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To switch industries, find a role where your existing expertise is immediately valuable. After 18 years in finance, Gymshark's CCO moved to a retailer with a credit offering. This "bridge role" gave her the confidence and runway to learn the new sector while already adding value, de-risking the career transition.
For professionals in declining fields like Hollywood production, reinvention requires abstracting core skills. A line producer's expertise in organization, vendor management, and execution is directly transferable to a growth sector like high-end event planning, which capitalizes on the consumer shift from things to experiences.
To break into AI product management, avoid giant leaps. Instead, move adjacently by leveraging your unique background. For example, a professional with experience in hearing aids is a perfect fit for a PM role on Apple's AirPods hearing aid feature. Your domain expertise is a powerful, non-obvious differentiator.
Pursuing a more fulfilling career doesn't require risking financial ruin. Instead of taking a blind leap, you can vet a new direction by "trying it on"—shadowing professionals, conducting informational interviews, and testing the work in small ways to understand its reality before making a full transition.
Career growth isn't just vertical; it can be more powerful laterally. Transferring skills from one industry to another provides a unique perspective. For example, using music industry insights on audience behavior to solve a marketing challenge for a video game launch.
Instead of always chasing promotions, professionals should consider lateral moves into new companies. This allows them to build a solid grounding and learn a new environment without the pressure of a more senior role, ultimately leading to faster, more sustainable upward mobility.
When entering a new region or industry without a network, accepting a role slightly below your experience level is a powerful strategy. It lowers the barrier to entry and allows you to quickly prove value, earn trust, and ultimately get promoted faster than if you had held out for a more senior role from the start.
When transitioning to a new industry, your lack of domain knowledge is secondary. Focus on your "superpower": the proven, repeatable process you use to deliver results. Articulate your ability to launch, rally teams, and solve problems, as these core skills are universally valuable.
Instead of just climbing the corporate ladder, define an ultimate career objective (a 'North Star'). Then, strategically choose roles—even uncomfortable or lateral ones—that deliberately fill the specific knowledge gaps standing between you and your long-term goal.
A non-linear career path is a source of unique solutions, not a disadvantage. Reframe your varied past by translating skills into the new context. For example, a musician's "tour logistics" becomes a marketer's "launch planning," showcasing transferable expertise.
An engineer successfully transitioned from mechanical to controls not by asking for training, but by first learning the fundamentals independently. By showing initiative and baseline knowledge, he made it a low-risk decision for his manager to give him a chance on a real project.