Essential Tips for Career Success

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

Summary

Achieving career success is about taking ownership, making intentional decisions, building relationships, and continuously developing skills. It’s not just hard work, but also strategic actions that make a lasting impact on your professional growth.

  • Advocate for yourself: Be proactive in sharing your ambitions and accomplishments with your manager and peers, as visibility and communication are key to career progression.
  • Build meaningful relationships: Connect with mentors, colleagues, and leaders who can support and amplify your growth by advocating for your achievements and potential.
  • Develop and showcase skills: Continuously learn new, in-demand skills and look for opportunities to demonstrate them through high-impact projects and contributions.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Mita Mallick
    Mita Mallick Mita Mallick is an Influencer

    Order The Devil Emails at Midnight 😈💻🕛 On a mission to fix what’s broken at work | Wall Street Journal & USA TODAY & LA Times Best Selling Author | Thinkers 50 Radar List | Workplace Strategist | LinkedIn Top Voice

    203,481 followers

    I spent too many years thinking my boss was responsible for my career. Or the company. Or a magical fairy godmother. I thought it was everyone else’s job to advocate for me. To push me. To help me advance and grow. And I completely missed the fact that it was me. It was always ME. Our job is to be the biggest advocate for our careers. We are in the driver’s seat. And we can’t take a back seat and expect someone else to do the driving. Here are ten ways to start advocating for your career not tomorrow, TODAY: 1️⃣ Take a seat at front of the table, not at the back of the room. Be visible. Log onto that Zoom early, make sure people know you are there. Don’t shrink to the corner of the screen or room. 2️⃣ Raise your hand 🙋🏾♀️ Ask that question. Show you’re engaged and thoughtful and there to contribute. I always ask a question early on in the meeting to build my confidence to contribute more later. 3️⃣ Ask to be put on that assignment Make sure you are working on assignments that are priorities for the company. Especially in this market. 4️⃣ Coach your peers on their work You don’t have to have direct reports to have influence. Guide peers who ask for your help: position yourself for the next level by acting like you are at the next level. 5️⃣ Build a career development plan If your boss won’t help you do this, ask a colleague to be a sounding boarding or a friend outside of work. Understand what your goals are this year and what you want your next two roles to be. 6️⃣ Focus on one new skill you want to build What’s one new skill you want to learn that can help with your career growth? Pick it and commit to it. Block 30 minutes on your calendar daily to work on it. Make this time non negotiable. 7️⃣ Take credit for your work Even if they won’t let you in that meeting, share what you are working on with others. Whether that’s it in 1:1 conversations or in team meetings, make sure you let others know the impact you are making. 8️⃣ Get meaningful feedback If your boss keeps saying you’re killing it or avoids giving your feedback, ask others. Show up with what you think your strengths are and areas of opportunity to get their reactions. 9️⃣ Keep a track of your wins Start a Google doc or grab a notebook, and down all of your wins and the end of every month. This makes it easier to do your self evaluation during performance review time and update your resume. 🔟 Always have your resume ready Whether you are looking for internal or external, always have your resume ready. And make sure it’s not saved on your work lap, especially in this market where layoffs are happening every day. How do you advocate for yourself at work? #leadership #culture #inclusion #MitaMallick

  • View profile for Loren Rosario - Maldonado, PCC

    Executive Leadership Coach for Ambitious Leaders | Creator of The Edge™ & C.H.O.I.C.E.™ | Executive Presence • Influence • Career Mobility

