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Embarking on a journey that commenced as a lawyer, Didier Busard has evolved into a seasoned leader with a rich tapestry of experiences. His trajectory encompasses pivotal roles at Cobac, where he navigated operations, financial analyses, and risk ma...
As Winston Churchill once said, “Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.” How can leaders transform career disruptions from obstacles into defining moments?
Today, no one is immune to career-disruptive events – not even experienced executives. These disruptions could come in many forms, including organizational restructuring, industry volatility, geopolitical shifts, technological advancements, or personal crossroads. For most, navigating the immediate shock of career disruption is one of resistance and dread, often viewing these unexpected breaks as significant setbacks.
Didier Busard, Leadership Consulting Partner at Signium in Brussels, comments on these major interruptions:
“We shouldn’t be asking ourselves about whether disruption will occur, but rather how to respond to it when it does. More importantly, instead of viewing disruption as some doomsday event, we must anticipate the possibility that it could be used to shape the next chapter for the better.”
As much as a career break may stir uncertainty and panic, it can also create the opportunity to step into new roles with refreshed clarity, increased credibility, and even enhanced capability. The difference lies in facing disruption calmly and choosing to act with intention rather than haste.
For high-performing leaders, stepping away from the corporate fast lane can feel disorienting. However, a forced career break could provide the opportunity to pause and reflect, perhaps for the first time in years. Rather than signaling a loss of relevance – which many leaders may feel in these circumstances – career breaks offer a rare chance to upskill, pivot entirely, or re-prioritize personal aspirations.
A recent Roland Berger study found that 53% of professionals who took a significant break felt it made them better at their job upon return, while 51% of hiring managers believed the experience positively impacted long-term performance.
Whether through unplanned disruptions or overdue sabbaticals, career breaks allow leaders to leverage the true luxury of time:
Stepping back from constant deadlines creates the distance needed to see personal values and priorities more clearly. Away from the noise of daily operations, leaders may find they can reflect on what drives them, how their leadership style has evolved, and what kind of impact they want to have going forward.
A break can be an ideal window for learning, whether through short executive programs, online courses, or reading and research. Without the usual time constraints, leaders often discover new perspectives or develop expertise in areas they had long set aside, bringing fresh insight back to their next role.
Time away often draws leaders into projects that reconnect them with meaning. This may include mentoring, community involvement, or personal passions. These activities can uncover different dimensions of leadership, reminding executives why they lead in the first place and strengthening their sense of purpose.
Just as professional athletes build rest and recovery into their training, leaders benefit from intentional downtime. For many, a pause becomes the first chance in years to rest properly and restore energy. As a result, when the right opportunity arises, they’re ready to return with fresh momentum.
A break also allows leaders to consider whether their current industry, role, or trajectory still feels aligned, or whether it’s time for a shift. Some discover that their skills translate across sectors, while others clarify the type of culture they want to be part of next. This reimagining often lays the groundwork for more purposeful career decisions.
“Sometimes, a major disruption is exactly what we need,” says Didier Busard. “The gifts of time and perspective often lead to innovative career moves. The next big adventure. The idea we had years ago. The executive role we always dreamed of applying for. The recovery our bodies needed. Even when it’s scary, we must shift the paradigm from ‘I’m unemployed’ to ‘I’ve got some time to reimagine my future’.”
A break in an executive career can easily drift into uncertainty if it isn’t managed with purpose. Yet, by treating the pause as an active phase rather than a gap, leaders can keep their skills sharp, their networks engaged, and their sense of direction intact. The following five proactive approaches highlight how executives can turn downtime into an investment in the future.
1. Stay updated on shifting job markets
The executive hiring landscape has undergone some meaningful shifts in recent years. Across sectors, organizations are prioritizing agility, digital literacy, and values-centric leadership. Executives re-entering the workspace must not only demonstrate continuity of expertise, but also alignment with evolving organizational demands.
Traditional recruitment channels have become less prominent and, while public job boards remain in use, many leadership roles are filled through networks, private referrals, and specialist executive search. This is why strategic visibility plays an important role in remaining connected while navigating a career break. Executives should maintain regular interaction with their industry through updated professional profiles, intentional networking, and relevant thought leadership content.
