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The 5 Stages of Career Growth — and What It Takes to Reach the Next One

Source: EntrepreneurView Original
businessApril 18, 2026

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Key Takeaways

- Advancing your career requires evolving how you build visibility, trust, and influence — not just improving performance.

- Recognizing your current stage helps you make the right moves to avoid plateaus and accelerate growth.

A few months after being promoted to lead a regional marketing team in Central and Eastern Europe, I walked into a meeting where the people around the table had been my peers just weeks earlier. I was now responsible for setting direction, evaluating performance and representing the team to senior leadership.

My technical skills had earned me the promotion, but what would determine my success in that new role was something different. I needed to intentionally evolve my personal brand.

Careers stall when people keep using strategies that worked in a previous stage. Just as consumer brands refine their positioning as they grow, professionals must evolve how they show up and build trust.

I’ve developed a framework to identify each career stage and the steps to reach the next one. Whether you’re the leader of the company helping grow your team, or the employee pushing toward a greater personal brand, understanding these stages can unlock career growth for you or your team.

Stage 1: New brand with no market awareness

It’s never too soon to start practicing the skills that will build the foundation for future career growth. Stage 1 represents individuals who are new to a company, function or are early in their careers.

Early in my career, I measured progress by how many projects I could complete and how quickly I could deliver them. I assumed that productivity would automatically translate into advancement. What I learned is that organizations reward visible impact.

At Stage 1, your focus must be on building intentional awareness.

Start by understanding your company’s enterprise priorities. Study leadership communications and clarify how your work connects to broader business objectives. When you demonstrate context, you differentiate yourself from peers who operate in isolation.

Progressing to the next stage

To move from Stage 1 to Stage 2, you must transition from being known to being trusted.

- First, identify two to three projects that directly tie to enterprise goals and deliver them with measurable results.

- Second, proactively seek feedback. Ask your manager what exceeding expectations looks like and align your performance accordingly.

- Third, expand your network beyond immediate peers. Build relationships with cross-functional partners whose work intersects with yours.

Stage 2: New brand with high market awareness

In Stage 2, you have developed a track record. Leaders recognize your contributions. You may have recently been promoted or given greater responsibility. This increased visibility can create the temptation to drive projects at any cost. Professionals at this stage sometimes prioritize results over relationships, unintentionally eroding trust.

To continue progressing, you must refine your positioning. Identify your top strengths and pursue projects that amplify them. Become known for a specific capability. Secure a senior mentor who understands how talent discussions and succession planning work inside your organization.

Begin mentoring junior colleagues. Developing others signals leadership potential and strengthens your emotional intelligence.

Progressing to the next stage

Advancing to Stage 3 requires shifting from a reliable executor to an emerging enterprise leader.

- First, request ownership of a high-visibility initiative aligned with a strategic priority.

- Second, structure your communication with your manager. Regularly highlight milestones, risks and resource needs so your narrative is clear well before formal evaluations.

- Third, begin building a modest external presence. Share thoughtful insights tied to your expertise to reinforce credibility beyond your company toward the industry level.

Stage 3: Established brand looking to become a market leader

By Stage 3, your strengths are well understood, and you deliver consistent results. Yet this is where many professionals plateau.

Execution becomes expected. What differentiates future executives is enterprise perspective and strategic visibility.

Early in my career, leading marketing initiatives for major consumer health brands, I realized strong campaign execution alone would not accelerate my growth. The real shift happened when I volunteered to lead cross-functional initiatives tied directly to enterprise priorities, working with finance, sales and supply chain teams to align strategy across the organization.

These opportunities include leading a cross-functional launch, managing a product innovation, driving market expansion or owning a priority that requires coordinating multiple departments.

Expand your network vertically. Build relationships with senior stakeholders who inf