The story of The Millennial and how she approaches her career is everywhere. A recent New York Times article explained that millennial women are looking for balance in their lives, and expect their career and family priorities to shift over time. More often than not, millennial women are planning for this shift, adopting a ‘give and take’ approach to their careers and shaking up what it means to achieve career success. Whether they’re starting businesses, traveling across the world or simply challenging convention, millennial women are fearless in their quest for professional and personal happiness.
Here’s how millennial women are defining career success.
Controlling their path:
Millennial women are associating career success with their ability to plan for and control professional outcomes. By choosing what they want to work on and when, millennials are opting for true fulfillment. By planning for potential career breaks or travel opportunities, women are controlling their career and guiding it as they desire. The increase in millennials doing freelance work on the side illustrates this new sense of career control – and it enables women to do what they want, when they want.
Bucking tradition:
By not following in the path of their parents, millennials are changing what it means to be professionally successful. Unless she’s involved in a family business, it’s highly unlikely that a millennial echoes the career that her mother or father pursued. A study from the Center for Women and Business at Bentley University noted millennials’ individual ambitions as a primary career driver: “Millennials seem to be motivated by personal values and aspirations and less by career advancement.”
Upskilling:
Continuing professional development is a common theme among millennial women. I observe my own friends and colleagues attending conferences, signing up for training courses and becoming members of support or learning groups. In order to ‘upskill’ you need to always be on the lookout for the next opportunity or helpful course that can transform your way of working. I regularly attend conferences and workshops to broaden my mind, meet new people and learn new skills to offer my clients.








