Changing jobs doesn't help
Staying long enough to master the system
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Early in my career, I thought progress meant constant movement. Every time a recruiter called with an interesting job opportunity, I listened. Changing jobs felt like proof that I was advancing. The problem was that I was learning breadth, not depth. I was exposed to many systems but never fully understood how any of them worked.
It took me a few years to see that mastery takes time. The people who seemed to accelerate later in their careers were often those who had stayed long enough to understand how the business actually created value. They knew the real drivers of cost, the points of friction in the system, and the informal networks that made things happen. That understanding made them hard to replace and ultimately far more valuable.
When you stay long enough to master a system, you start to see how decisions are made above you. You learn what trade-offs your leaders face and how influence flows across the organisation. Those lessons do not appear in a job description, but they are what senior roles require.
This does not mean staying put forever. It means staying until you have built leverage. Move on when you reach a point where you are no longer learning anything new about how the business operates, or when your growth depends on experiences that only exist elsewhere.
Careers are marathons, not sprints. If every move is about chasing the next pay rise, you will gain income but lose momentum. If you build capability first, the pay will follow, and so will the authority that comes with genuine expertise.
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Your last sentence says it all….
. If you build capability first, the pay will follow, and so will the authority that comes with genuine expertise.