Career Path Planner
Structured frameworks for career assessment, skill gap analysis, development planning, and professional growth milestone tracking.
Career Assessment Frameworks
Skills Audit Matrix
SKILL AUDIT TEMPLATE:
TECHNICAL SKILLS:
Skill | Proficiency (1-5) | Market Demand (1-5) | Evidence
[Skill 1] | [X] | [X] | [Projects, certs]
[Skill 2] | [X] | [X] | [Projects, certs]
TRANSFERABLE SKILLS:
Skill | Proficiency (1-5) | Relevance (1-5) | Evidence
Communication | [X] | [X] | [Examples]
Leadership | [X] | [X] | [Examples]
Problem-solving | [X] | [X] | [Examples]
Project management | [X] | [X] | [Examples]
SCORING:
1 = Beginner (awareness only)
2 = Basic (can do with guidance)
3 = Intermediate (independent work)
4 = Advanced (can teach others)
5 = Expert (industry recognition)
Values Identification Framework
| Value Category | Questions to Ask | Example Values |
|---|
| Work Style | Remote? Autonomous? Collaborative? | Flexibility, independence, teamwork |
| Impact | Who do I want to help? What scale? | Social impact, innovation, mentoring |
| Growth | Learning? Mastery? Leadership? | Continuous learning, expertise depth |
| Compensation | Salary floor? Equity? Benefits? | Financial security, wealth building |
| Lifestyle | Hours? Travel? Work-life balance? | Balance, adventure, stability |
| Culture | Startup? Corporate? Mission-driven? | Autonomy, structure, purpose |
Interest Mapping (RIASEC Model)
RIASEC CAREER INTEREST TYPES:
R - REALISTIC: Hands-on, practical, physical tasks
Careers: Engineering, trades, agriculture, IT infrastructure
I - INVESTIGATIVE: Research, analysis, problem-solving
Careers: Data science, research, medicine, academia
A - ARTISTIC: Creative expression, design, innovation
Careers: Design, writing, marketing, product development
S - SOCIAL: Helping, teaching, counseling
Careers: HR, teaching, healthcare, nonprofit management
E - ENTERPRISING: Leading, persuading, managing
Careers: Sales, management, entrepreneurship, consulting
C - CONVENTIONAL: Organizing, data management, processes
Careers: Finance, accounting, operations, compliance
YOUR TOP 3 TYPES: [___] [___] [___]
CAREER MATCHES: Intersection of top types with skills and values
Skill Gap Analysis
Gap Analysis Methodology
STEP 1: Define target role
- Job title and level
- 3-5 real job postings as reference
- Extract required skills, qualifications, experience
STEP 2: Map current state
- Complete skills audit (above)
- List current qualifications and credentials
- Quantify years of relevant experience
STEP 3: Identify gaps
For each target role requirement:
HAVE IT: Skill present and at required level
PARTIAL: Skill present but below required level
MISSING: Skill not present, needs development
ADJACENT: Have related skill, needs pivot
STEP 4: Prioritize gaps
Priority = (Importance to target role) x (Size of gap)
Focus on HIGH importance + LARGE gap first
Gap Prioritization Matrix
| Small Gap | Large Gap |
|---|
| High Importance | Quick win — close fast | Critical path — invest heavily |
| Low Importance | Defer — nice to have | Ignore — not worth the effort |
Common Skill Development Paths
| Gap Type | Timeline | Methods |
|---|
| Technical certification | 1-3 months | Online course + exam |
| New programming language | 2-4 months | Project-based learning |
| Domain knowledge | 3-6 months | Reading, mentorship, side projects |
| Leadership experience | 6-12 months | Volunteer to lead, manage projects |
| Industry transition | 12-24 months | Networking, bridge roles, education |
| Advanced degree | 1-3 years | Part-time programs, employer sponsorship |
Career Ladder Mapping
Industry Career Ladder Templates
TECHNOLOGY (Individual Contributor):
Junior Engineer → Engineer → Senior Engineer → Staff Engineer
→ Principal Engineer → Distinguished Engineer → Fellow
TECHNOLOGY (Management):
Team Lead → Engineering Manager → Senior EM → Director
→ VP Engineering → SVP → CTO
PRODUCT:
Associate PM → Product Manager → Senior PM → Group PM
→ Director of Product → VP Product → CPO
DESIGN:
Junior Designer → Designer → Senior Designer → Lead Designer
→ Design Manager → Director of Design → VP Design → CDO
MARKETING:
Coordinator → Specialist → Manager → Senior Manager
→ Director → VP Marketing → CMO
FINANCE:
Analyst → Senior Analyst → Manager → Senior Manager
→ Director → VP Finance → CFO
CONSULTING:
Analyst → Associate → Consultant → Senior Consultant
→ Manager → Senior Manager → Principal → Partner
Level Progression Indicators
| Signal | What It Means | Action |
|---|
| Scope increase | Handling bigger projects/teams | Ready for next level discussion |
| Peer recognition | Others seek your expertise | Document for promotion case |
| Autonomy growth | Less supervision needed | Take on stretch assignments |
| Impact widening | Influence beyond immediate team | Build cross-functional presence |