    29,483 followers

    Most people think career success comes from making the perfect decision. It doesn’t. It comes from making timely, values-aligned ones. Especially when the next step feels unclear. One of my clients, a brilliant VP, spent 3 months stuck on a single choice: “Do I speak up about being overlooked, or wait for my work to speak for itself?” She called it strategic patience. But it was really fear disguised as overthinking. We ran it through this framework. She made the call. Six weeks later, her promotion was fast-tracked. She was finally seen, heard, and most importantly, included. Because here’s what I tell every high-achiever I coach: You don’t need more time to decide. You need a better way to decide. Try the 2-Minute Decision Framework™ (Career Edition): 1. QUICK DECISIONS → Handle it NOW For low-stakes tasks that clog your mental bandwidth: → Can you respond to that email in < 2 minutes? → Is the request low risk and easily reversible? → Are you spiraling on something that just needs action? ✅ Do it. Momentum builds trust and confidence. (Your career doesn’t stall in the big moves, it drips away through tiny indecisions.) 2. TEAM DECISIONS → Resolve it TODAY For collaborative work or project bottlenecks: → Who’s recommending this approach? → Who’s doing the work? → Who’s accountable for the final call? ✍️ Assign roles. Align expectations. Move forward. (Most team confusion comes from no one knowing who’s driving.) Use this anytime you’re: – Leading a cross-functional project – Navigating performance reviews – Building team trust through shared clarity 3. CAREER DECISIONS → Make it THIS WEEK For decisions that affect your growth, visibility, and voice: Use the 3–2–1 Method: → 3 options: Brainstorm career paths, scripts, or solutions → 2 perspectives: Ask two mentors, not the whole internet → 1 call: Choose the path aligned with your long game 🎯 Clarity > complexity. Every time. This works for: – Deciding whether to advocate for a raise or promotion – Considering a lateral move for growth – Navigating visibility or speaking up on tough issues The truth is: courageous careers aren’t built on perfect plans. They’re built on small, aligned decisions made with intention. That’s C.H.O.I.C.E.® in action. So here’s your coaching moment: 🔥 Pick one decision you’ve been avoiding. Run it through the framework. Make the call within the next hour. Then ask yourself: What changed when I finally decided? ❓ What’s one career decision you’ve been sitting on too long? Share it below, or DM me, and we’ll run it through together. 🔖 Save this for your next “Should I…?” moment 👥 Tag someone who needs this framework in their toolkit Because alignment isn’t found in overthinking. It’s built through C.H.O.I.C.E.®. ➕ Follow Loren Rosario - Maldonado, PCC for tools that actually work in real life. #CareerCoaching #LeadershipDevelopment

  • View profile for Sarah Baker Andrus

    Helped 400+ Clients Pivot to Great $100K+ Jobs! | Job Search Strategist specializing in career pivots at every stage | 2X TedX Speaker

    16,770 followers

    It's easy freak out about the job market right now. But, there is a silver lining in all of this uncertainty. The smart move? Use this time to invest in yourself. I learned this the hard way, wasting too much time trying to make a move during the Great Recession and getting no results. At first, I panicked. Then I realized the job market was completely out of my control and decided to focus on something that wasn't: Expanding my skillset and getting a new certification. ⭐Within 10 months, I was promoted from recruiting to leading PR and external affairs. ⭐Within 4 years, I was recruited to a dream job Bottom line: This isn't the time to just sit back and relax. And panicking won't help. When the job market turns (and it will!) you want to be ready to go. Here's what to do now to set yourself up for success: 1️⃣ Create Your Own Opportunities ↳ Volunteer for high-visibility projects ↳ Solve problems nobody owns yet ↳ Document your wins meticulously 2️⃣ Build Strategic Relationships ↳ Network across departments and externally ↳ Find mentors who challenge your thinking ↳ Be the go-to person others count on for something specific 3️⃣ Learn In-Demand Skills ↳ Master data analysis and visualization ↳ Build AI savvy and experience ↳ Pick up tools to manage complex projects 4️⃣ Develop As A Thought Leader ↳ Share insights from your daily work ↳ Write internal newsletters or reports ↳ Present at team meetings consistently 5️⃣ Volunteer in Your Community ↳ Search for organizations aligned with your values ↳ Find out what help they need most ↳ Take on a leadership role to make connections or build skills 6️⃣ Teach Others ↳ Choose something you genuinely enjoy ↳ Take a deep dive into it so you can teach it to others ↳ Check out community centers, and local colleges for adjunct roles 7️⃣ Start a Side Gig ↳ What can you do that others can't or won't? ↳ Let friends, family and neighbors know what you're doing ↳ Ask people to refer you and share testimonials on social media 💡Career growth isn't just about changing jobs. It's about owning your own professional development. ♻️ Share to help others grow professionally. 🔔 Follow Sarah Baker Andrus for more career insights. 📌 Need help with your growth strategy? DM me to chat.

