Stop saying you made a career change.
There’s no such thing as a new career. And you didn’t start from scratch.
That way of thinking belongs to a world where your career was tied to a profession. You trained for it. You got a degree. You climbed a ladder. Then one day, maybe, you switched ladders.
That world is gone.
According to LinkedIn, professionals entering the workforce today are on pace to hold twice as many jobs over their careers as they did 15 years ago—driven by shifts in technology, skills, and the rise of AI. So your new job isn’t a career change. It is your career, just in its next form. You didn’t switch professions—your profession is evolving.
Research from the Burning Glass Institute shows that today’s jobs are increasingly hybrid—combining skills from multiple domains and redefining traditional career paths. And so you move across roles, industries, and labels. You don’t trade one job title for another—you build on everything you’ve done to find new ways to apply your skills and grow.
So if you’ve just made a move—into a new field, a new role, a new domain—don’t tell yourself you’ve become “junior” again. That’s not how it works.
You’re not back at square one. You’re higher up on the climbing wall.
When people talk about career changes, they often try to justify themselves. “I know I’m new to this,” they say. “I’m still learning.” They downplay their worth. They start over in their own minds.
Let’s stop doing that.
If you spent 10 years in banking, realized it’s not what you want to be doing, studied design, and are now a “junior” in a media company—you’re not junior. Because you’ve got years of experience. You know how to plan your work, deliver on deadlines, collaborate with peers and customers, manage up. You’ve learned to communicate, influence, network, build trust, and work under pressure.
And you’ve continued to develop, evolve, and update your skills.
These things didn’t disappear when you took a new title. You didn’t erase them when you stepped into a different role.
They’re your foundation. They’re your advantage.
You’re not a junior at work. Just because you’ve shifted domains, there is no reason to shrink your story.
Four Things to Remember When You Feel Like a Junior
1. You Didn’t Change Careers. You Grew.
“Career change” implies you left something behind. But what you’ve actually done is build on your experience, update your skills, and apply them in a new context. That’s growth—not a reset.
Start by identifying the foundational skills and capabilities you still bring. For example, a teacher who moves into learning experience design didn’t leave education—they brought with them a deep understanding of learning psychology, content structure, and facilitation. A marketer who becomes a product manager isn’t starting over—they’re expanding their range.
2. You’re Only “Junior” in One Dimension.
Maybe you’re new to the tools, the systems, the outputs. That’s fine. But what about your ability to work in teams? To navigate complex projects? To ask better questions?
Your value at work is more than just the “hard” skills of the trade. Much of it relies on what we now call power skills—what we used to call “soft skills.” The great news? These skills transfer with you, no matter the job.
If you’ve ever trained someone, managed a crisis, delivered under pressure, or led cross-functional collaboration—those are not junior-level capabilities. They move with you.
3. Know What Gives You an Edge—and Talk About It.
Cross-functional experience is more valuable than ever. When industries and domains collide, those who speak multiple “languages” have an advantage.
If you’ve moved into what’s considered a new profession or industry, that means you bring something others don’t: a different lens, a unique background, instincts trained elsewhere.
Make your edge visible. Learn how to articulate the throughline between your past and your present. It’s a strength—not a liability.
An architect who now works in urban tech can spot structural blind spots others miss. A psychologist working in user experience knows how to surface unmet needs. If you made the move, you already sensed the value you’d bring. Now say it out loud.
4. Trust the Convergence. It’s Coming.
Early on, everything feels disconnected—your background, your new role, the steep learning curve, the unfamiliar language.
But give it time. There will be moments when your previous experience lets you see what others miss. Or when you realize you’ve done this before—just under a different name.
That’s when you stop feeling like an outsider and start realizing you’re ahead.
It’s the moment when your product team sees how your legal background helps avoid risks. Or when your storytelling skills from journalism unlock better executive presentations. It won’t feel like a coincidence—it’ll feel like confirmation.
Of course, there are things you still need to learn. That’s true for every growth move. But those gaps? They’re not proof you don’t belong. They’re just the next grip on the wall—part of your development, not your deficiency.
If you see yourself as “junior” just because you don’t yet speak the jargon, you’re missing the point.
You’re not starting over. You’re evolving.
Your career isn’t a ladder anymore—it’s a climbing wall. And you just reached for the next hold.