2. Re-evaluate career direction
A career break also creates space for deeper professional re-evaluation. For some, it affirms a continued commitment to their previous industry. For others, it raises questions about relevance, purpose, and the direction of the journey ahead.
More executives in transition are considering cross-sector moves or lateral shifts into similar functions. The key lies in identifying which leadership capabilities and skills remain transferable, like transformation management, stakeholder alignment, and team development.
Didier Busard adds: “Leaders willing to explore these connections often uncover paths they might not have previously considered. For those thinking of charting a new course entirely, targeted reskilling can serve as a bridge between past experience and future opportunity.”
3. Stay active in the industry of interest
Leadership capabilities, like any skill, benefit from ongoing practice refinement. During a career pause, it’s possible to stay engaged through high-impact, low-commitment activities, such as consulting projects, nonprofit governance, industry panel participation, or mentorship of emerging leaders.
These activities not only maintain intellectual momentum but also provide evidence of continued contribution.
“By participating in professional webinars, leadership forums, or short-term project work, executives remain current with emerging challenges and frameworks,” says Didier Busard. “And in a hiring conversation, these experiences show initiative and enthusiasm. It shows that the executive is personally invested, ready to work, and relevant.”
4. Frame the career break in a positive light
Despite growing acceptance of career gaps, leaders must still navigate different perceptions when re-entering the job market. How a break is communicated often matters more than the break itself.
On resumes, clear labeling of how one used a career gap can signal transparency and initiative. Descriptions that reflect strategic activities help contextualize the break in a professional framework. These could include “Independent Consulting,” “Executive Learning and Development,” or “Nonprofit Board Leadership”. In recruitment conversations, executives who frame the break as a period of realignment or personal development tend to maintain credibility.
“There’s no shame in admitting that one has had to take a career break, for whatever reason,” says Didier Busard. “What may open doors to new opportunities is being able to account for time well spent – time spent doing something proactive and productive.”
5. Do some internal diagnostics
One way to keep from drifting during a career break is to invest in honest self-assessment. Diagnostic tools such as CliftonStrengths (StrengthsFinder), personality frameworks, or leadership style assessments can help uncover what drives performance and where energy is best allocated. Reflection exercises, like reviewing past achievements, noting where satisfaction was highest, and defining what no longer feels acceptable, also serve as anchors during months of uncertainty.
A recent Happen to Your Career podcast interview takes a look at Caroline’s story – a senior leader in a major accounting firm who took a two-year break after burnout. During that pause, she used diagnostic tools to clarify her top strengths and to redefine what she truly wanted from work. She declined several roles that didn’t align with her values, holding out until she found one that offered both flexibility and purpose. For her, the time away was less about finding a job fast, and more about re-entering on her own terms.
Didier Busard adds: “Structured self-assessment turns abstract ideas like personal strengths or aspirations into something concrete that can be described, seen and understood. It equips leaders with the language, evidence, and confidence to rely on when new opportunities arise. Investing in this kind of reflection during a career break can also save years of wrong turns later.”
Career disruption is rarely part of a leader’s plan, but it’s becoming a more frequent reality in many stories. While an executive may feel overwhelmed by the financial strain and stress that follows, there are ways to navigate a break that goes beyond mere survival. It’s an opportunity to explore personal reinvention.
“Those who return to leadership roles after a break have been given the time to redefine their sense of value – both about what they want from a role, and what they can offer,” says Didier Busard. “They often bring with them heightened awareness and deeper wells of resilience. These traits are essential for reintroducing stability and consistency in a landscape where disruption is such a constant.”
Career disruption is not a fatal failure, nor the end of a journey. It is a moment of stillness at the close of one chapter, where one can reimagine the road ahead. That moment can be wasted by worry, or it can be made into something extraordinary. Leaders need to remember that they don’t have to face these challenges alone. With the help of an executive coach specialized in outplacement or career guidance, they can use the pause to dream and design a brighter tomorrow. In this way, they’re often able to return to better-suited roles, more fulfilling paths, and a renewed sense of direction and purpose.