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.
While metrics are important, great marketing is built on genuine human insight. The most resonant campaigns connect with deep human traits. This is why many top CEOs have backgrounds in the humanities, not just STEM; they excel at understanding people, not just algorithms.
To move from execution to strategy, stop waiting for permission or a promotion. Proactively demonstrate strategic thinking in your current role. Instead of just reporting what you did, frame your updates as "This is what I think we should do and why."
Many professionals chase titles and salaries ("acquisition"). True career satisfaction comes from choosing roles that align with personal values and desired lifestyle ("alignment"). Chasing acquisition leads to a short-term sugar rush of success followed by professional emptiness.
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.
"Bad niching" boxes you in, making you unemployable outside a tiny market. "Good niching" focuses on solving a specific, high-value problem (e.g., messaging, positioning) that is applicable across multiple industries, ensuring your skills remain transferable and in-demand.
A simple yet powerful way to assess your career trajectory is to evaluate your direct superior's role. If you have no desire to eventually hold that position, it's a strong signal that you are on an unsuitable path and need to change direction.
