In today’s ever-changing economy, navigating your career path can feel more overwhelming than ever. Layoffs, hiring freezes, industry pivots—it’s a lot to process. If you’re at a crossroads and considering a career change or simply looking for something new, I want to share one powerful piece of advice that completely shifted how I view career growth:
👉🏾 Stop focusing so much on job titles. Start focusing on your skills.
We often scroll through job boards looking for titles that match our current or past roles—“Marketing Manager,” “Project Coordinator,” “Executive Assistant”—but we forget to ask the most important question:
What skills do I actually have, and how can I use them in new and exciting ways?
Focusing on job titles alone can limit your opportunities. Titles don’t always tell the full story of what a job entails. However, when you shift your mindset and start analyzing the skills listed in job descriptions, you might realize you’re already more qualified than you thought—or that you’re just a few learnable steps away from your next big opportunity. FAMILY AND CAREER: CAN YOU HAVE BOTH?
For example:
A job labeled “Digital Marketing Analyst” might sound intimidating, but if you already have skills in content creation, data interpretation, social media, and SEO, you’re well on your way.
Think of your skills as currency in today’s market. The more you have—and the more adaptable they are—the more options and freedom you create for yourself.
Here’s how to start building and strengthening your skills:
- Take free or low-cost online courses on platforms like Coursera, LinkedIn Learning, or YouTube.
- Volunteer for new responsibilities in your current role to stretch and grow.
- Watch how-to videos, read blogs, or attend webinars on topics that interest you.
- Keep a “skill journal” to track the tools, programs, or soft skills (like communication and time management) you’re using and improving.
- Join communities or networking groups where you can learn from others and share knowledge.
The more skills you develop, the more flexibility you gain. You’re not bound to one title or one industry. You’re equipped to pivot. That kind of freedom is empowering, especially in uncertain economic times.
When you build your skill set, you start choosing jobs based on alignment with your lifestyle, values, and growth—not just survival.
If you’re feeling stuck, uncertain, or discouraged about your career right now, please know:
You are not starting from scratch. You’re starting from experience.
Every job you’ve ever worked has taught you something. Every life experience you’ve had has shaped your perspective. You already have value—now it’s time to invest in expanding it.
So the next time you search for a job, read beyond the title. Look at the description. Ask yourself:
✨ Do I have these skills?
✨ Can I build the ones I don’t?
Then go out and build your career around what you can do, not just what you have done.
Journal Prompts to Support Career Growth:
- What are five skills I currently have that I enjoy using?
- What skill have I always wanted to learn but haven’t started yet?
- What part of my current (or past) job do I feel most confident in?
- What industries or jobs interest me that I’ve never explored?
- What’s one new skill I can commit to learning this month?
- Who in my network is in a role I admire, and what skills do they have?
- How do I define career success for myself—not by society’s standards?
- What would it look like to create a job based on my skills instead of titles?
- What transferable skills do I have that could apply to multiple fields?
- What is one small step I can take today to grow professionally?
“Your skills are your superpower. Grow them, stretch them, share them—and watch your opportunities grow too.”
RosalynLynn
Be you so you can be free.