feel most fulfilled, they need first to be in an environment that feels aligned with their values, and then they must get their core psychological needs met. After that, they can use whatever time and energy they have left to get (or do) what they want. Anytime a person shakes up their environment, they must spend enormous brain power and energy stabilizing in a new system. This is why moving houses feels like a such a big deal. Moving jobs is even more of a big deal.
Moving jobs makes sense when you:
Moving jobs does not make sense to you for a reason; from your letter, it sounds like several reasons. Unless as you read this you get a flood of good reasons to move that you hadn’t thought of, I say enjoy the next few years where you are.
Have the conversation with your wife, though. You might uncover something she really wants that is causing her to push you. Then you can build a plan to help her get what she wants and let go of this conversation.
Love, Madeleine
About Madeleine
Madeleine Homan Blanchard?is a master certified coach, author, speaker, and cofounder of Blanchard Coaching Services.?Madeleine’s Advice for the Well Intentioned Manager?is a regular Saturday feature for a very select group: well intentioned managers. Leadership is hard—and the more you care, the harder it gets. Join us here each week for insight, resources, and conversation.
Got a question for Madeleine??Email Madeleine?and look for your response soon. Please be advised that although she will do her best, Madeleine cannot respond to each letter personally. Letters will be edited for clarity and length.
Director of Client Solutions at Blanchard
2 年Thank you so much for this Mad. Thanks for giving those of us who love our jobs the permission to just love our jobs and do them well. There's so much conversation about the extra "hustle" and the pressure to continually rise in the ranks. Sometimes it's ok to be content where you are, doing what you're doing.
Passionate Human Resources professional with a strong background and broad experience coaching and developing employees and leaders to achieve organizational success.
2 年Love the advice to dig into what keeps making his wife ask... Because it's about her and not him. Be curious! I always look forward to reading your advice column. :-)
Improving human performance through learning
2 年Great life advice, Madeleine Homan Blanchard. Coaching is so much more than just offering a sounding board.
Global executive coach, speaker, author, Director of Coach Training, presence, awareness & somatic coaching
2 年Love your wisdom...