Death of the Career Path

February 13, 2008

Back in the mid 1990’s as an HR Manager, I noticed that the 
conventional career path was a dying concept. Lifetime 
employment was an artifact. Lateral moves became the new 
way to advance your career. And downsizings were a constant 
threat. 
 
The ‘security’ of a straightforward career path was gone. 
That left many mid-career professionals wondering what to 
do with their career plans.  
 
I recently read an article at CIO.com asking “Are Career 
Paths the Best for Professional Advancement?” The article 
concluded career paths are no longer relevant. I’m not 
surprised. They were on their last leg years ago. 
 
Yes, it’s true. Linear career paths are dead.  
 
So, what has replaced the good old fashioned career path? 
 
Career portfolios. 
 
I recommend managing your career as a portfolio. Based on 
your strengths, interests, and level of risk tolerance you 
make career moves that appeal to you and fit your goals. 
You choose opportunities that stretch and expand your 
skills instead of focusing only on grabbing the next title 
on the rung. You find security in being in control of each 
move, rather than feeling at the mercy of your boss, your 
company or the economy to decide your fate. 
 
So, how do you build a career portfolio? 
 
You diversify. The more options you have, the less you will 
be dependent on the company or the economy for your 
security.  
 
Know your "most profitable skills". You recession proof 
your career by knowing exactly what your strongest 
competencies are and you strengthen them so that you’re 
among the best at what you do. And the more transferable 
you can make your skills, the better. 
 
Stay current on the trends in the economy and your field or 
industry. Look ahead a few years and make sure you’re 
moving toward opportunities that align with the trends 
(instead of leaving you on the chopping block). 
 
Let me give you an example from my own life. 
 
In the mid 90’s I was a happily employed HR Manager at a 
fairly large corporation. But, the writing was on the wall 
that much of HR was going to be outsourced, industry wide, 
in the next 5 to 10 years. I noticed a great deal of focus 
on becoming more strategic, and on being able to support 
company-wide change efforts (which makes sense given all 
the organizational changes we’ve seen since the late 90’s). 
I decided it was time to diversify in order to avoid a dead 
end career track. 
 
In order to diversify my career I made a few specific and 
planned moves.  
 
I went back to grad school to earn my Masters Degree. I 
minored in Organization Development, to diversify my 
knowledge base beyond the scope of traditional HR 
functions. I also had an interest in teaching, so I took 
electives in adult learning. When I graduated, I took a job 
in Consulting where I could get experience leading 
organizational change and experience a variety of 
industries. From there, I expanded my experience base by 
taking on a part time college teaching position.  
 
All of these moves were designed to expand my career 
portfolio so that I had options, no matter what happened. I 
could be an HR Manager, I could consult, I could teach. I 
knew traditional HR functions and I knew how to implement 
broad scale change. All of these moves made me unique and 
more valuable in the marketplace. 
 
If you’d like to start developing your career portfolio, 
here are 5 questions to get you started: 
 
1.What are some current and emerging trends you see in your 
field or industry? 
2.If you were to make a career change in the next year, 
what would you most want to do?  
3.What are the skills, experience and knowledge you would 
need to make that move? 
4.What’s one or two moves you could make to expand your 
skills/experience over the next year? 
5.What’s one action you will take in the next 30 days? 
 
Have fun building up your portfolio and experimenting with 
new assignments, and possibilities. This can be an 
exciting process because you pursue things that interest 
you and allow you to grow. It pulls you out of the rut of 
worrying about what will happen and puts you in the 
driver’s seat so you're ready for anything.



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