| Mentoring others | Junior colleagues come to you | Formalize mentorship |
| Stagnation | Same work, no new challenges | Time to have a growth conversation |
Professional Development Plan
Development Plan Template
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN
NAME: [Your name]
CURRENT ROLE: [Title] at [Company]
TARGET ROLE: [Title] — Timeline: [Date]
DATE CREATED: [Date]
REVIEW CADENCE: Monthly
VISION STATEMENT:
[One sentence describing where you want to be and why]
GOALS (SMART Format):
Goal 1: [Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound]
Key Results:
- KR1: [Measurable outcome] — Due: [Date]
- KR2: [Measurable outcome] — Due: [Date]
Resources: [Courses, mentors, books, budget]
Status: [ ] Not started [ ] In progress [ ] Complete
Goal 2: [SMART goal]
Key Results:
- KR1: [Measurable outcome] — Due: [Date]
- KR2: [Measurable outcome] — Due: [Date]
Resources: [Courses, mentors, books, budget]
Status: [ ] Not started [ ] In progress [ ] Complete
MONTHLY CHECK-IN:
- What did I accomplish this month?
- What blocked progress?
- What do I focus on next month?
- Do goals need adjusting?
Goal Categories
| Category | Examples | Measurement |
|---|
| Skills | Learn Python, get AWS cert | Certification, project completion |
| Experience | Lead a project, present at conference | Deliverables, speaking slots |
| Network | 10 informational interviews, join community | Connections made, events attended |
| Visibility | Publish article, open-source contribution | Publications, contributions |
| Education | Complete course, read 12 books | Completion certificates, book list |
Networking Strategy
Networking Framework
NETWORKING STRATEGY:
IDENTIFY TARGETS:
- 5 people in your target role (learn the job)
- 3 people who recently transitioned (learn the path)
- 2 hiring managers in target companies (learn requirements)
- 2 industry thought leaders (learn trends)
OUTREACH APPROACH:
1. Research the person (LinkedIn, articles, talks)
2. Find a genuine connection point (shared interest, mutual contact)
3. Send personalized message (not generic template)
4. Ask for 20 minutes, not a favor
5. Prepare 3-5 specific questions
6. Follow up with a thank-you and value-add (article, introduction)
MAINTENANCE:
- Engage with contacts' content monthly (comments, shares)
- Share useful resources quarterly
- Reconnect with updates every 3-6 months
- Offer help before asking for help
Informational Interview Questions
| Stage | Questions |
|---|
| Role understanding | What does a typical day/week look like? What surprised you about this role? |
| Path discovery | How did you get into this field? What would you do differently? |
| Gap identification | What skills are most critical? What do you wish new hires knew? |
| Opportunity | What trends are shaping this field? Where do you see growth? |
| Connection | Who else would you recommend I speak with? |
Resume and Portfolio Optimization
Resume Impact Formula
ACHIEVEMENT FORMAT:
[Action verb] + [What you did] + [Quantified result] + [Context]
EXAMPLES:
WEAK: "Responsible for managing the engineering team"
STRONG: "Led 8-person engineering team that shipped 3 products generating $2M ARR"
WEAK: "Helped improve website performance"
STRONG: "Reduced page load time by 60% (3.2s to 1.3s), increasing conversion rate by 15%"
WEAK: "Worked on data analysis projects"
STRONG: "Built predictive churn model (92% accuracy) that identified $500K in at-risk revenue"
ACTION VERBS BY SKILL:
Leadership: Led, Directed, Orchestrated, Championed, Mentored
Technical: Architected, Engineered, Automated, Optimized, Migrated
Growth: Scaled, Grew, Expanded, Launched, Increased
Efficiency: Streamlined, Reduced, Consolidated, Eliminated, Simplified
Innovation: Pioneered, Designed, Prototyped, Invented, Transformed
Portfolio Structure
| Section | Contents | For Whom |
|---|
| Hero | Name, title, value proposition | Everyone |
| Featured Work | 3-5 best projects with outcomes | Hiring managers |
| Case Studies | Deep-dive process stories | Interviewers |
| Skills | Tech stack, certifications | Recruiters (keyword matching) |
| Writing/Talks | Blog posts, presentations | Thought leadership evidence |
| Contact | Professional email, LinkedIn | Networking |
Career Transition Planning
Transition Types and Strategies
| Transition | Difficulty | Strategy | Timeline |
|---|
| Same industry, new role | Low | Internal transfer, upskilling | 3-6 months |
| New industry, same role | Medium | Networking, domain learning | 6-12 months |
| New industry, new role | High | Bridge role, education, portfolio | 12-24 months |
| Employee to entrepreneur | High | Side project, savings runway, validation | 6-18 months |
| Return after gap | Medium | Returnship programs, freelance ramp | 3-9 months |
Bridge Role Strategy
BRIDGE ROLE: An intermediate role that builds missing experience
while leveraging existing strengths.
