Alexandra Humbel
  • Home
  • About
  • Coaching
  • Acclaimed Lives
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Book a Call
  • English
    • Français
    • English
  • Menu Menu
  • Link to LinkedIn
  • Link to Facebook

Tag Archive for: Professional development

How to Navigate a Career Transition: 6 Smart Strategies Backed by Experience

Career Transitioning
6-effective-strategies-to-save-you-time-in-your-career-transitionAlexandra Humbel

There are moments in a career when something shifts. Sometimes it’s external — restructuring, market evolution, unexpected redundancy.
Sometimes it’s internal — a growing restlessness, a loss of meaning, the quiet awareness that you’ve outgrown your role. In both cases, uncertainty can take over. The temptation is either to rush toward the first available solution or to freeze and wait for clarity to magically appear.

Over the years, working with executives and entrepreneurs in transition, I’ve noticed that the most successful moves are rarely reactive. They are intentional. Here are six anchors to hold onto when the ground feels unstable.

1. Slow Down to Think Clearly

When change hits, emotions rise fast: fear, anger, excitement, frustration, hope. All normal. All human.

But decisions taken in emotional turbulence tend to prioritize relief over alignment.

Unless you’re facing a genuine emergency, create space before making irreversible moves. Slowing down is not procrastinating. It’s strategic. Clarity rarely emerges from panic — it emerges from reflection.

2. Activate Your Network — It’s Larger Than You Think

When people enter transition, they often retreat. I suggest the opposite.

Reconnect intentionally. Call former colleagues. Meet peers. Reengage with your ecosystem — not only to ask for opportunities, but to exchange, contribute, and stay visible.

There is a structural reason for this: the majority of job opportunities are never publicly advertised. Various studies estimate that up to 70% of roles are filled through networking and informal channels rather than traditional job boards.

If you are not in conversations, you are invisible to that market. And here is something reassuring: people often remember your value more clearly than you do during moments of doubt.

3. Take a Holistic View of Your Life

A career transition is rarely just about work.

When we dig deeper with clients, the real questions often sound like this: I want more autonomy. I want to take better care of my health. I want less commuting. I want to use my full potential. I want time for family. I want intellectual challenge.

Your professional decision must integrate your health, financial needs, relationships, energy level, and appetite for learning. You are not redesigning a job. You are redesigning a life structure.

4. Build Your Invisible Support Team

Transitions can feel lonely. Confidence fluctuates.

I often think of Maya Angelou, who described imagining her support circle — family, mentors, ancestors — present with her during stressful moments. Even when physically alone, she drew strength from that inner board of advisors. You can do the same. Share your journey with people you trust. Borrow confidence when yours dips. Let others remind you of your track record when you momentarily forget it.

Support is not emotional comfort alone. It is psychological reinforcement.

5. Think Long-Term — Especially When You’re Tired

The stop-and-go rhythm of career transitions can be exhausting. Interviews that lead nowhere. Delays. Silence. False starts. This is often when people accept a role just to end the discomfort.

But short-term relief can create long-term misalignment.

Transitions test resilience because you cannot control timing. What you can control is your criteria. Stay anchored to the bigger picture of where you want to land — not just how quickly you want uncertainty to disappear.

6. Don’t Fixate on One Door

There is a subtle trap in career transitions: as soon as a promising opportunity appears — a specific role, a prestigious company, a well-known brand — it can quickly become the opportunity in your mind. And when it doesn’t work out, the disappointment can feel disproportionate, because you had attached your hope, identity, and future to it.

I see this often. Candidates become so focused on one process that they unconsciously narrow their field of vision. While waiting for that one answer, they overlook other conversations, delay follow-ups, or dismiss alternative paths that might actually align better with their long-term goals.

Direction matters. But attachment is risky. A career transition is an exploration phase. Every interview is data. Every conversation expands your understanding of what fits — and what doesn’t. The opportunity that transforms your trajectory may not be the one with the most recognizable name. It may be the one that better matches your values, your lifestyle aspirations, or your growth curve.

Stay committed to your criteria. Stay open about the vehicle. When one door closes, it’s not rejection. It’s redirection.

 

Career transitions are not interruptions. They are inflection points.

They ask you to combine emotional maturity, strategic thinking, and courage. When handled with intention — supported by networks, reflection, and long-term perspective — they often lead not just to a new role, but to a more aligned professional identity.

