When Your Dream Job Turns Into a Nightmare
Dear Jamie Jumpstart,
I spent four years working toward a senior manager position at my company. I took on extra projects, earned certifications, networked with executives. When they finally promoted me six months ago, I thought I'd made it.
Now I dread Mondays. The job involves constant firefighting, endless meetings, and managing people who resent my promotion. I miss the hands-on work I used to do. My family notices I'm irritable. But I can't quit after fighting so hard to get here. Everyone will think I failed. What do I do?
—Promoted and Miserable in the Midwest
Dear Promoted,
You haven't failed. You learned something expensive: the job you wanted and the job you got are two different things.
Stop waiting for this to feel better. Six months gives you enough data. You know what the role requires. You know how you feel doing it. That won't change because you tough it out another year.
Here's your action plan. First, write down what you miss about your old work. Be specific. "Hands-on work" could mean coding, client meetings, creative projects, or working alone. You need to know what you're trying to get back to.
Second, have an honest conversation with your boss. Schedule 30 minutes. Say this: "I want to talk about how I can be most valuable to the team. I've noticed I'm spending 80% of my time in meetings and managing up. The technical work energized me. Can we restructure this role to include more of that?" Some managers will work with you. Others won't. You need to know which type you have.
Third, if your boss can't or won't adjust the role, start looking internally for a lateral move. You already know the company. You have credibility. A sideways step into a senior individual contributor role isn't a demotion. It's a correction.
If nothing exists internally, look outside. Yes, people will ask why you're leaving after six months. Tell them the truth: "I discovered I do my best work as an individual contributor, not in people management. This role taught me that." Hiring managers respect self-awareness.
Your reputation won't tank because you left a bad-fit role. It will tank if you stay miserable, underperform, and burn out. Those are the people everyone remembers.
You fought hard to get here. Now fight hard to get somewhere better.
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