How to Pivot With an Unrelated Degree

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Summary

Pivoting with an unrelated degree involves strategically transitioning into a new career field by leveraging transferable skills, crafting a compelling narrative, and building relevant connections, even if your previous experience doesn't align directly with the new role.

  • Highlight transferable skills: Align your existing experience with the demands of your target role by identifying skills, such as problem-solving or project management, that hold value across industries.
  • Research and rebrand: Understand your desired industry by learning its language, trends, and requirements, then tailor your resume and professional narrative to demonstrate your fit for the transition.
  • Take proactive steps: Build credibility by gaining relevant experience through freelancing, volunteering, or passion projects, and create connections with industry professionals to learn and grow.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Leslie Crowe

    Partner at Bain Capital Ventures | MuleSoft, Dropbox, & Navan Alum

    4,981 followers

    Software to Hardware. Banking to Tech. B2B SaaS to ClimateTech. [insert basically anything] to AI. ↔ Career shifts come in all shapes and sizes, but shifting an industry can be challenging, particularly in a tighter hiring market where experience is valued. Over the years, I’ve interviewed hundreds of people who are looking to move into a new industry and I’ve found a few things influence whether or not someone will be successful at making the leap. 1️⃣ Find the thread - If you want to make a change, it’s your responsibility to craft a story that makes sense. Don’t force the person reading your resume or interviewing you to guess why you’re able to make this jump. At MuleSoft, I interviewed a program manager at a non-profit for a recruiting role. Sounds completely unrelated, but throughout the interview, she did the best job showing me how many of the things she had accomplished in her role actually translated incredibly well to recruiting. She took the guesswork out of it for me and actually convinced me over the course of the interview that she knew enough about the job and had enough of the skills that she could make the pivot. As you’re prepping for your interviews, make a list of all the things you’ve done that translate to working in the new industry and make it a point to share those in your conversations.  2️⃣ Do your research - I’m the biggest fan of benchmarking conversations when you’re hiring for a role on your team. The same logic applies here - find people who are experts in the industry you want to pivot into and ask if they’d spend 15 minutes with you so you can get advice on how to pivot. Come prepared with great questions and soak up the trends, lingo, etc. Doing even 3-5 of these calls will make you sound exponentially smarter and better researched for your interviews. 3️⃣ Ask great questions - Basic, surface-level questions, “what’s it like to work here?” indicate you haven’t done your homework and send a red flag that you’re potentially unable to make the shift. At Dropbox, I interviewed an equity analyst from a big bank for an Enterprise AE job. Sounds like quite a jump, but he asked the best questions about the product and company. He understood the role we were hiring for and sounded like he had been in our industry for years. His intellectual curiosity sold us on his ability to make the jump. 4️⃣ Network hard into companies - Part of the challenge in making a career shift is being able to get your story across on why you can make the leap. A reference at the company where you hope to work can do this for you. Maybe it’s not an obvious connection, but see if you can dig deep. For example, you may find a past coworker who knows an investor in a company you’re interested in, and that investor may be able to forward your information, with the appropriate color, to the hiring manager or recruiting leader so you get a proper look. What else have you all seen that’s been useful for those trying to switch industries?

  • View profile for Daniel Wolken

    Land your dream remote job - DailyRemote.com  | Remote Work Expert | Connecting professionals to thousands of remote jobs worldwide  | Sharing fresh remote opportunities & career advice every day

    60,462 followers

    Thinking about a career change? Here’s how to actually make it happen, step by step. I’ve spoken with hundreds of people stuck between “I don’t want to do this anymore” and “But where do I even start?” Here’s the truth: Changing careers isn’t about starting over. It’s about repackaging what you already know, and proving you can solve a new set of problems. Here’s how to do it (with examples): 1. Start with your story. What’s pulling you away from your current path—and what’s pulling you forward? ✅ Example: “I’ve spent 6 years in education, but what I really loved was designing systems and learning tools. I’m now pivoting into UX design for edtech.” Make the shift clear and intentional. 2. Identify your transferable skills. You’ve built real value, name it. ✅ Example: Sales → Relationship-building, persuasion, handling objections Ops → Process design, cross-functional collaboration, execution List your strongest 4–6 skills and align them with your new target role. 3. Learn the language of the new industry. Every field has its own lingo. Start speaking it. ✅ Tip: Search 10 job listings in your target role. Write down the top 5 repeated words/phrases. Mirror those in your LinkedIn, resume, and pitch. 4. Rewrite your resume to match the direction, not the past. Lead with relevance, not chronology. ✅ Example: Add a “Career Summary” section: “Operations leader transitioning into product management, with 7+ years leading cross-functional teams, driving process improvements, and delivering results.” 5. Build proof fast. Don’t wait to get hired to show your skills. ✅ Options: Freelance Volunteer Build your own project Take a short course and create a case study Demonstrate that you’re not just interested, but also taking action. 6. Apply smart, not just often. Instead of applying everywhere, focus on quality roles in flexible environments. ✅ Pro tip: Use DailyRemote to find legit, remote-friendly roles across industries. It’s especially helpful for career changers who want fresh opportunities and a bit more breathing room. 7. Network with purpose. Start with conversations, not asks. ✅ DM example: “Hi Alex, I saw your post about transitioning into UX. I’m making a similar shift from content strategy. Would love to hear about your journey, no pressure at all.” Career changes take courage. But they’re absolutely possible. You’re not starting from scratch. You’re starting from experience. Now package it with purpose, and go get what’s next.

  • View profile for Karla Aljanabi

    Redefining career success beyond the 9–5 ⚡️ Building freedom and a meaningful life — and sharing everything I learn along the way.

    48,704 followers

    Here’s how to actually pivot into a new career successfully 👇 (As someone who did it 6 times) Yes, the job market is tough, and changing careers makes it even harder. But it’s totally doable. The key is clarity and strategy: 1. Get specific: ➞ The clearer you are about what you want, the easier it is to get there. ➞ Pick a role that excites you, research what it takes, and align your skills. 2. Rebrand yourself: ➞ Tell the story of why you’re the right fit for this new path. ➞ Highlight transferable skills, quantify your impact, and use keywords. 3. Build real connections: ➞ 80% of jobs aren’t even posted. ➞ Show up where the right people are. ➞ Comment on LinkedIn posts, join industry groups, and connect. 4. Play the long game: ➞ If you keep hearing “you don’t have experience” start creating it. ➞ Take on freelance projects, build a portfolio, get certified. 5. Apply smarter, not harder: ➞ Leverage referrals. ➞ Customize your resume for each role. ➞ Prepare for interviews like it’s your full-time job. 🧡 BONUS TIP: Get a mentor in your target industry. Find someone who’s already made the switch and learn from them. A quick 20-minute chat with the right person can save you months of frustration. Who here has successfully pivoted? Share your best tip below! 👇 PS: If you need help mapping out your next career move, make sure to steal my FREE Career Clarity Journal from my profile. I've got you covered.

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