Picture a Director at a mid-size firm. She has been in the role for four years. Her results are strong. Leadership thinks highly of her. She expects to make VP within the next 18 months.
Leadership sees it differently. They are not sure she is ready. Nobody has told her that. Nobody has told her what "ready" even means. She has no idea what is standing between her and the next level. Neither does anyone else in her organization.
That is not a promotion problem. That is a career pathing problem.
And here is the thing most professionals do not realize: the absence of a career path is not something that just happens to you. It is something you can choose to respond to. The moment you decide your career is in your own hands, everything changes. That shift from waiting to owning is where real advancement begins.
What Career Pathing Actually Is (and Why Most Organizations Get It Wrong)
Career pathing means mapping out what a person needs to get from where they are to where they want to go. That includes skills, behaviors, experiences, and mindset shifts. Done well, it connects what the individual wants with what the organization needs. Done poorly, it leaves good people guessing.
Most organizations make the same mistake. They treat career pathing like a once-a-year performance review topic. Or they point people to a job ladder on the company intranet and call it done. That is not a career path. That is an org chart with a hopeful label.
A real career path answers three questions for every person at every level.
Where are you right now?
Not just your title or how long you have been in the role. A real look at what you can do, where your gaps are, and what habits are helping or hurting you.
Where are you trying to go?
Not assumed. Clearly defined. In terms of scope, leadership responsibility, and what kind of leader you want to become, not just what you want to earn.
What specifically needs to change to get there?
Not "be more strategic." Not "develop your presence." Specific behaviors. Measurable gaps. A real plan to close them.
Most organizations can answer the first question. They struggle badly with the second and third. And when they do try, the answers are usually too vague to act on.
Why This Is a Business Problem, Not Just a People Problem
When organizations skip structured career development, the cost is real and measurable.
According to Work Institute, which analyzes tens of thousands of exit interviews every year, career pathway issues have been the number one driver of employee turnover for years running. That pattern does not fix itself.
Nearly half of employees say their manager does not know how to help them grow. 59 percent say their company rarely or never helps them explore opportunities outside their current role. Because of this, one in four employees say they are likely to quit within the next six months.
That is a retention crisis hiding in plain sight.
Succession gaps. When you do not develop leaders before you need them, you end up hiring externally for roles that could have been filled from within. That costs more, takes longer, and disrupts your culture.
The accidental executive problem. When career paths are not structured, promotions become rewards for past performance rather than decisions based on readiness. You end up putting strong individual contributors into leadership roles they were never prepared for. As we cover in our new manager training post, 82 percent of managers step into their roles with no formal leadership training at all. That is the pipeline problem in one number.
Disengagement you cannot see. 66 percent of workers are thinking about leaving because of a lack of professional development. High performers do not get less ambitious just because no path exists. They get quiet. They show up. They do enough. And they interview elsewhere on their lunch break.
The business case for career pathing is not soft. It is financial.
Your Career Trajectory Is Within Your Control
Here is what the absence of a career path does to the individual professional. It creates a specific kind of frustration: working hard without knowing if any of it is moving you forward.
There is a concept in psychology called locus of control. When it is external, you believe your outcomes depend on forces outside yourself: your boss, the organization, the politics, the timing. When it is internal, you believe your actions and decisions drive your results. Research consistently shows that people with a stronger internal locus of control handle stress better, perform at a higher level, and build more satisfying careers.
That is not just an abstract idea. It is the most practical shift a professional can make.
I know this from personal experience. There came a point in my own career where I could see clearly that no path forward existed where I was. I had to make a decision. I left, went back to get my doctorate, and built Arrington Coaching from the ground up. It was a bet on myself. It paid off. And that experience is a big part of why I coach the way I do. I am not teaching theory. I am teaching what I had to live.
The leaders I work with who break through are not always the most talented people in the building. They are the ones who stop waiting for someone else to hand them a map. They take ownership of their development. They get an honest read on where they stand. They close the gaps on purpose.
I have worked with Directors who made VP. I have worked with VPs who went on to become COO, CFO, and President in three separate cases. Every single time, the breakthrough started with one decision: to stop treating advancement as something that would eventually happen and start treating it as something they were going to make happen. If you are looking for guidance on how to advance in your career, that decision is step one.
When the Organization Is the Problem
I want to be direct here. Not every stalled career comes down to the individual's gaps. Sometimes the organization is the problem.
I once worked with a leader who had been passed over for six years. Her performance reviews were strong. Her results were excellent. And her manager was openly attributing her work to a colleague in front of leadership. Without apology.
Six years of being told she was not ready. Six years of watching her contributions disappear under someone else's name. Six years of quiet damage to her confidence.
When she came to me, she was carrying a lot. Real external obstacles. A genuine credibility problem inside her organization. And a layer of imposter syndrome that had built up over years of being overlooked and underestimated.
Over nine months, working through our ASCEND coaching process, we did several things together. We clarified her impact in measurable terms so her contributions could not be ignored or reassigned. We worked on her visibility with the right people in the right rooms. We prepared her for the difficult conversations she had been putting off. And we worked on the internal piece, the confidence that had been worn down, because none of the external work holds without that foundation.
She was promoted within nine months.
The obstacles were real. Her manager was genuinely a problem. But once she shifted from waiting to be recognized to actively driving the story of her own career, the trajectory changed.
That is locus of control in action. Not pretending the obstacles do not exist. Acknowledging them clearly, then deciding to lead your own advancement anyway.
