Career Progression in Skilled Sectors: How to Move Forward Without Making the Wrong Move

Career Progression in Skilled Sectors: How to Move Forward Without Making the Wrong Move

For skilled workers in facilities management, engineering, field service, technical support and related sectors, career progression is rarely a straight line. There is no standard ladder. There are multiple directions. And the wrong move — a sideways step disguised as a promotion, a new employer who does not invest as promised — can set you back significantly.

This guide is about moving forward deliberately.

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Why career progression in skilled sectors is different

In many skilled sectors, progression is not simply about accumulating years of experience and waiting for a management role to appear. It requires deliberate choices about qualifications, employer quality, sector focus and timing.

The field engineer who wants to become a contracts manager needs a different development path to the one who wants to specialise in a high-value technical discipline. The facilities management supervisor who wants to lead a major contract needs a different employer to the one who wants to move into consultancy.

Understanding which direction you want to go — and which employers and moves will support that direction — is the starting point for good career decisions.


The most common career progression mistakes

Taking a move for a better job title without understanding the role. A senior title at a poorly run company is worth less than a junior title at a company that invests in people and gives you the right experience.

Moving for pay without considering development. A £3,000 pay rise that comes with no development, a poor manager and a shrinking role is often a net negative over three years.

Staying too long in a role that is not progressing. Loyalty is valuable, but stagnation is not. If you have been in the same role for three years with no progression, no new skills and no development investment, it may be time to move.

Not knowing what you want before speaking to recruiters. Recruiters match you to vacancies, not to career plans. If you don’t know your own direction, you are vulnerable to being placed in the wrong role.


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