EXAMPLE:
Current: Marketing Manager (B2C)
Target: Product Manager (Tech)
Bridge: Product Marketing Manager (Tech company)
— Leverages marketing skills, builds product and tech exposure
FINDING BRIDGE ROLES:
1. List skills in current role
2. List skills needed for target role
3. Find roles that require your current skills + expose you to target skills
4. Apply to bridge roles at companies in your target industry
Salary Benchmarking
Salary Research Approach
SALARY RESEARCH SOURCES:
1. Levels.fyi (tech, most accurate for tech roles)
2. Glassdoor (broad coverage, self-reported)
3. LinkedIn Salary Insights
4. Payscale (detailed by factors)
5. Bureau of Labor Statistics (government data)
6. Blind (anonymous, tech-focused)
7. Industry salary surveys (Robert Half, Hays, etc.)
TOTAL COMPENSATION COMPONENTS:
Base salary: $_____
Annual bonus: $_____ (target %)
Equity/RSUs: $_____ (annual vest value)
Sign-on bonus: $_____
Benefits value: $_____ (health, 401k match, etc.)
Perks: $_____ (education budget, wellness, etc.)
TOTAL: $_____
BENCHMARKING FACTORS:
- Geography (cost of living adjustment)
- Company stage (startup vs FAANG vs enterprise)
- Years of experience
- Specialized skills premium
- Management vs IC track
Planning Horizons
1-Year, 3-Year, 5-Year Framework
1-YEAR PLAN (Tactical):
Focus: Close immediate skill gaps, build network foundation
Goals: 2-3 specific, measurable goals
Review: Monthly check-ins
Questions:
- What skill will have the biggest impact in 12 months?
- What relationships do I need to build?
- What can I ship/accomplish to demonstrate growth?
3-YEAR PLAN (Strategic):
Focus: Role transition, career level advancement
Goals: Target role/level, compensation target, reputation goals
Review: Quarterly check-ins
Questions:
- Where do I want to be in my career ladder?
- What domain expertise do I want to be known for?
- What does my professional network look like?
5-YEAR PLAN (Visionary):
Focus: Career direction, industry positioning, life integration
Goals: Broad direction, not specific roles
Review: Annual reflection
Questions:
- What impact do I want to have?
- What does success look like holistically (career + life)?
- What opportunities am I positioning myself for?
PLANNING RULE:
1-year plan: 80% confidence in specifics
3-year plan: 50% confidence, expect to revise
5-year plan: 30% confidence, directional only
Milestone Tracking
| Milestone Type | Example | Tracking Method |
|---|
| Skill acquisition | Complete AWS Solutions Architect cert | Credential earned date |
| Experience | Lead a cross-functional project | Project completion + retrospective |
| Network | 20 informational interviews conducted | Spreadsheet tracker |
| Visibility | Publish 4 industry articles | Publication links |
| Compensation | Reach $X total compensation | Annual review benchmark |
| Role change | Transition to target role | Offer letter date |
Mentorship and Learning Resources
Mentorship Framework
FINDING MENTORS:
- Internal: Skip-level manager, senior IC in target role, ERG leaders
- External: Industry meetups, LinkedIn outreach, alumni networks
- Paid: Executive coaching, career coaching platforms
MENTOR MEETING STRUCTURE:
Frequency: Monthly (30-60 minutes)
Preparation: 2-3 specific questions or situations to discuss
Follow-up: Action items, thank you, progress update next session
MENTOR TYPES:
Career Mentor: Guides long-term career direction
Skill Mentor: Teaches specific technical/domain skills
Sponsor: Advocates for you in rooms you're not in
Peer Mentor: Mutual growth partnership at similar level
Learning Resource Categories
| Resource Type | Best For | Time Investment |
|---|
| Online courses (Coursera, Udemy) | Structured skill building | 2-8 weeks per course |
| Books | Deep knowledge, frameworks | 1-2 weeks per book |
| Podcasts | Industry trends, passive learning | 30-60 min/episode |
| Conferences | Networking, trend awareness | 1-3 days/event |
| Side projects | Portfolio building, applied learning | Ongoing (2-5 hrs/week) |
| Communities | Peer learning, accountability | 1-2 hrs/week |
| Newsletters | Staying current | 15 min/day |
See Also