If you have been passed over and are not sure what to do next, start with the 25 strategies we cover here. And if you want a deeper framework, my book Promotable was written specifically for professionals in exactly this situation.
Does any of this sound familiar?
Whether you are figuring out your next move as an individual or building a leadership pipeline for your organization, I am happy to talk through your specific situation.
No pitch. Just an honest conversation about where you are and what might help.Know Where You Stand Before You Make a Plan
The most common career development mistake is working on a gap you have not accurately identified. People read leadership books. They take on extra projects. They volunteer for high-profile work. All good moves. But if they are aimed at the wrong gaps, they will not move the needle.
More than three out of four workers say they received bad professional advice at some point in their career. 67 percent say that bad advice from a manager had a lasting impact on their trajectory. Vague guidance and no clear path do not just slow people down. For a lot of high achievers, they are genuinely career-defining in the wrong direction.
Before you build a career development plan, you need an honest baseline.
That is the purpose of the VP Readiness Assessment. It is a structured tool built specifically around the Director-to-VP transition. It does not measure your personality or assign you a type. It measures the specific behaviors and leadership habits that separate Directors who get promoted from those who do not, across six dimensions.
Strategic thinking
Are you designing outcomes or reacting to them?
People development
Are you building the team's capacity or carrying it yourself?
Execution and accountability
Are you driving outcomes across the organization or managing your own task list?
Communication and influence
Can you align people who do not report to you?
Change leadership
Can you lead a team through uncertainty without breaking the culture?
Decision making
Can you move fast when the data is not complete?
The assessment takes under ten minutes. You get an immediate Executive Briefing identifying your primary leadership gap and archetype. If you want the full picture, the optional VP Readiness Profile is an 11-page breakdown of all six dimensions, your leadership archetype, and a roadmap for what comes next.
More than 500 Directors and VPs have used it. The consistent finding: most high performers underestimate the altitude shift that the VP role requires. They overestimate their readiness on strategic thinking and people development. And they underestimate their actual strength on execution.
The assessment tells you what you are working with. That is where a real career development plan has to start.
Four Principles That Separate Real Career Development from the Stuff That Just Looks Good
Whether you are managing your own path or building a development framework for your team, a few things consistently separate progress from activity.
- Specificity beats encouragement. "You are almost ready" and "keep working on your leadership" are not career guidance. Real career pathing names the gaps clearly, ties them to behaviors, and builds a plan around closing them. Vague feedback with good intentions is still vague feedback.
- Development has to come before the need. The time to develop your next VP is not when the seat opens. It is 18 months earlier. Organizations that treat leadership development as a reaction to a vacancy are always behind.
- Big shifts require outside perspective. The mindset change from individual contributor to manager, or from manager to executive, rarely happens through experience alone. Experience often just reinforces old habits, good and bad. External coaching, structured development, or an honest assessment gives people the outside view they need to actually change. Our post on why great employees struggle as bosses gets into this in detail.
- Personal development has to connect to the organization's direction. A career development plan that lives only in someone's head, disconnected from what the organization actually needs, has a low ceiling. The most effective development connects individual ambition to organizational succession. It makes the business case that developing this person directly serves the company.
For HR Leaders and Talent Executives: The Structural Question
If you are responsible for talent development in your organization, the career pathing question is ultimately a structural one. Individual coaching and assessments help. But they address symptoms of a system problem, not the system itself.
The real question is this: does your organization have a clear, consistent, shared definition of what "ready" looks like at each leadership level?
If the answer is "it depends on the manager" or "we know it when we see it," you have a career pathing gap. It is showing up as turnover, disengagement, failed promotions, and leaders you cannot replace from within.
According to SHRM, management-related turnover hit a six-year high in 2024. Researchers noted that "no organization is doing a fantastic job at the middle-manager level, in skilling, preparedness, or even the wellness of managers themselves." That is a development architecture problem, not a talent quality problem.
Building that framework does not require a large budget or a big consulting engagement. It requires three things: clarity about what leadership looks like at each level, honest assessment of where your current leaders actually stand, and a reliable development process that closes the gaps consistently.
That is exactly what our Leadership Pipeline Builder is designed to do. It gives organizations a structured, affordable way to develop managers and leaders at scale, without overburdening HR or relying on one-off training events that do not stick. Consistent. Reliable. Built for organizations with real budgets and real timelines.
For organizations that want to go further and get a real-time picture of leadership readiness across their teams, we are also building an enterprise dashboard for the VP Readiness Assessment. If getting early access to that is something you are interested in, let us know.
Ready to build a leadership pipeline that actually works?
We help organizations develop managers and leaders consistently, reliably, and on budget. Let's talk through what that looks like for your team.
No pitch. Just a real conversation about your leadership development needs.The Bottom Line
Career pathing is not a perk. It is not an HR checkbox. It is how organizations keep their best people, build the leaders they need, and turn ambition into results.
For the individual professional, it starts with a decision. Not a plan. Not a tool. A decision that your career belongs to you and you are going to act like it.
Once that decision is made, you need to know where you actually stand. That is what the VP Readiness Assessment gives you. It is free. It takes ten minutes. It tells you what you are working with.
For the organization, the question is simpler than it sounds: are you building the leaders you are going to need, or are you hoping they figure it out on their own?
If you want to talk through what a structured approach would look like for your team, let's have that conversation.
Frequently Asked Questions About Career Pathing and Promotion Readiness
Common Questions
Career pathing and promotion readiness.
Questions we hear all the time.
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