And sometimes, to a version of yourself that feels more solid than ever before.

by Alexandra Humbel
https://alexandrahumbel.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/6-effective-strategies-to-save-you-time-in-your-career-transition.jpg 533 800 Alexandra Humbel https://alexandrahumbel.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/alexandra-humbel-logo-tag.png Alexandra Humbel2023-12-18 01:24:432026-02-18 12:25:31How to Navigate a Career Transition: 6 Smart Strategies Backed by Experience

Career Reinvention After 40: When Passion Becomes Your Profession

Career Transitioning, Personal Development
from-hobby-to-career-a-sailing-passion-that-sets-sail-on-new-horizons

There comes a moment in life when we pause and ask ourselves a daring question: Could my passion become my profession?

In this testimonial, Benoit shares his journey from seasoned media executive to professional skipper — a bold career transition driven not by dissatisfaction, but by desire. His story is not about escaping a career. It is about answering a calling.

Chapter 1: A Lifetime on the Waves

Sailing had always been part of Benoit’s life. From childhood adventures at sea to becoming an instructor and competing in regattas, the ocean was more than a hobby — it was a constant source of energy and clarity.

Over the years, a quiet thought began to surface: What if this wasn’t just leisure? What if this was the real thing?

Chapter 2: The Awakening

Then came the pivotal realization:
“The clock is ticking. Today, I can do this — physically and mentally. I can turn my passion into my work. I can earn my autonomy doing something that truly excites me.”

This was not an impulsive decision. It was a lucid moment of alignment. He understood that energy, health, and drive are precious resources. If not now, when?

Chapter 3: Testing the Waters

Rather than jumping blindly, Benoit chose a strategic approach. For a full year, he researched the market, studied demand, and confronted the real questions:

  • Is this genuinely what I want long-term?
  • Will I still love it when it becomes my responsibility, not my escape?
  • Am I ready to let go of status, income stability, and familiarity?
  • Do I accept the financial, emotional, and lifestyle implications?

Career reinvention is not romantic. It is rigorous. Passion must meet reality.

Chapter 4: Setting Sail

Once the decision crystallized, action followed. Training. Certification. Positioning. Network activation.

The transition from media executive to professional skipper was not symbolic — it was operational. Skills had to be upgraded. Credibility had to be earned. A new professional identity had to be built.

Chapter 5: Living the Choice

Challenges came, of course. Entrepreneurship always brings uncertainty. But something fundamental had shifted: his work now generated energy instead of draining it.

When passion becomes responsibility, the stakes are higher — but so is the meaning.

Benoit’s journey is a powerful reminder: turning a hobby into a career is possible. But it requires clarity, courage, preparation, and a willingness to pay the price of transformation.

The real question is not “Can I?”
It is “Am I ready?”

by Alexandra Humbel
https://alexandrahumbel.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/from-hobby-to-career-a-sailing-passion-that-sets-sail-on-new-horizons.jpg 410 619 Alexandra Humbel https://alexandrahumbel.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/alexandra-humbel-logo-tag.png Alexandra Humbel2023-12-13 02:45:122026-02-18 10:49:58Career Reinvention After 40: When Passion Becomes Your Profession

From Career Stagnation to Growth: Practical Steps to Overcome Boreout

Career Reorientation, Personal Development
Breaking Free from Boreout: Empowering Your Career with Coaching - Alexandra Humbel CoachingAlexandra Humbel Coaching

Burnout Gets the Headlines. Boreout Drains You in Silence.

In the world of work, burnout and boreout are two very different traps. Burnout is loud. It comes with stress, overload, and visible exhaustion. Boreout is quieter, but no less destructive. It is marked by chronic under-stimulation, disengagement, monotony, and a subtle yet persistent sense of emptiness.

If you feel underused, unchallenged, or disconnected from meaning, take it seriously. Boreout can be just as soul-wrenching as burnout. As David Graeber powerfully illustrated in Bullshit Jobs, the absence of meaning at work erodes something fundamental. Even if your job is not absurd, repetition, lack of challenge, and the feeling that your contribution barely matters are red flags you should not ignore.

Here is how to begin breaking free.

1. Regain Clarity Before You Make a Move

Boreout often leaves you drifting. You may complain silently, scroll job boards half-heartedly, or make endless lists of “possible next steps” without taking action. Reflection can quickly turn into rumination.

