The 90-Day Career Reset Plan for Retrenched Professionals
The first month after retrenchment is rarely the right time to make big decisions.
The first month after retrenchment is rarely the right time to make big decisions.
One of the most powerful things you can do during a mid-career transition is build a bridge income — not to replace your next full-time role, but to reduce the financial pressure that forces poor decisions.
If you are mid-career and seriously considering a switch, the WSQ (Workforce Skills Qualifications) framework is one of Singapore’s best-kept open secrets.
Most Singapore professionals can identify a toxic workplace in retrospect. In the moment, it is harder — because toxicity normalises gradually, and because leaving feels more dangerous than staying.
Your resume has 30 seconds to make its case. In many cases, an ATS (Applicant Tracking System) will evaluate it before a human ever does. And then there is the age question — the subconscious bias that your resume must navigate without you even knowing it is happening.
The career books promise you a framework. A five-step plan. A methodology for reinvention.
Most networking advice is written for people who enjoy networking. For the rest of us — especially mid-career professionals who built their careers on competence rather than connection — it feels performative, transactional, and vaguely embarrassing.
The question is everywhere. In coffee conversations, LinkedIn feeds, HR conferences, and late-night anxiety spirals. Will AI take my job?
The career advice industry does not serve 50-year-olds well.
Both feel terrible. Both make you not want to go to work. But they have very different causes — and very different solutions.