One of the most persistent myths about career change is this: you need years of retraining before you can even consider it.
Not necessarily.
One of my clients moved from being a CEO in the media industry to becoming a professional skipper, sailing clients across the Mediterranean. He already had sailing experience, but he knew the difference between a passionate amateur and a professional. So he committed to six months of intensive training, earned his professional skipper’s license, and graduated with honors.
I have also seen seasoned executives in advertising or finance enroll in professional culinary schools. They may be older than most students in the kitchen, but they are often the most focused and disciplined learners in the room.
The common denominator? Motivation
Of course, not every career transition needs to be radical. You may want to move into a new industry while leveraging your existing skills. Or remain in the same sector but shift departments, bringing fresh perspective and hard-earned expertise.
The challenge is that hiring managers and headhunters often struggle to look beyond linear CVs. Even when you possess strong transferable skills, they may hesitate if your experience doesn’t perfectly match the job description.
This is where strategy comes in
A short, targeted certification can help bridge the gap and signal serious intent. Continuous education — while still employed — can also reposition you. Some of my clients completed MBAs or executive programs alongside demanding roles. The days were long, but the return was powerful: renewed confidence, sharper positioning, and expanded opportunities.
Recent surveys consistently show that the desire to learn does not diminish with age. In fact, experience brings perspective, discipline, and clarity of purpose — three powerful accelerators in any learning journey.
If you are considering training as part of your transition, reflect on three things:
Assess your motivation
A 360-degree pivot requires time, financial investment, and lifestyle adjustments. Be clear about what you are signing up for. A gradual path — evening classes, certifications, modular programs — may suit you better. In every case, clarity of intention is your fuel.
Be candid with yourself
Experience is an asset, but it can also create blind spots. The very expertise that makes you strong in familiar environments can slow down new learning. Approach training with humility. Adopt the mindset of a beginner.
Activate your learning strengths
If you are competitive, aim to excel. If you are perfection-driven, use that energy to master the craft. If you are reflective, allow yourself to go deep. Mature professionals often learn faster because they understand who they are and why they are learning.
Training is not a barrier to career reinvention. It is a lever.
Once you are clear about your direction, education becomes a strategic move — not a burden. The question is not whether you are too experienced to learn something new. The real question is whether your motivation is strong enough to carry you through.
Because when it is, six months can change everything.

