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career-transitions skill

/skills/career-transitions

This skill helps you navigate career transitions by applying proven frameworks from product leaders to test ideas, assess readiness, and design experiments.

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---
name: career-transitions
description: Help users navigate career changes and pivots. Use when someone is considering a new role, transitioning into product management, evaluating job offers, taking a sabbatical, or feeling stuck in their current position.
---

# Career Transitions

Help the user navigate career changes using frameworks from 76 product leaders who have successfully pivoted roles, industries, and career stages.

## How to Help

When the user asks for help with a career transition:

1. **Identify the type of move** - Determine if they're seeking a new role, new function, new stage, or entirely new path
2. **Understand motivations** - Uncover the "pushes" (frustrations) and "pulls" (attractions) driving the change
3. **Assess readiness signals** - Help them evaluate if now is the right time or if preparation is needed
4. **Design experiments** - Suggest low-risk ways to test hypotheses before committing fully

## Core Principles

### Progress matters more than pay
Bob Moesta: "Over 50% of the people who got new jobs didn't get more money. It's a lie. It's about progress. It's about what do they want to learn? What skills do they want to get?" Identify your "metric of progress" - what growth looks like for you specifically.

### Use the Genie Framework
Graham Weaver: "What if you had one wish... whatever you throw yourself into, it's going to turn out great." Remove fear of failure from the equation to identify what you actually want. Work backwards from a successful 10-year outcome.

### Build serendipity through relationships
Gokul Rajaram: "Great careers are built by knowing a lot of people doing great work so they know and want you on their teams, and just waiting for serendipity and then seizing it." Prioritize building relationships with smart people over linear promotion paths.

### Follow intuition over spreadsheets
Ami Vora: "The thing that has consistently served me is to do the thing that feels right, go to the place that feels like home, work with the people who feel like my friends." Choose roles where you feel "lucky" to be there.

### Three months is attainable
Paul Millerd: "A three month sabbatical is much more attainable than people think... if you're assuming you're going to work continuously in adulthood, that's about 500 months." Frame sabbaticals as a tiny fraction of your total career to make them feel possible.

### Treat your career like a product
Gibson Biddle: "It's just a lot like building a product. You have theories and hypotheses, you find ways to experiment with them." Run small experiments to test career hypotheses before making big commitments.

### Internal moves are easier
Anneka Gupta: "Doing it within the same company is a lot easier than trying to switch companies and switch jobs at the same time because you've already built credibility." Leverage existing relationships and domain knowledge for role transitions.

### Balance learning and impact
Deb Liu: "You can have the most impact in the job you know the best, but then you stop learning... How do you keep going back and forth so that you're not going straight up?" Alternate between mastery roles and "newbie" roles to avoid stagnation.

### Join winning teams
Matt MacInnis: "As an early career product manager... you should join a winning team. I want to hear what they learned from being part of a winning team." High-growth companies provide more learning than struggling ones.

## Questions to Help Users

- "If success were guaranteed, what would you pursue?"
- "What are you running away from versus running toward?"
- "When did you last feel truly energized by your work?"
- "What would you do if you didn't have to make money?"
- "Who are the three people whose careers you most admire?"
- "What's the smallest experiment you could run to test this path?"

## Common Mistakes to Flag

- **Optimizing for compensation early** - Early career earnings are negligible compared to back-loaded executive compensation
- **Staying due to inertia** - Monitor if your environment still provides learning or if you're the "boiling frog"
- **Title chasing** - A senior role at a losing company often beats a junior role at a market leader
- **Skipping the sabbatical buffer** - Moving between intense roles without recalibration leads to carrying old culture baggage
- **Ignoring the "habitat" fit** - Failing in one environment doesn't mean you lack skills; it may mean wrong environment

## Deep Dive

For all 111 insights from 76 guests, see `references/guest-insights.md`

## Related Skills

- Building a Promotion Case
- Negotiating Offers
- Finding Mentors & Sponsors
- Managing Imposter Syndrome

Overview

This skill helps people navigate career changes and pivots using practical frameworks from experienced product leaders. It focuses on clarifying motivations, assessing readiness, and running low-risk experiments so users can make informed moves. The guidance balances learning, impact, and relationship-building to increase the odds of a successful transition.

How this skill works

I first identify the type of move you want (new role, new function, new stage, or a complete pivot) and surface your pushes and pulls. Then I help you define a progress metric, evaluate timing and readiness signals, and design small experiments that test the new path before committing. The approach emphasizes internal moves, relationship-building, and treating your career like a product with hypotheses to validate.

When to use it

  • Considering a role change within your company or to another company
  • Transitioning into product management or another function
  • Evaluating job offers and comparing progress vs. compensation
  • Planning a sabbatical or intentional time off to recalibrate
  • Feeling stuck, stagnant, or unsure about next career steps

Best practices

  • Define a personal metric of progress (skills, learning, impact) instead of optimizing solely for pay
  • Use the Genie Framework: imagine guaranteed success to uncover true desires and long-term goals
  • Run small, low-risk experiments (consulting, part-time projects, informational interviews) before a full switch
  • Prioritize internal moves when possible to leverage existing credibility and reduce friction
  • Invest in relationships and serendipity—meet people doing the work you admire

Example use cases

  • Map a 12-month plan to move from engineering into product management with experiments and learning milestones
  • Compare two job offers by scoring them on learning potential, team strength, and long-term progress
  • Design a three-month sabbatical plan that preserves momentum and tests new interests
  • Create an internal transfer strategy that leverages sponsors and visibility
  • Run a micro-experiment (freelance project or product sprint) to validate interest in a new industry

FAQ

How do I know if now is the right time to change?

Look for readiness signals: sustained frustration with growth, clear learning bottlenecks, or a viable experiment you can run. If you can design and complete a small test that reduces uncertainty, timing is probably right.

What if I need higher pay but also want growth?

Prioritize roles that offer meaningful progress plus a path to compensation growth. Early career moves favor learning; you can often accelerate pay later by joining winning teams or gaining differentiated skills.