Anonymous wrote:You have to make it to c-suite or just below in the giant corporations (with a track record of quantifiable results) to become a fractional c-suite consultant.
There is no coasting if you want to make it past 50 in a F100.
Anonymous wrote:I got laid off for my 50th birthday and my career/income never recovered. I caught on with a small company in another field am still working there today.
Nobody wants to talk to you "cold" when you are that old.Me and everyone I know in that situation got their next job through personal connections - you have to know somebody.
My brother made the jump to a government job when he was in his early 50s and has been very happy with his choice. (he was always the smart one)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's very hard to get hired after 50. They don't want to pay what you expect and prefer younger workers.
So what do most Americans do??? I only know people who don’t get laid off (teachers, contractors) or who retire with big money at 50 (lawyers and tech). My DS is looking at career paths outside this, and he is wondering what happens if he doesn’t want to run up the career ladder??
Anonymous wrote:It's very hard to get hired after 50. They don't want to pay what you expect and prefer younger workers.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think it is age related necessarily. I hired two people in their 50s. Both were solid hires. It’s about value creation, energy, ability to keep up, ie travel when needed, do evening events if that’s warranted by the company, etc. Basically you can’t act like you’d prefer to be on a rocking chair.
A lot of people who leave at 50 + either start their own company, move into consulting, or do Fractional C-suite stuff.
Anonymous wrote:I am nearing sixty and I have clearly plateaued: I cost more than my colleagues now and I worry about being laid off: I always believed all that “we are a family” BS and now I am wondering what it was all for
Anonymous wrote:I am nearing sixty and I have clearly plateaued: I cost more than my colleagues now and I worry about being laid off: I always believed all that “we are a family” BS and now I am wondering what it was all for
Anonymous wrote:Consulting or start your own business.