Start with deeper questions instead. What energizes you? Where do you feel competent but underused? What kind of problems do you enjoy solving? Do not do this alone. A trusted friend, mentor, coach, or peer group can help you move from dissatisfaction to structured insight.

Clarity does not emerge from despair. It emerges from alignment.

2. Reignite Engagement — Where You Are or Elsewhere

Once you understand what is missing, you can explore options with a more open mind. Sometimes the solution is not to leave immediately but to redesign your role: take on a project, propose an initiative, ask for a move into a new department, develop a new expertise. Small injections of challenge can reignite momentum.

Other times, boreout is a signal that the environment itself has become too narrow for who you are becoming. In that case, the question is not “What is wrong with me?” but “Where would my energy be better used?”

Either way, you are no longer passive. You are experimenting.

3. Set Goals — and Make Them Concrete

Boreout thrives on inertia. The antidote is structured movement. Define what you want to explore and break it into actionable steps. One conversation. One course. One application. One proposal. Progress does not need to be spectacular to be transformative.

Accountability is powerful. Share your goals. Track your steps. Celebrate small wins. Momentum rebuilds confidence, and confidence fuels further action.

4. Develop What Wants to Grow

Very often, boreout hides a hunger for growth. Identify the skills you want to strengthen or acquire. Invest in learning. Take a course. Join a community. Explore a side project. Skill development is not only strategic; it restores a sense of expansion.

Growth creates energy. Stagnation drains it.

Boreout is a signal that your potential is under-challenged. Ignoring it may feel safe in the short term, but over time, disengagement erodes confidence and vitality.

If you recognize yourself here, consider this your invitation.  Not to resign tomorrow. But to listen carefully. Your boredom may be pointing toward your next evolution.

by Alexandra Humbel
https://alexandrahumbel.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Breaking-Free-from-Boreout-Empowering-Your-Career-with-Coaching-Alexandra-Humbel.jpg 850 1400 Alexandra Humbel https://alexandrahumbel.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/alexandra-humbel-logo-tag.png Alexandra Humbel2023-07-06 16:14:302026-02-16 19:03:32From Career Stagnation to Growth: Practical Steps to Overcome Boreout

Switch Language

  • Français
  • English
alexandra-humbel-sidebar-banner

Latest Articles

  • Still Relevant After 60 Years: The Rolling Stones Reinvention Playbook
  • How to Navigate a Career Transition: 6 Smart Strategies Backed by Experience
  • Career Reinvention After 40: When Passion Becomes Your Profession
  • Designing Your Second Act: 5 Long-Term Priorities for a Fulfilling Life and Career After 50
  • When Job Titles Define You: Overcoming Status Anxiety in Career Change

