I'm hitting a crossroads in my career and I think I need to do some soul searching about what success is for me. I will always be a full-time working mom just trying to decide if swimming upstream at a large corporation and trying to achieve executive ranks is really what I want. Or do I want to go to a smaller company and possibly be able to climb higher there? Or am I happy reaching almost exec ranks at my large company? Not to say exec level at my large company is out of reach yet, just not advancing at the rate I thought I would be. They are still giving me great feedback on my performance and potential.
So to the moms who enjoy having a career, what is your definition today and in the future of success? Do you have a certain salary you want to reach? The prestige that comes with a certain title? Span of control in your job, either direct or indirect?
I think I'm also struggling with what I should want vs what I might want. I feel a lot of pressure to be high achieving.
Re: How do you define success?
In terms of the money aspect, I feel like I am being compensated for my education and even though it isn't oodles of cash, I'm not really driven to add more. So money does not mean success to me.
I could progress up in title but I kind of like where I am for now. I am respected and I contribute and frankly I'm not sure how much management I want to do.
My personal definition of success is to feel happy and not stressed while being challenged and contributing. In the future for me, this could mean anything from staying at my current company to staying at home with my kids and putting in some volunteer hours at nonprofits or my kids' school.
I'm just not sure exactly what my future success looks like. My husband is in his last year of training and will be job hunting soon. I will reevaluate then because it could mean a move.
I do not strive for exec level positions. For me, success is having a career that I enjoy, where I'm compensated fairly, where I feel valuable and that I'm making a difference, and that allows a good level of balance between work and home.
By that definition, I am currently extremely successful!
MMC 3.30.16
Agree with others that my definition of success has changed, or well maybe I just don't want to be as 'successful' as I used to. I see the execs in my company working 80-90 hours a week, I will not do that, I want to enjoy my family.
I honestly don't have a definition for what my success would look like, mainly because I don't have dreams/goals of someday being c-level. I'm very content with my life and while I will look to move up within my career path, I'm not striving for a certain salary or position.
My only dream would be to have my own successful small business, but I'm definitely not ready to leave security at this point.
I'm struggling with this, too. I'm at a point where those above me are subtly pushing and setting me up to move up to the next level but I feel very "meh" about that and not sure I really want to do it. I am solidly mid-career now and kind of feeling like I don't know what I want to do next. When I was younger I thought I wanted to move up as quickly as possible but the appeal of that kind of career path has definitely dwindled. I don't really like managing people. I don't really like dealing with the internal politics and BS that come with higher level positions. Having the title doesn't seem like a big reward to me any more.
I don't know if it's a mid-life crisis, per se, but I feel like I am once again trying to figure out exactly what it is that I want to be when I grow up. Having a family definitely is a big part of that because my priorities are so different and my focus is so much less on myself as an individual, but it goes beyond mommy-tracking myself. I still have a lot of years to work and I am trying to figure out what I want those years to look like.
As long as I feel challenged and appreciated/recognized at an individual contributor level, that is fine with me. I am more concerned with having happy, successful kids and being able to spend time with my family. DH and I are both in individual contributor-level roles, and we earn enough for a comfortable life and some extras like a nice vacation once a year. Maybe when the kids are in college I would consider a management level role. My family will always be #1 and work will always be #2.