Congrats On The New Job! Now I Dare You To Show Up!

hiding in yellow

My audience of seasoned professionals come to leadership coaching knowing they want help to navigate their barriers so they can stop trying to solve the same career problem over and over again until retirement.

But I’ve learned not to focus on the problem. And see that more as a start-point for our solution! The right problem only becomes obvious in striving for career-life synergy.

It’s there when you:

    • Dare to hope for what you really want.
    • Make yourself vulnerable by trying.
    • Secure that exciting new role or promotion.


Let’s take Louise for instance.
Louise worked for a large consulting firm. Louise was utilized in her company and valued by her client-base. But had aspirations to climb above her technical to-do list and grow into leadership. Louise felt like a small, insignificant cog in a large, corporate wheel that wouldn’t listen.

Louise was also someone who coached kids’ football in her spare time. Her standout favorite experience as a coach was when the mom of a physically-impaired student acknowledged the amazing progress – and wider impact – Louise was having on her daughter’s life.

Bringing that kind of clarity back into her career meant Louise became ever more motivated to leave a legacy in her work, too. Ultimately, she took that clarity and pointed it at a very intentional job search.

But when she landed exactly what she wanted, it became a struggle to act according to that drive to make an impact.

  • She held back from demonstrating the good stuff she had spoken to in the process of securing the role.
  • She didn’t show up, telling herself she was observing, being sensitive while getting to know a new culture and fresh leadership.
  • She felt unseen, unheard, and unrecognized…and overwhelmed by how much felt wrong.
  • She started mind-reading about what her CEO was thinking of her.
  • Her inner critics chattered ever louder until she couldn’t sleep through the night.

Louise needed to navigate her inner barriers when she moved into the exciting, new role she secured. Or her elevation was at risk of circling the same career problem again.

Now, in one way, Louise wasn’t wrong – the company you keep in a new corporate home will make judgements about you as you start. Of course.

So it turned out the coaching “problem” wasn’t securing a career move that would give Louise the opportunity to have lasting impact and elevate her to leadership. That was the solution. The real problem was daring to be relentlessly herself once she arrived.

Unless we unpack our hidden pain points, we’re destined to achieve mere environmental change with any amount of job moves. Because everywhere we go, some new doubt will arise, triggering the same response pattern that made our tenure uncomfortable at the last place.

That’s the same career problem, again and again until retirement.

We worked through a few tools to find the right blend for her. She now captures the commentary of her inner critics in a journal. Her page is folded longways, and a day later, she revisits the notes to populate the more compassionate side of the page with evidence against the criticisms – praise from others, something achieved well – thanks and wins.

If jotting in a journal isn’t very you, I suggest setting up an email file. Call it “the good stuff,” or similar. Put every positive proof point from your real world in there. When you feel the call of your inner critics getting louder, you can dip in and spend a little (or a lot) of time calming the doubts holding you back from doing you. You’ll find you make room for another perspective at the least, and at best, come away feeling validated and ready to dare to do you.

Now Louise is flying. Demonstrating leadership and feeling comfortable as she does so. Because she gained perspective about the problem and backed her leadership. Her good stuff email folder is filling up for later and she knows it will be powerful when her inner critics dial up at the next junction of growth. As they always will.

We don’t always KNOW what to do or how to do it. But we know what feels right. We have opinions, strengths, and values.

Understand what you give value to and how to live into these things that matter, and you too will have confidence as you work to consolidate in your new role.

This article was first published on Forbes.com 

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