Follow us on Facebook

Alexandra Humbel
Logo image
Like us on Facebook
Join our Facebook community

Trending Topics

zooming outWynwood WallsWork-Life BalanceWork fulfillmentWisdom in the WorkplaceWellness after burnoutValery Guyot-SionnestUnlocking PotentialUnexpected Opportunities in CareerTriumphs in CareerTransformative JourneyTransformative Career PhaseTransformations after burnoutTransformationTraining OpportunitiesTime Management in Career TransitionThierry MuglerSupport in Career TransitionsSupport for workplace dissatisfactionSunk Cost FallacySuccess in Later YearsSuccess in Career TransitionStrategic Career Planningsoldier to leadersoldierSocial StatusSkill Diversification for LeadersSkill DiversificationSkill development for work satisfactionSetting career goalsSenior ProfessionalsSelf-ReflectionSelf-GrowthSelf-ConfidenceSecond Career PlanningSecond Act of LifeSecond ActSailing AdventuresRetirement AgeRetirementResilience in Long-Term Career GoalsResilience after burnoutRenewed EnthusiasmRenaissance ProfessionalsRenaissance PersonRenaissance Individual in WorkplaceRekindling work passionReinventing YourselfReinventing Professional IdentityReinvent YourselfReflection in LearningReflection and PrioritizationReflectionRediscovering professional purposeRediscovering passion after burnoutRedefining success post-burnoutRedefining SuccessRedefining RetirementRecovering from burnoutReality Checkralph laurenPursuing PassionsPurposeful WorkPurposeProfessional SkipperProfessional IdentityProfessional Growth StrategiesProfessional developmentProfessional AdaptabilityProactive Career MindsetPrioritiesPost-burnout opportunitiesPhased RetirementPersonal TransformationPersonal growth after burnoutPersonal growthPersonal development after burnoutPersonal DevelopmentPersonal Branding for Renaissance PersonPersonal Branding for ExecutivesPersonal and Professional GrowthPatience and Perseverance in CareerPassion Pursuitparadox of self-confidenceOwning Your WorthOvercoming Training ChallengesOvercoming Social AnxietyOvercoming limiting beliefsOvercoming burnoutOvercoming boreoutOpportunities in Later LifeOpen-Mindedness in Career ChoicesOpen Mindset in TrainingNew Career HorizonsNetworking for Career GrowthNegativityNavigating Social LimbosNavigating Mid-Career TransitionsNavigating ChallengesNavigating Career ChangesMultitalented ProfessionalsMultifaceted SkillsMultidisciplinary SkillsMulti-domain ExpertiseMotivational GoalsMotivation in LearningMisconceptions in Career ChangeMisconceptions about Career TransitionMisconceptionsMindsetMidlife Career ShiftsMarket AssessmentManaging Emotions in Career ShiftLong-Term GoalsLong-Term Career PlanningLifelong Learning for LeadersLifelong LearningLifelong HobbyLife's JourneyLife's AdventuresLife Lessonslife coachingLife ChangesLife ChangeLife After RetirementLife After LeadershipLife after burnoutLetting Go of Social WorriesLetting goLegacy BuildingLearning ProcessLearning JourneyLeadership ResilienceLeadership LessonsLeadership AdaptabilityLeadershipleaderLate Career TransitionJoyful CareerJean-Francis PecresseInterdisciplinary ThinkingIntentional LivingImpactful Career ChangeHolistic Approach to Career PlanningHobby to CareerHealth and WellnessHealing from burnoutGroundingGradual Career ShiftFulfillment in WorkFulfillment in Career ChangeFulfilling work lifeFulfilling Second ActFulfilling CareerFinding Fulfillment in Second CareersFear of ChangefashionExtensive TrainingExpectations in Career Transitions.Exiting CareerExecutive WellnessExecutive Transition StrategiesExecutive Mindset ShiftExecutive CoachingEvening Classes for Career ChangeEntrepreneurshipEnd of CareerEncore CareersEmpowerment in Career TransitionEmploymentEmployee disengagementEmerging SelfEmbracing New SkillsEmbracing New BeginningsEmbracing Multiple TalentsEmbracing Change in CareerEmbracing changeEmbracing Career TransitionsEd KushinsDecision-Making in Career TransitionDecision-MakingDealing with Career ChangesDealing with burnoutDealing with boreoutDaniel KahnemanCrystallized IntelligenceCross-Disciplinary ExpertiseCreative EndeavorsCovid-19Core Values in CareerContinuous LearningContinuous Career DevelopmentCombatting workplace monotonyCoaching StoriesCoaching for professional growthCoaching for boreoutClear Vision in Career Changeclassically neatChanging JobsChange of CareerChange ManagementChangeCareer Transitioning TipsCareer TransitioningCareer Transition TipsCareer Transition StrategiesCareer Transition MythsCareer transitionCareer reorientationCareer ReinventionCareer OpportunitiesCareer InspirationCareer GoalsCareer DecisionsCareer CoachingCareer ChangeCareer AdvicecareerBurnout vs boreoutBurnout recovery journeyBurnout RecoveryBurnout and self-careBurnout and career changeBuilding Positive Relationships in CareerBreaking through obstaclesBreaking free from boreoutBreaking Career StereotypesBoreout RecoveryBoreoutBoosting work engagementbig pictureBiasBenoit RunelBalancing Social and Career ChangesAvoiding work burnoutAutonomy in WorkAuthentic ImpactAligning Work with PassionsAlexandra Humbel CoachingAlexandra HumbelAging WorkforceAge and Job SuccessAge and Career ChoicesAdaptationAction PlanningAccountabilityAccelerated LearningShow MoreShow Less

STAY UP TO DATE

Stay connected and receive updates, free tools and resources.

Website by Done Digital
  • Link to LinkedIn
  • Link to Facebook
Scroll to top Scroll to top Scroll to top