Managing A Career
I was reading a post on LinkedIn () by Jason Feifer (), the Editor in Chief of Entrepreneur Magazine. In a recent article, Jason was interviewing Gary Vaynerchuk () about how marketing has changed, specifically through a redefinition of the mid funnel. The traditional idea of a funnel still exists, but where and how momentum is created has shifted. In the post, Jason shared a story that stuck with me. Heinz once posted a simple image on Instagram about a fictional keg of ketchup. It wasn’t clever. It wasn’t polished. It wasn’t even particularly strategic. It was, by most...
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“Be quick to decide…but slow to act.” This isn’t just a pithy saying you nod along to and forget; there’s real weight behind it. It’s a quiet strategy that shows up again and again in fast career growth and strong professional reputations. If you’ve ever watched someone get promoted and thought, That seemed sudden, there’s a good chance this was part of the story. From the outside, it looks like an overnight decision; behind the scenes, it’s anything but. They were making clear decisions early, then deliberately working the back-channels; socializing ideas, pressure-testing...
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When it comes to AI, a lot of professionals are still telling themselves the same story; “I’ll get around to learning it when I get the chance.” That mindset made sense when AI felt like a curiosity…or a distant threat that might someday take everyone’s jobs. But that phase is already over. AI is no longer a hypothetical technology sitting on the sidelines; it’s being quietly woven into daily workflows, baked directly into the tools you already use, and increasingly embedded into what managers and companies expect from their employees. At this point, AI isn’t going away. The...
info_outlineManaging A Career
I heard a quote on a recent of the Hidden Brain podcast that really hit me. It was so powerful that I had to rewind the podcast just to hear it again. It was simple, almost obvious once you heard it; “Just because you’re scared doesn’t mean you do nothing.” The line came from a story the guest was telling about his mother. The story had nothing to do with careers, promotions, or performance reviews…but the moment I heard it, I knew it applied perfectly to work. Fear shows up any time you’re trying to grow. Any time you’re pushing beyond what’s familiar....
info_outlineManaging A Career
If you’ve been listening to this podcast for any length of time, you know I like to pull ideas from real situations… not theory, not hypotheticals, but things people are actually living through at work. This week’s episode came together exactly that way. I was scrolling LinkedIn and came across by about an engineer who had been stuck in a mid‑level role for more than thirty years. Thirty years. Not because this person wasn’t talented… not because they were lazy or disengaged… but because they focused exclusively on technical excellence and didn’t care what their managers...
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As we wrap up the year and head into the holiday season, many of you are taking a well‑deserved break—stepping back, recharging, and hopefully celebrating everything you’ve accomplished over the past twelve months. I’m doing the same. And even though I’m pausing new episodes for a bit, I still want to leave you with something meaningful to support your growth during this important stretch of the year. Because for a lot of professionals, the end of the year isn’t just about holidays and downtime. It’s also the season of annual reviews, performance conversations, and...
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I hope you’re finding a little space to breathe as we head into the final stretch of the year. This is the season when everything seems to converge at once—deadlines, holidays, planning for next year, and of course, the annual review cycle. And because I’m taking a few weeks off, I’m replaying some of my favorite past episodes that still feel incredibly relevant, especially right now. Today’s episode is one of those. Before we jump into it, I want to set the stage for why this particular topic—speaking with finesse—matters so much at this time of year. If you’re like...
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Hello everyone, and welcome back to the podcast. I hope you’re enjoying the holiday season and taking some time to recharge. I’m doing the same this week—stepping back for a little rest—but I didn’t want to leave you without an episode. So, I’m bringing back one of the most impactful conversations we’ve had on this show: Episode 73, Put Yourself In Their Shoes. It's all about one of the most underrated skills you can develop for both your career and even everyday life: the ability to understand the motivations of the people around you. It’s not necessarily about...
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We've all experienced it. You're at a training session or a professional meet-up or maybe you're wandering the expo hall at an industry conference. A bit of downtime leads to a quick exchange with the person next to you... five minutes of conversation, maybe ten if everyone’s particularly chatty. You swap LinkedIn profiles or trade business cards or even promise to follow up later. Then nothing happens. The moment ends, the event ends, and the relationship ends right along with it. But it doesn’t have to. Those tiny talking windows you slip through at conferences and workshops can evolve...
info_outlineManaging A Career
I was talking with someone last week who’s been in the same role for years. Smart person; dependable; someone who always gets things across the finish line. Their question hit me hard because I’ve heard it so many times before: “Why do people who seem less competent than me keep getting promoted?” My answer was simple… and frustrating… and completely true. Advancement isn’t about competence; it’s about story. The people moving up aren’t always better at the work; they’re better at talking about the work. They’ve learned how to turn their accomplishments into a narrative...
info_outlineAt the time of recording, the U.S. government is in the middle of a shutdown. Progress has stalled. Federal employees are stuck in limbo, staring down questions with no answers: *How long will this last? What happens to me? What changes when it finally lifts?* It’s a moment of suspended animation—where uncertainty reigns and momentum evaporates. Sound familiar? It should. Because the same thing can happen in your career. Not with a headline or a press briefing, but with a quiet stall in progress, a creeping sense of doubt, and a calendar full of meetings that don’t move the needle.
