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Live classes built for parents who want to keep developing their careers — leadership, executive presence, negotiation, career strategy, networking that actually fits your life.

New lessons are being filmed for this stage — check back soon. In the meantime, the specialists below already work this stage.
New lessons are being filmed for this stage — check back soon.
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Pick fewer things and protect them. Most career stalls during early parenthood come from trying to do everything at half-volume instead of doing two or three things well. Identify the work that compounds — the project that earns trust, the relationship that opens doors — and let the rest run on maintenance until your bandwidth comes back.
Start the conversation months before the ask, not in the meeting itself. Bring written evidence of impact (numbers, outcomes, scope), a clear comparison to the level you’re asking for, and a specific number or title. Decide your walk-away in advance, and never share it. Practice the conversation out loud — once with a coach, once in the mirror.
Executive presence is the sense that you can be trusted with bigger rooms, harder calls, and ambiguous problems. It’s mostly behavior: how you show up under pressure, how you take a position, how you handle disagreement, how you make people around you sharper. It’s very learnable, and parenthood is one of the best labs for it — most of the muscles transfer.
Treat networking like a cadence, not an event. Twenty minutes a week of warm follow-ups, two short calls a month, and one thoughtful introduction you make for someone else will out-perform a dozen happy hours. The point isn’t volume — it’s being someone people remember at the right moment.
Renegotiate the first 90 days out loud. Set expectations with your manager about ramp-up, hours, and the one or two things you’ll lead first. Don’t try to prove you’re unchanged — prove you’re effective on a smaller surface area. Most people who lose ground after leave do it by saying yes to everything in week one.
Maybe — but it’s not automatically more flexible. Fractional and freelance work trade one set of constraints (a manager, a calendar) for a different set (sales, scope creep, irregular pay). Run the math on a realistic year, talk to people two years in, and decide whether you want the freedom enough to take on the operational load that comes with it.
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