  • View profile for Sahil Bloom
    Sahil Bloom Sahil Bloom is an Influencer

    NYT Bestselling Author of The 5 Types of Wealth

    677,255 followers

    I get a lot of messages asking for career advice. Here are 10 pieces of career advice I wish I knew at 22: 1. Be the person who can figure it out. Early on, you'll be given a lot of tasks you have no idea how to complete. There's nothing more valuable than someone who can just figure it out. Do some work, ask key questions, get it done. People will fight over you. 2. Build a reputation for reliability. You can get pretty damn far by just being someone that people can count on to show up and do the work. Being reliable is entirely free. 3. Work hard first (and smart later). It's trendy to say that working smart is all that matters. Wrong. If you want to accomplish anything significant, you have to work hard. Work hard early—take pride in it. Then you can start to build leverage to work smart. 4. Build storytelling skills. World-changing CEOs aren't the smartest in their orgs. They are exceptional at: (1) Aggregating data and (2) Communicating it simply & effectively. Data in, story out. Build that skill and you'll always be valuable. 5. "Swallow the frog" for your boss. This is one of the greatest "hacks" to get ahead early in your career. Observe your boss, figure out what they hate doing, learn to do it, and take it off their plate. Easy win. 6. Be a "yes" person early in your career. Saying "yes" expands your luck surface area. It may mean you're a bit overwhelmed at times, but the benefits from the increased luck outweigh the downsides of feeling stretched. 7. Wake up early and work out. When you wake up early and work out, you do a hard thing to start your day that sets the tone. You start to self-identify as a winner. That has ripple effects all across your life. There's no such thing as a loser who wakes up at 5am and works out. 8. Dive through cracked doors. I recently had an experience to bring this to life: A young guy saw on my story that I was at a coffee shop working. He messaged me asking if he could come by and ask a question. I said ok. He got there an hour later and we hit it off. Turns out he lived far away and made it work. I'd always bet on people with that kind of energy. If someone cracks open a door that may present an opportunity, dive through it. 9. Show up early, stay late. Showing up early and staying late is a free way to materially increase your luck surface area. The most interesting side conversations come up before meetings start or after they end. When you're in the room, you're more likely to get pulled into a follow-up call, coffee, or discussion. It pays off handsomely in the long run. 10. Do the "old fashioned" things well. Look people in the eye, do what you say you'll do, be early, practice good posture, have a confident handshake. It sounds silly, but these things are all free and will never go out of style. *** Embrace those 10 pieces of advice and you'll stand out and be on the right track. If you enjoyed this, share it with others and follow me Sahil Bloom for more in the future!

  • View profile for Kyle Buerger, MBA

    Empowering Rising Leaders through Executive Coaching | Team Development | Creating Cultures of Ownership | MBA Instructor

    2,356 followers

    The skills that get you to director won't get you to VP. Technical expertise builds careers.  Soft skills accelerate them. I've watched countless professionals hit plateaus  Not because they lacked expertise, But because they underinvested in the fundamental skills that amplify impact. 8 Soft Skills That Drive Career Advancement: 1. Adaptability: Update your work habits regularly to match changing conditions instead of protecting comfortable routines. 2. Communication: Ask for specific feedback on how you come across rather than assuming your message lands as intended. 3. Emotional Intelligence: Use personality assessments as tools for understanding, not labeling yourself or others. 4. Continuous Learning: Join study groups to learn collectively rather than trying to master everything independently. 5. Time Management: Apply the Eisenhower Matrix to distinguish between urgent and important rather than treating everything as critical. 6. Teamwork: Learn to navigate disagreements productively instead of avoiding necessary conflict. 7. Strategic Thinking: Develop frameworks and analyses to make decisions based on data and logic rather than gut feelings alone. 8. Influence: Learn from leaders you admire by studying their approach, not just their achievements. The difference between good and exceptional often comes down to these foundational capabilities. What soft skill gap is holding back your next career move?