Right now, the headlines are packed with shutdowns and budget battles. But this episode isn’t about politics—it’s about something far more personal. Because shutdowns don’t just happen in Washington. They happen in our work lives, too. Whether you’re fresh out of school, mid-career and questioning your next move, or leading a team that’s lost its spark, shutdowns show up when forward motion disappears. And if you don’t spot them early, your growth can stall for months… sometimes years. So let’s break down what a career shutdown actually looks like, why it happens, and how to restart the engine before you lose momentum for good.
A career shutdown doesn’t mean you stop working. Far from it. You’re still showing up, still checking boxes, still attending meetings that could’ve been emails. But the spark is gone. You’re treading water, stuck in cruise control—doing the same tasks, facing the same challenges, with zero stretch and even less excitement. Maybe you’re getting raises, but they’re just enough to keep you from updating your résumé. Promotions? Not even a whisper. It’s professional purgatory: you’re employed, but you’re not advancing.
Just like in Washington, a career shutdown doesn’t happen overnight. It creeps in—slow, quiet, and disguised as “just a busy season.” It’s triggered by unresolved issues or a lack of leadership—sometimes from others, often from ourselves. Maybe it’s indecision. You’re unsure about your next step, so you wait. You tell yourself you’ll figure it out later… but “later” becomes “next year.” Or maybe you’re over-relying on management, assuming your boss or company will chart your growth. Spoiler: no one is thinking about your development as much as you should be. Then there’s avoidance. You know you should ask for feedback, clarify your goals, or push for that promotion—but it’s uncomfortable, so you stall. Meanwhile, burnout builds. You’ve been running hard for so long your tank is empty. You’re still in motion, but you’re not moving forward. And at the root of it all? Complacency. You tell yourself, “Things are fine.” You stop chasing, stop stretching, stop learning. And just like that, your momentum dies. Career shutdowns don’t announce themselves—they sneak in, settle down, and stay until you decide to kick them out.
Let’s start with those of you early in your career. You land that first “good job” and think, I made it. But that’s exactly when shutdown risk spikes—because comfort is sneaky. You tell yourself you’re gaining “experience,” but if that experience isn’t growing you, it’s just keeping you busy.
Here’s how to shutdown-proof your early career: Don’t wait for assignments. Be proactive. Ask, “What’s next? Where can I add value?” The ones who seek out responsibility are the ones who get noticed first. Focus on transferable skills—communication, writing, project management, presenting. Skills that make you valuable anywhere, not just in your current role. And find a mentor. Someone who gives honest feedback, keeps you accountable, and helps you see beyond your current lane. If you avoid stalling in your first five years, you’ll outpace most of your peers. Momentum built early compounds fast.
Now, let’s talk mid-career. You’ve built credibility, earned a solid salary, maybe even a leadership title. Your shutdown doesn’t look like boredom—it looks like plateauing. You’re doing well. You’re respected. You’re stable. But… nothing’s really changing. And here’s the danger: stability feels safe, but in today’s world, stability without growth is decline in disguise.
So how do you stay in motion? Start by revisiting your goals. The ambitions that got you here won’t take you where you want to go next. Don’t coast on old goals—create new ones that stretch you. Expand laterally. Take on projects that expose you to new departments or business functions. Growth doesn’t always mean promotion—sometimes it’s about broadening your scope. And reinvest in your network. At this level, visibility often matters more than output. If no one knows your impact, it’s like it didn’t happen. Mid-career shutdowns are sneaky—because they feel like comfort. But comfort and growth rarely coexist.
And if you manage people? Your career growth is tied to theirs. When your team stalls, you stall. When they can’t deliver results, your progress slows too. As a leader, avoiding shutdown means playing a different game.
Start by developing your people—not hoarding them. The more you help others grow, the more capacity you create to take on bigger challenges. Build influence beyond your team. Don’t just lead your group—be someone whose perspective shapes decisions across the org. And watch out for manager autopilot. It’s easy to fall into a routine of one-on-ones, reports, meetings, and metrics. But real leaders don’t just manage the status quo—they push for innovation and change. If you’re in leadership, your challenge isn’t just preventing your own shutdown—it’s making sure your entire team keeps moving forward too.
Maybe you’re listening and thinking, Yeah… that’s me. I’m in one of those shutdowns. Good news: stalled careers aren’t permanent. But they don’t restart on their own. They need intentional action.
Step one: reset expectations with your boss. Schedule a career conversation. Ask, “What does success look like over the next six months? What would it take to earn that next promotion?” Clarity creates accountability—and accountability drives progress.
Step two: rebuild your energy. Sometimes, what you need isn’t a new job—it’s a reset. Rest. Recharge. Re-engage. Burnout doesn’t fix itself, and momentum needs fuel.
Step three: re-skill. Pick one new capability that creates leverage for your next role. Maybe it’s AI, data storytelling, leadership development—whatever positions you for what’s next. Growth starts with learning, and learning starts with choice.
Shutdowns don’t fix themselves. They end when you take initiative. So if you’re stuck, stalled, or just coasting—this is your sign. Restart the engine. Your career’s waiting.
Career shutdowns happen to everyone. The real question is—will you catch it early enough to restart? You don’t need a perfect moment, a new title, or someone else’s permission. You can create your own momentum—starting today.
If this episode got you thinking, share it with a friend or colleague who might be stuck in their own “career shutdown.” And if you haven’t already, hit subscribe so you never miss an episode of *Managing A Career*. I’m Layne Robinson—thanks for listening. Now go out there and shutdown-proof your career.