I am often asked by individuals, who want to move out of one industry to another but stay doing the same kind of work. What can you do it about it. That’s a really common challenge—when someone wants to pivot industries, the biggest hurdle is helping employers see that their skills transfer even if the job titles or industries look different.
Here’s how I’d help a job seeker make that leap:
🔎 1. Identify Core Transferable Skills
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Pull out skills that cut across industries (project management, communication, leadership, problem-solving, analysis, customer service, tech tools).
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Focus less on where you used them, and more on what impact they had.
📝 2. Translate Industry Jargon
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Avoid using language only your old industry understands.
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Swap niche terms for universal ones.
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Example: Instead of “worked with athletic compliance reporting systems” → “managed regulatory reporting systems.”
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💌 3. Reframe Resume & Cover Letter
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Resume: Highlight accomplishments that any employer values (saved time, cut costs, improved efficiency, built teams).
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Cover Letter: Tell the career change story → why you’re moving, what you bring, and how your past strengthens your future.
🎯 4. Use a Functional / Hybrid Resume if Needed
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Instead of only listing jobs chronologically, group bullet points under skill categories (Leadership, Communication, Data Analysis).
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Shows hiring managers you already have the skills they’re hiring for.
🌐 5. Fill Gaps with Bridge Experiences
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Volunteer work, certifications, freelance projects, or side gigs can give credibility in the new industry.
🤝 6. Leverage Networking
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Many pivots happen through people, not postings.
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Talk with professionals in the new industry and get referrals—this reduces bias about your background.
👉 In short: Tell the story of your skills, not your industry. Employers hire problem-solvers, not job titles.
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