  • View profile for Lorraine K. Lee
    Lorraine K. Lee Lorraine K. Lee is an Influencer

    📘Grab bestseller Unforgettable Presence to go from overlooked to unforgettable 🎙️ Corporate Keynote Speaker & Trainer 👩🏻🏫 Instructor: LinkedIn Learning, Stanford 💼 Prev. Founding Editor @ LinkedIn, Prezi

    330,264 followers

    The best promotions don't go to the most talented people. I’ve worked with thousands of professionals in my career. If there’s anything I’ve noticed after a decade in tech, it’s the fact that the promotions and high-visibility projects go to those with advocates. Here are the key reasons why advocates are essential for career growth (and some practical tips to gain and nurture them) 🔵 Advocates amplify your visibility. ↳ They talk about your achievements to others. This spreads your name and work beyond your immediate circle. 𝗧𝗶𝗽: If you’re a heads down person like me, it’s time to lift your head up to build relationships with colleagues and mentors who can vouch for your skills and contributions. 🔵 Advocates provide opportunities. ↳ They recommend you for projects and roles. This opens doors that you might not even know exist. 𝗧𝗶𝗽: Show your value consistently so that advocates feel confident in recommending you. 🔵 Advocates build your credibility. ↳ They lend their reputation to yours. This enhances your professional standing and trustworthiness. 𝗧𝗶𝗽: Maintain integrity and professionalism to ensure advocates are proud to support you. 🔵 Advocates ensure your efforts are recognized. ↳ They make sure your hard work is seen by decision-makers.This leads to promotions and career advancement. 𝗧𝗶𝗽: Document your achievements and share them with your advocates regularly. Bonus: 🔵 Advocates help you build a network. ↳ They introduce you to influential people. This expands your professional connections and opportunities. 𝗧𝗶𝗽: Your network is one of the most valuable things you’ll take with you in your career. Don’t let these opportunities go to waste! Seize the opportunity to build strong advocates and supercharge your career in the final months of 2024. If you’re not sure where to find your first advocate, try building a good relationship with your manager. Here’s my FREE LinkedIn Learning Course that can help you turn your managers into your #1 advocates: https://lnkd.in/gPXXNckd 💬 What are your obstacles when it comes to finding advocates at work?

  • View profile for Akosua Boadi-Agyemang

    Bridging gaps between access & opportunity || Global Marketing Comms & Brand Strategy Lead || Storyteller || #theBOLDjourney®

    110,162 followers

    Career tip for those Early in Career: ✨a series ✨ Advocating for yourself in the workplace is essential for career growth and success. Here are 4 key things to know (and what I’ve learned through my own journey thus far): 1️⃣ Speak Up with Confidence Your perspective matters! Don’t hesitate to share your ideas or insights during meetings or discussions. Advocating for your contributions not only highlights your value but also builds your confidence over time. To do this, you don’t have to block other people’s voice — part of this skill is knowing when, where and how to speak up. Mastering this will set you apart. 2️⃣ Set Clear Boundaries Know your limits and communicate them. Whether it’s managing workload or addressing unrealistic expectations, advocating for your well-being helps maintain balance and ensures you can deliver your best work. I’ve found when I’m super overwhelmed it shows in how I communicate — taking a step back with clear boundaries will do more good for you. 3️⃣ Track and Showcase Your Achievements Keep a record of your wins—big or small. Highlighting your accomplishments during performance reviews or casual conversations with your manager (peers, other leaders) this demonstrates your impact and sets you up for opportunities. 4️⃣ Build a Support Network Advocacy isn't a solo journey. Build relationships with mentors, sponsors, allies, and peers who can amplify your voice and advocate for you when you're not in the room. 💡Advocacy is about finding your voice and ensuring it’s heard in a way that aligns with your values and goals. It’s a skill worth mastering! What are your top tips for self-advocacy? I'd love to hear your thoughts in the comments. ⬇️ #theBOLDjourney #EarlyInCareer

  • View profile for Shelley Piedmont🧭

    Clarity↣Strategy↣Hired For Managers to VPs • Job Search Strategist & Interview Coach • Career Coach, Job Change Advisor & Resume + LinkedIn Advisor

