If you’ve taken a career break and are asking yourself “what do I want to do next?,” you’re not alone. Meet Ginny Brzezinski, Know Your Value’s comeback career contributor who knows first hand just how overwhelming and impossible it may feel to jump back into the workforce. But as she explains, careers are no longer a linear progression. In the weeks and months to come, she’ll help you explore what career is right for your life today and how you can get there. Here’s more about Ginny:
1. You left a high-powered career to raise your children, and then returned to work many years later. Can you tell us about yourself, and your personal return-to-work struggles?
I know the return-to-work struggle intimately. I stepped back from a 12-year Capitol Hill press career when my kids were born. Mika never stopped working. Now, as I look to return to the communications world after a career pause and pivot, the path back isn’t always clear.
Of the dozen years I worked on Capitol Hill as a Senate press secretary, the last five I was the communications director for the Senate Finance Committee. I left my job in 2001, after my boss, Sen. Bill Roth of Delaware, lost his re-election bid. At the time, I was eight months pregnant with my second child, and my first child had just turned one. There was no way I could have interviewed for a new position. But the truth was, I wanted to be home with my son and daughter-to-be. I figured I could always find a job, but I couldn’t get this time back with my kids. It probably wasn’t the smartest thing financially; my husband and I at the time were about equal in pay. But we both felt strongly that one of us needed to be with the kids.
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It turned out to be the right decision for our family. I know we are fortunate that I could have that time with our kids. I also know that it’s not possible, nor the right fit, for everyone. I was happy to be home with the kids. And after seven years, once the kids were in school, I got my real estate license. It was quite a different experience from working on the Hill. I didn’t love it, or at times even like it. But it was local, I worked with great people and it allowed me the flexibility to take my kids to school, pick them up, go to their games and have summers with them.
Now that my kids are teenagers, I have more time. And I’m excited about figuring out my next career.
2. What is the biggest lesson you learned from those experiences?
I learned that sometimes you have to be okay with swimming against the tide. When I decided that I was going to leave the Hill and be a stay-at-home mom for seven years, many of my friends and colleagues were horrified. Maybe that’s because no one ever says, “Hey, I’m going to take a seven year career break.”
There was the loss of income and the notion that I had somehow made a career-killing decision. Really, they thought I was crazy. Most of my Hill colleagues were determined to be working moms. And, I have to say, many of them are now in top positions and have balanced career and motherhood spectacularly. And, of course, there is Mika, my sister-in-law, who has done it all. I could not, nor did I want, to do it all.
When I left the workforce in 2001, there were no options to work from home or even working part time. There was no gig economy. The options were either all in or home with kids. For women today, 16 years later, it’s easier to ratchet back but still keep your toes in the career water until you are ready to go back. And that’s a very good thing.
3. What are some of the topics you will cover on Know Your Value?
Comeback Careers is the newest evolution in the nationwide Know Your Value movement to empower women in the workplace.
We’re creating a suite of multiplatform content that gives women a roadmap for getting back to work. We’ll be sharing proven return-to-work strategies and tools through web content, video, conferences and events.
We’ll talk about how to figure out what you want to do after your career break, how to put your resume together, developing a great LinkedIn profile, interviewing, what to wear to an interview, career “returnships,” putting together a great elevator pitch, networking, updating your skills, the gig economy, how to address the dreaded “gap” and many other key topics.
4. What information and inspiration do you want Know Your Value readers to walk away with?
Returning to work after a career break shouldn’t be an uphill battle.
I hope that our website can inspire you, help build your confidence and give you the tools you need to go back to work.
The biggest impediment for women who want to return to work is a lack of confidence. We feel like we are rusty, like we have been out of the loop for a while, like we’re technologically obsolete and aren’t quite sure where we fit in. The thought of putting together a resume is daunting. Many of us wrongfully believe that we just aren’t up to the job and think “why would they ever hire me?”








