Not all career transitions are born from desire or ambition.
Sometimes they arrive without warning. A department shake-up. A skill that’s fallen behind. A shifting business model that sidelines your role. You weren’t dissatisfied or disengaged. You weren’t on the hunt for your next move. But something shifted — and it wasn’t you.
That’s what makes these moments uniquely disorienting.
When change starts from within, we tend to wrap it in noble language — reinvention, growth, purpose. But when career shifts are forced upon us, they hit differently. They upend plans we carefully mapped out. They interrupt strategies and shake identities built on progress and consistency.
Suddenly, we’re answering questions we didn’t ask. Yet the steps required of us remain the same.
A career never truly collapses overnight. The signs are usually there beneath the surface in the form of vague feedback, or influence moving elsewhere; this pattern is especially clear in the age of AI.
A data analyst who once spent their day building reports now watches as tools generate insights in real time. A customer service agent sees chatbots take over routine queries. A marketing pro notices content creation speeding up, but the real bottleneck becomes human judgment.
In many cases, job titles remain and performance appears solid. Because the changes are not the result of personal failures, they’re market shifts. But since they appear from the outside, they’re easy to dismiss.
We tell ourselves it’s temporary. That leadership will change course. That tenure alone will shield us. We confuse signals with background noise because we never signed up for this change.
And that’s the real danger.
Responding to external shifts requires a different kind of awareness. It’s not about asking, “What do I want?” but instead, “What’s changing around me — whether I like it or not?”
When change is something done to us rather than chosen by us, action feels heavier, even riskier.
That’s where many get stuck. Even if we see the signs, we don’t see the way forward. When change is something done to us rather than chosen by us, action feels heavier, even riskier. That’s why structure matters more than ever.
Here’s a three-step process to help you recalibrate your career — even when the change wasn’t your choice.
Step 1: Spot the External Signals Impacting Your Career
The first move is learning to view the signs structurally, not emotionally. What kinds of work are being deprioritized? What areas are attracting resources? Where is authority moving? Which skills are quietly vanishing from job descriptions? What conversations are you no longer part of?
A useful shortcut is to ask how AI is changing your current responsibilities. Which parts of your job are already being done faster or cheaper by tech — even if you don’t fully understand the how? If you can envision a task being automated or redesigned, that hunch is a sign that your role is shifting.
Step 2: Understand That Ignoring Change Won’t Stop It
Second, realize that resistance doesn’t protect you — it only postpones the hard work of adapting. External change feels unfair because it breaks the rhythm we relied on. But when careers are built purely on stability, they become brittle in the face of disruption.
One powerful way to move forward is to let go before you choose what’s next. What parts of your professional identity would you actually feel relief releasing? What roles or responsibilities no longer match how you want to live and work?
Often, it’s easier to identify what you’re ready to leave behind than what you’re running toward. That awareness alone can shift your mindset from loss to opportunity.
Step 3: Act Before the Situation Forces Your Hand
The hardest step is translating awareness into action. That doesn’t mean making a dramatic exit or panicking. It means broadening your inputs.
Talk to people in different fields, industries, or career stages. Explore tools, ideas, or communities outside your current focus. Learn something just because it piques your interest. Change begins with curiosity often long before it leads to a new title.
This is where people stall. They see the trend. They acknowledge the shift. But taking action feels too soon, too uncertain. And because this wasn’t the plan, it feels like a deviation instead of growth. But avoiding change has its own risks — to your reputation, your finances, and your sense of self.
As a new year rolls in, many professionals find themselves confronting this exact scenario. Change is here, whether you’re ready or not. You can’t slow down technology, markets, or business models.
Disruption will happen. The only thing left to decide is whether you’ll let it define your path, or start shaping it yourself.
You didn’t ask for this next chapter. But you still get to write it.

Dr. Gleb Tsipursky – The Office Whisperer
Nirit Cohen – WorkFutures
Angela Howard – Culture Expert
Drew Jones – Design & Innovation
Jonathan Price – CRE & Flex Expert