    37,095 followers

    "Just work hard and you'll get noticed" might be the worst career advice ever given. I believed it until I saw the reality when the curtain was drawn back when I entered HR. Time after time, I witnessed the same scenario unfold. The #1 department performer would focus solely on working harder than others and delivering high-quality work, assuming it would naturally lead to recognition and promotion (that was me). But the person who did get the promotion? Often, it was the #2 performer who was actively communicating with their manager about their desire to move up. While the top performer worked in silence, the #2 performer was: →Volunteering for additional projects →Asking for feedback from the boss and acting on it →Making their development goals visible to leadership →Having regular conversations about career aspirations The result? The #1 performer was passed over for promotions, while the more visible #2 performer advanced. Once I understood the game, I played it with good results. Diana Alt and I also covered in my recent podcast appearance on her Work Should Feel Good podcast: →Interview red flags that both candidates miss →How to identify your motivating vs. burnout skills →Redefining career success beyond traditional metrics →Leveraging your natural strengths for career changes →The four pillars of finding work that fits (YouMap® method) It was a great conversation. Take a listen. The link to the full podcast is in the comments section. ---------- 💜 Helping mid-career professionals find clarity, build confidence, and land jobs they love. 📖 Follow me for career tips, job search strategies, and interview advice. 💌 Need support in your career journey? Reach out—I’m here to help!

  • View profile for Oz Rashid
    Oz Rashid Oz Rashid is an Influencer

    Founder | CEO | Podcast Host | AI + Future of Work Advocate | 15,000+ Corporate Hires Across 43 Companies

    12,918 followers

    Early-stage career advice: do all of the things that NOBODY else wants to do. When I was 24, I got promoted to a management role. I didn't get there because I schmoozed my tail off in the pursuit of promotions - I got there because I was the only one willing to take notes in meetings. So here are my top 3 pieces of advice to accelerate your career and maybe make yourself irreplaceable to your employer: 1. Don't work smarter, work harder Earn the right to work smart by working hard FIRST. Take pride in embracing the grind. Then, once you've earned your stripes, you can build up to working smart.    2. Rise above "doing your best" "Doing your best" falls short, especially in the early stages of your career. Instead, focus on what's essential to win. And propel yourself towards victory.   3. Be the go-to guy/gal who figures it out You don't know how to complete a task? That's normal. Now go out, ask questions, and get it done. Because it's powerful to be the person with the reputation for just figuring it out. By doing these 3 things, I quite literally got the life experience of a 40-year-old by my mid-20s. Simply by offering to do the mundane tasks that nobody else wanted to do. Nobody wanted to take notes - but everybody wanted a record of what the heck went on in those board rooms. And so everybody came to - and fought over - me. 😅 Anything you'd add to the list?

  • View profile for Anne Genduso
    Anne Genduso Anne Genduso is an Influencer

    Career Coach & Growth Strategist🚀 | Empowering mid-career pros to level up, build influence, & grow with purpose and momentum | Founder, Career Level-Up Collective | LinkedIn Top Voice | Leadership & Career Development

    9,608 followers

    Are you leaving your career growth in someone else's hands? For years, I thought hard work alone was the key to career success. --> Work hard. --> Keep my head down. --> Wait my turn. Then, a promotion or new opportunity would magically appear. Right? Wrong. I remember feeling stuck in my role, watching others move ahead while I kept doing “all the right things," yet getting nowhere. It was frustrating—until I finally realized: 💡 Career growth isn’t just about working hard. It’s about working strategically. Hard work makes you qualified, but visibility gets you chosen. Opportunities aren't given—they're created. If I could go back and give my younger self advice, I’d say: ✦ Speak up about your ambitions. Don’t assume people know what you want or will automatically reward your hard work. ✦ Build relationships with decision-makers and influencers. Turn them into vocal advocates to champion your growth. ✦ Stop waiting for permission to level up. Create opportunities to gain greater responsibility, and take control of your career path. If you’ve ever felt overlooked, stuck, or stagnant, know this: ✨ Your career growth isn’t in someone else’s hands. It’s in yours. Your turn to share: What’s one career lesson you learned the hard way? 👇Drop it in the comments to help someone who needs to hear it! #CareerDevelopment #CareerGrowth #Leadership #EmpoweredByAnne #CareerCoach

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