A career is not a mathematical equation. Being at X by Y does not equal you will get to Z. It just doesn’t work like that.
When I look st a CV I tend to look ( and ask) at what legacy someone left behind, why are things different because they were there? If they can give a good answer they spent long enough. If they can’t then they are unlikely to progress in my process.
You have asked on numerous occasions about qualifications making up for experience. In fact you asked again this morning. They don’t. They won’t. They will not help you leapfrog 2-3 quality valued adding jobs or full experience gaps.
Generally if someone has been in the same admin level job for 10+ years then it will be very hard for them to demonstrate the added value and progression necessary.
Age discrimination is of course illegal. But my observation is that if you are going to make it to the very top jobs then it’s likely you will be in a “Head of” type role by late 30s/early 40s. Relatively few people break through fully after that - it is possible just harder and less likely. ( unless you transfer in from a senior job in another function)
Anyone who seriously suggests going away and holding down the same job for ten years to prove you are capable is talking nuts and I wound discount their advice.
In reply to Keith:
Age discrimination is of course illegal. But my observation is that if you are going to make it to the very top jobs then it’s likely you will be in a “Head of” type role by late 30s/early 40s. Relatively few people break through fully after that - it is possible just harder and less likely.In reply to Andre:
It is not ( in my opinion) a question of time served. In theory yes you could get the same number of years in by 65/70. But...but... but it’s unlikely to be the same. For all the legislation it would be very rare to get the very top jobs you seek in that way. Look at those profiles of HRDs etc. Do you see many in their 70’s or heaven for bid 80’s? It’s just not a model that people have adopted yet ( or I think are likely to)
Often HRDs tend to go into consultancy etc in late 50s as they tend to struggle to get new roles and that’s with experience.
Realistically you will get on if you can demonstrate added value and talent ( talent not more qualifications ) if your talent is not being recognised then ask yourself why?
In reply to Keith:
Having entered HR late at 40, on average some 10-15 years above the average, it would be fair to say that I have lost that time. Most people do not embark on a wholesale sector change at 40+ (think how difficult and time consuming it would be yourself to now retrain to be a news reporter) which gives an idea of the difficulty involved, but at least I can say that I broke into HR and have worked in HR.In reply to Andre:
As Keith and others have said in many posts :
I repeat what I have said in other posts - CIPD qualification levels certifY the possession of technical knowkledge, and not the demonstrated ability to use it in real life situations, that is done by the Member and Fellow membership level IMHO. It is technically possible to obtain a level 7 qualification however this alone does not guarantee the person has the proven track record operating at senior and strategic levels to be able to obtain the grade of Fellow or even Member.
Finally, I would reword Keith's comment about age and put it in terms of experience - getting a senior job usually requires 10-15 years of applied experience in jobs where responsibilities have increased over time. I have seen people enter the profession at 40+, and take a fast track to the top on the basis of the skills mentioned above, whilst relying on the heavy technical knowledge of their teams. The best R&D directors are rarely the "best" tecnical experts - their job is to coordinate, prioritise and manage others who handle the techy things. I also had the privilege of working with the CFO of a £90bn business of 200.000+ people in 67 countries; he became CFO at 42 and believe me, his technical skills were less and less important as he moved up the ladder.
In reply to Andre:
Andre, I started my CIPD qualifications at 40 or 41,In reply to David Perry:
Excellent post, David. Thank you..............and a total career or working life is around 50 years (some can push it to 60 years +) Wow! thats some working life. I think people plan to retire long, long before they've spent that long sitting behind a desk.
There's also plenty of evidence that very very few people stay on one career path for most of their working life. Such a shame to have your work & life? planned out like this.
In reply to David Perry:
That is so reassuring to hear David. I have worked for the same SME boss for over 20 years but in different businesses. I originally 'fell' into the HR remit taking on the admin, coordinating recruitment etc because there wasn't a separate HR function, but it soon became a genuine interest for me. Over the years, I have endeavoured to ensure my knowledge is up to date through a variety of methods and resources (not least CIPD!).
For various reasons I have not been able to do any formal CIPD qualifications on top of what I've already got going on but I would like to at some point; however for now I intend to make use of the excellent CIPD progression framework online modules which look like something I will be far better able to fit in alongside everything else I'm doing. I'm now the wrong side of 49, and 18 months ago I was promoted to HR Director, something which I still pinch myself about; I think I underestimate myself and my knowledge because I don't have that piece of paper with the formal qualification (and definitely some imposter syndrome sprinkled in for good measure!) but day to day when something comes up which I deal with to everyone's satisfaction it reminds me that I must be doing ok!
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