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  • You Don’t Plan a Career Switch. You Explore One.

Blog

27 Jun

You Don’t Plan a Career Switch. You Explore One.

  • By salomons.coach
  • In Blog, Change & Transformation, Self & Personal Growth, Tools & Methods, Web Courses & Programs
Blue gradient hero with a golden dotted path winding from left to right toward a compass on the right; headline reads 'You don’t plan a career switch. You explore one.'

Career Transition · The 4R Model

You Don’t Plan a Career Switch. You Explore One.

How the Pioneer Map and The Expedition help senior leaders navigate a deliberate career change, and the theory beneath the method.


Senior leaders are trained to remove uncertainty. Forecast it, model it, de-risk it, close it down. That discipline is exactly what made them senior.

Then comes the career switch, and every instinct they trust turns against them.

They build the business case. They benchmark the market. They wait for the data to confirm the move. And the move never comes, because the data they are waiting for can only be produced by making the move. The leader who can restructure a division freezes in front of their own next chapter.

You cannot analyse your way into a new identity. You have to explore your way into it.

I coach executives and executive teams, and increasingly, I coach the career switch itself: the move into a new sector, a founder role, a portfolio of board seats, a reinvention that the org chart never accounted for. This work sits in the Re-Align → Rise phase of my 4R Model (Reflect · Reset · Re-Align · Rise™), and I run it through two connected exercises delivered on Salomons.Coach.App: the Pioneer Map and The Expedition.

One is orientation. The other is movement. A map without an expedition is a fantasy. An expedition without a map is a wander. Senior careers are pivoted by holding both.

The Pioneer Map: cartography of the self, before the market

Most transition advice starts with the market, vacancies, sectors, headhunters. The Pioneer Map starts one step earlier, with the only fixed point a leader actually owns: themselves.

The exercise asks the executive to chart four things. Their magnetic north, the values that don’t bend. Their proven terrain, the capabilities already earned and transferable. Their no-go zones, the environments and trade-offs they will not re-enter, often the most clarifying part. And the white space, the unexplored ground that pulls at them but can’t yet be named.

A pioneer does not map territory they have already crossed. They mark what they know, fix their bearings, and draw a hypothesis about what lies beyond the edge. That is the posture the exercise builds.

The theory beneath the map

The Pioneer Map draws on four bodies of work. Edgar Schein’s career anchors, the self-concept of talents, motives and values a person will not give up, supply the magnetic north. Markus & Nurius’ possible selves frame the white space as a set of futures one could become, not a single destination to be found. Herminia Ibarra’s working identity reframes identity as plural and discovered in motion rather than excavated by introspection. And Mark Savickas’ career construction / life design treats a career as a narrative the leader authors, not a ladder they climb. The map is where that narrative gets its coordinates.

The Expedition: a map is not a journey

Clarity is seductive. Many leaders mistake a good map for progress and stall there, endlessly refining the plan, never leaving base camp. The Expedition exists to break that spell.

It converts the map’s white space into a sequence of small, deliberate experiments: a conversation, a pilot project, a fractional engagement, a public point of view, a week shadowing a different world. Each is designed to be survivable if it fails and informative either way. The leader stops asking “Is this the right path?” and starts asking “What does this next step teach me?”

The Map

Orientation. Where you stand, what you carry, where you will not go, and which direction pulls. Reflection that produces bearings.

The Expedition

Movement. Small, affordable experiments that turn the unknown into evidence. Action that produces a new identity.

The theory beneath the expedition

The Expedition lives in what William Bridges called the neutral zone, the disorienting in-between where the old role has ended but the new one hasn’t begun, where most transitions are won or abandoned. It runs on Ibarra’s test-and-learn logic: act your way into a new way of thinking through provisional selves and small bets. John Krumboltz’s planned happenstance turns curiosity, persistence, flexibility, optimism and calculated risk into a way of engineering luck rather than waiting for it. Saras Sarasvathy’s effectuation tells the executive to start from their means and act within an affordable loss, the antidote to the all-or-nothing leap. And Nancy Schlossberg’s 4 S’s, Situation, Self, Support, Strategies, are the kit they pack before they walk.

Why Salomons.Coach.App

A career switch is not decided in the coaching room. It is decided in the weeks between sessions, in the second thoughts, the quiet experiments, the conversation that went somewhere unexpected. Salomons.Coach.App lets me hold that space. The Pioneer Map and The Expedition arrive as structured, reflective work the leader completes in their own time, logs as they go, and brings back as evidence. It turns coaching from a fortnightly conversation into a continuous practice. Depth, not a one-off worksheet.

The app holds more than 250 activities, exercises, surveys, 360 feedback, metaphors, assessments, worksheets, meditations, reflections and more. Single activities rarely move a leader on their own. So they are often bundled into a Pathway, a proven sequence designed to carry a coachee through a real transformation rather than a single insight. The Pioneer Map and The Expedition are two stages of exactly such a Pathway.

What it has produced so far

This is not theory in a drawer. To date I have guided twelve senior leaders through a deliberate career-switch decision. Ten made the move, into new sectors, founder ventures, portfolio and board careers. Two chose to stay, almost certainly for very good reasons.

12 senior leaders coached through a career-switch decision. Ten switched. Two stayed, on purpose, and that counts as a result too.

The pattern is consistent. None of them moved, or stayed, by planning harder. They mapped honestly, then ran experiments small enough to survive and sharp enough to teach. For ten, the experiments pointed outward. For two, they confirmed that the ground they already stood on was the right ground. A career switch you decide not to make, with clear eyes, isn’t a failure of the method. It is the method working.

The leaders who get stuck are waiting for certainty. The ones who switch go and manufacture it.

If you are a senior leader sensing that your next chapter won’t be a promotion of the last one, the work is the same as it ever was: stop trying to think your way out, and start exploring your way through. Draw the map. Then run the expedition.

Considering a career switch at the top of your field?

The Pioneer Map and The Expedition are part of how I coach senior transitions in the Re-Align → Rise phase of the 4R Model. Start a conversation at Salomons.Coach.

Jan Salomons, Executive Coach & Transformation Consultant, Salomons.Coach. Member, Harvard Business Review Advisory Council. 35+ years in leadership, 20+ years coaching C-suite leaders across 55+ countries.

Tags:careerchangecoachingexecutive-coachingreflectionself-awareness
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Jan Salomons is an international executive leader turned leadership specialist and executive coach with over 35 years of experience across IT, transport, and semiconductors. His senior roles in HR, L&D, operations, transformation, and portfolio management—combined with work in 50+ countries—give him a rare, practical understanding of how leadership behavior drives organizational success in high-pressure environments. Jan founded Salomons.Coach to help executives and teams create visible behavioral change and measurable results. In 2024, he joined the Harvard Business Review Advisory Council. Today he partners with CEOs and executive teams who want leadership behavior to become the engine of performance and transformation.

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