I was thinking back on my experience over the last 1 year and also for the past 10 years and if I could have done things a little differently.
I joined a company in 2022 and I enjoyed working there. The work, team mates etc were all good. I had no plans to leave and risk a bad boss and toxic workplace. So I closed my ears to any new opportunity. So 2023 rolled by and in Sept I got a call for a VP position from a startup. I ignored it.
Then some months later I got laid off along with 10% of the company. It was a brutal shock as I was working on the forward looking projects. A week later this startup contacted me again, it was a different recruiter saying I might not have seen the older message, and asking if I was interested. I jumped at it. I interviewed and had a very good interview with the CEO. Then I got rejected! The email said they decided to go with other candidates who matched better. Usual stuff. WTF, I thought. The CEO even said he would get me to meet with the other senior leaders. It does not seem that they hired anyone else though, as per Linkedin.
Anyway, but that got me thinking about what I should have done in the first place. I loved my job, but I should have been open to calls at all times. I closed my eyes and ears. I had done this thing in the past too and lost several potentially good roles. Now I am out of a job and the market is tough so it is going to be difficult to even get what I had earlier.
Lesson: Even if you don't turn your profile to "Open for Work" with the green thing on Linkedin, always turn the switch on to say that you are open. Monitor and read all messages and respond to the good ones that represent growth and upgrade. If you get it, then move, no matter how long you were with the current company. Do the same again. Be opportunistic and selfish. Greed is good, there is no loyalty.
So when I get my next role, this is going to be my new strategy. I am at Sr Manager, I want to be Director and have the qualifications and have put in the time and have been only doing lateral moves. I am unlikely to get a Director job now and don't want to wait endlessly and who knows when I will get promoted, so might as well upgrade myself when the opportunity presents itself.
Thoughts?
I joined a company in 2022 and I enjoyed working there. The work, team mates etc were all good. I had no plans to leave and risk a bad boss and toxic workplace. So I closed my ears to any new opportunity. So 2023 rolled by and in Sept I got a call for a VP position from a startup. I ignored it.
Then some months later I got laid off along with 10% of the company. It was a brutal shock as I was working on the forward looking projects. A week later this startup contacted me again, it was a different recruiter saying I might not have seen the older message, and asking if I was interested. I jumped at it. I interviewed and had a very good interview with the CEO. Then I got rejected! The email said they decided to go with other candidates who matched better. Usual stuff. WTF, I thought. The CEO even said he would get me to meet with the other senior leaders. It does not seem that they hired anyone else though, as per Linkedin.
Anyway, but that got me thinking about what I should have done in the first place. I loved my job, but I should have been open to calls at all times. I closed my eyes and ears. I had done this thing in the past too and lost several potentially good roles. Now I am out of a job and the market is tough so it is going to be difficult to even get what I had earlier.
Lesson: Even if you don't turn your profile to "Open for Work" with the green thing on Linkedin, always turn the switch on to say that you are open. Monitor and read all messages and respond to the good ones that represent growth and upgrade. If you get it, then move, no matter how long you were with the current company. Do the same again. Be opportunistic and selfish. Greed is good, there is no loyalty.
So when I get my next role, this is going to be my new strategy. I am at Sr Manager, I want to be Director and have the qualifications and have put in the time and have been only doing lateral moves. I am unlikely to get a Director job now and don't want to wait endlessly and who knows when I will get promoted, so might as well upgrade myself when the opportunity presents itself.
Thoughts?