April 7, 2026 Stéphanie Albéri

Career Transition at 40 : How to Put All the Chances on Your Side

Career Transition at 40 : How to Put All the Chances on Your Side

At 40, wanting to change careers is nothing unusual.

Doing it intelligently is.

Most career transitions fail for a simple reason:

they are emotional before they are strategic.

A difficult Sunday evening does not justify a professional rupture.

Frustration is not a career plan.

 

In Switzerland, the job market does not penalize age.

It penalizes lack of preparation.

 

A career transition at 40 is not a crisis.

This is a pivotal point in their career.

A moment of lucidity.

And it is this lucidity that makes repositioning possible.

A career transition does not follow a standard model.

It is built at the intersection of experience, real constraints, and an assumed vision.

 

In summary
In this article, you will understand:
– What is really at stake in a career transition at 40
– The invisible barriers that sabotage career changes
– The most common strategic mistakes
– Why there is no universal formula
– The structuring steps of a successful career transition
– The concrete levers to secure your employability in the Swiss market

 

What is really at stake in a career transition

A career transition is not just about changing jobs.

It touches identity.

Status.

Recognition.

Financial security.

The balance between personal and professional life.

Changing direction may involve:

  • a career shift
  • a career evolution
  • professional mobility
  • a structured career change
  • sometimes starting a business

These transitions activate powerful barriers.

Fear of the unknown.

Financial obligations.

Doubts about one’s skills.

Social pressures.

Fear of losing status or seniority.

Ignoring these barriers weakens the project.

Recognizing them allows for a lucid career strategy.

 

Major mistakes in a career transition

  1. Knowing yourself superficially

There is no universal formula for a successful transition.

However, any solid career move relies on real self-awareness.

Understanding:

  • your transferable skills
  • your non-negotiable values
  • your environmental needs
  • your core drivers

is essential.

 

A skills assessment can help structure the process.

But depth matters more than the tool.

Without a solid understanding of yourself, the risk is simple:changing jobs only to recreate the same misalignment.

 

  1. Not clearly identifying your “why”

Escaping a situation is not a career plan.

Defining a professional project requires a clear why.

A why connected to a future professional vision.

Without a defined intention, the professional transition collapses at the first obstacle.

 

  1. Wanting to control everything before acting

Waiting for 100% certainty leads to stagnation.

To start moving, 5% clarity is enough.

The rest is built along the way.

A career transition progresses through iteration.

Not through absolute control.

 

  1. Moving forward without testing the project against the market

In Switzerland, nearly 70% of positions are filled through networks.

A credible transition requires:

A credible career transition plan involves:

  • sector analysis
  • real-world conversations
  • a clear reading of the job market
  • identification of skill gaps
  • realistic positioning validations

Around 40% of adults engage in continuous learning each year.

Skill development strengthens employability.

 

  1. Trying to do everything alone

Isolation limits perspective.

Professional support helps:

  • clarify objectives
  • structure an action plan
  • challenge feasibility
  • ensure a smooth transition

A career transition gains strength when it is structured and supported.

 

A structured method to succeed

Each transition is unique.

There is no standard path.

However, some steps reduce uncertainty:

Awareness

Deep introspection

Project clarification

Market validation

Skill development if needed

Strategic networking

New professional chapter

 

This process may take between 6 and 24 months.

Structure supports.

It does not constrain.

Changing careers does not mean starting from scratch.

It means evolving with coherence.

 

How to truly put all the chances on your side ?

Putting all the chances on your side is not about impulse or formulas.

It is about a thoughtful, structured, and assumed repositioning.

At 40, your professional capital is real.

The challenge is not to dilute it.

The challenge is to redirect it intelligently.

In Switzerland, the context is reassuring:

  • Unemployment rate between 2% and 3%
  • Nearly 70% of roles filled through networks
  • Around 40% of adults engaged in continuous learning

The market is dynamic.

But selective.

It rewards coherence.

It penalizes improvisation.

 

  1. Invest in deep self-awareness

A career transition always starts from within.

Not superficial reflection.

Demanding analysis.

Understanding:

  • your transferable skills
  • your real achievements
  • what energizes you
  • what drains you
  • what is temporary fatigue vs. deep misalignment

Many want to change jobs.

Few can articulate their value.

Yet employability depends on clarity.

At 40, accumulated experience is a strategic asset.

You still need to know how to reposition it.

 

  1. Define a coherent and realistic project

A credible project does not come from frustration.

It comes from vision.

Why change?

Towards what?

Under which conditions?

A solid career transition considers:

  • aspirations
  • financial constraints
  • family reality
  • geography
  • the acceptable level of risk

Coherence reassures the job market.

Incoherence raises doubts.

A strong professional repositioning does not deny the past.

It integrates it.

 

  1. Analyze the Swiss job market objectively

Low unemployment does not mean easy transitions.

The Swiss market values:

  • credibility
  • demonstrable competence
  • specialization
  • readability

Before any professional transition:

  • analyze the sector targetted
  • meet professionals
  • understand expectations from recruiters
  • identify skill gaps

Motivation is not enough.

Validation is key.

 

  1. Build a structured action plan

A career transition must be managed.

Define steps.

Secure finances.

Plan skill development.

Anticipate scenarios.

Improvisation weakens.

Structure secures.

An action is not rigid.

It allows you to adjust without panicking.

At 40, risk-taking must be controlled.

Not impulsive.

 

  1. Activate your network strategically

In Switzerland, nearly 70% of opportunities are not publicly advertised.

The network is not a tool for making requests.

It is about exploring.

Meet.

Understand.

Test your positioning.

Adjust your project.

Professional mobility is prepared before the break.

Not after that.

 

  1. Allow yourself to move without full certainty

Waiting for 100% certainty leads to inaction.

Acting impulsively creates risk.

The right posture lies in between.

5% clarity is enough to start.

The rest comes through action.

 

A career transition is a living process.

It requires adjustments.

It requires courage.

It requires lucidity.

At 40, it is not about starting over.

It is about repositioning with maturity.

 

Putting all the chances on your side means turning an intention into a sustainable strategy.

There is no one-size-fits-all method.

Not necessarily. But deep self-reflection is essential.

An assessment can help structure this process.

Yes, if based on real skills and credible positioning.

6 to 24 months.

Yes.

But external perspective reduces blind spots and secures strategic decisions.

About the Author

Stéphanie Albéri is a certified coach within AAA+ Coaching - Formation.

An engaged alpinist, Stéphanie learned very early to navigate uncertainty, open new paths, and rely on collective strength.

Exploring the unknown, inventing routes where none yet exist, and moving forward together shape her DNA, in the mountains as in organizations.

With more than twenty years of experience in international marketing and leadership,she has held strategic and operational leadership roles within leading international groups such as P&G, Novartis, and Becton Dickinson, both in Switzerland and internationally.

A PCC-certified professional coach (ICF), trained in applied neuroscience to coaching and resilient leadership (Harvard, USA), Stéphanie supports executives, managers,leaders, and entrepreneurs in their career transitions, career change projects,
professional development, leadership development, and sustainable career management.

If you’d like to learn more or see if coaching right for you, please feel free to contact me for an initial consultation: Stéphanie Albéri

For further information, you may also contact: Fabienne Revillard

To learn more about career coaching and professional coaching

For more information on outplacement and career transition

 

Would you like to explore the topic further? These articles may also interest you:

How do I know if I need a coach

Career reorientation and career choices: practical advice

The career coach: your ally in professional change

Transitioning from International Organizations to the Swiss Private Sector?

 

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