Career Pivot:

If you have been in your industry for over a decade, you have likely become attached to your title. Whether you are a “Senior Director of Sales” or a “Lead Clinical Research Associate,” that title has become your identity. People introduce you that way. It shows up on your business cards, your email signature, and your LinkedIn profile. It is proof of everything you have earned. But when you are contemplating a career pivot, that same title can become a cage.
The biggest mistake mid-career professionals make when attempting a career pivot is trying to sell their history instead of their skills. Recruiters in a new industry don’t necessarily care about the specific “noun” of your previous role. They care about the “verbs.” In other words, they are looking for the actions you took to drive results.
Think about it this way: If you managed a 10 million dollar budget in the pharmaceutical world, the math doesn’t change when you move into Fintech. The stakeholders might have different names. The software might have a different user interface. But the core competency… the fiscal stewardship is identical.
Skills-Based Hiring
Modern recruitment is moving toward skills-based hiring. And for folks thinking about a career pivot, that means companies are looking for “Portable Value.” When you focus on transferable skills for senior managers, you stop asking for permission to enter a new field and start offering a solution to their problems.
You become the person who walks in the door already knowing how to improve numbers, make their teams stronger, and their risks smaller.
Here is an actionable step to get you started.
Take three major achievements from your current role and strip away the industry-specific jargon.
- Original: “Led a team of 10 to increase regional medical device sales by 15 percent.”
- Stripped: “Led a cross-functional team of 10 to drive a 15 percent revenue increase in a high-compliance, competitive market.”
See what we just did? You took something that sounded very “medical device sales” and made it read as if it could belong on any executive resume. By rebranding for a career pivot in this way, you make it impossible for a hiring manager to ignore your seniority.
Your Past Success is Your Future Currency
A career change at 40 shouldn’t feel like you are throwing away your hard-earned progress. In simplistic terms, it is about realising that your past success is the currency you will use to buy your future role.
If you are struggling to see the value in your own history, that is normal. You have lived it for so long that the gold in your story looks like wallpaper to you. Working with a career change coach can help you decode your experience and find the high-value language that opens doors.
You have the currency. Now, let’s get you spending it where it counts.