Career by Chance or by Design? Only 20% Manage Their Career Actively
My practice experience as a career advisor, combined with published research, points consistently in one direction: at most 20% of professionals actively shape their career.
The rest react.
The Numbers
Studies on career development (Randstad/KOFA/Monster, 2023/2024) show:
- Approximately 4% of professionals have a clearly documented career plan
- 40% have no plan at all
- 60% think in a time horizon of one to two years
Personal career management appears to feel non-urgent. It is not.
An employment situation ends — for whatever reason. A fast decision about a new position must be made. Someone with a plan arrives at that moment prepared. Someone without one arrives at it in emergency mode, making one of the most consequential decisions of their professional life under maximum pressure with minimum information.
What Having a Plan Actually Looks Like
Someone who manages their career proactively has:
- Already thought through this scenario before it happened
- A network with genuinely relevant contacts and recruiting agencies who know them
- Application materials that are ready and effective — not documents last opened two years ago
- Online profiles that generate inbound interest rather than just sitting there
- A trusted advisor in their corner when decisions need to be made quickly
The difference between these two people at the moment of transition is not primarily capability. It is preparation.
Why Potential Goes Unseen
Professional potential becomes visible only when it is consciously reflected on and deliberately developed. Most people have a narrower picture of their own strengths and market value than the reality warrants — because they have never systematically examined either.
Someone who knows their strengths, goals, and constraints — ideally grounded in a structured personality assessment — can:
- Market themselves more effectively and credibly
- Evaluate job offers more objectively, without panic
- Negotiate more confidently, with actual leverage
- Build a career that holds up over time, not just through the next transition
“Proactive career planning is not a luxury — it is a necessity. Those who act with intention sit more securely and reduce the risk of being caught unprepared.”
What Professional Career Counseling Costs in Germany
Professional career counseling in Germany ranges from approximately €100 to €180 per hour. Package offerings start from around €1,000 for compact reorientation programs. It is a differentiated market — one where price and quality correlate with the experience, expertise, and talent of the individual advisor.
For context: a single wrong job move — staying too long in the wrong role, accepting a position that does not fit, or being slow to respond to market signals — typically costs far more than this, in both financial and non-financial terms.
The Honest Question
Are you already planning deliberately? Or do you believe it works well enough without professional support?
There is no universally correct answer. Some people are naturally structured and self-aware, with good networks and clear direction. They may navigate transitions effectively on their own.
But for the majority — the 80% who are reactive by default — that confidence is more often a product of optimism than evidence. The OECD data is clear on this point: “no need” is the most common reason people give for not using career guidance. And it is most frequently cited in precisely the groups where the potential benefit would be highest.
The free initial consultation is a good place to find out which group you are actually in.
Sources
Practice experience and published research: Randstad/KOFA/Monster career development studies (2023/2024). OECD Survey of Career Guidance for Adults (SCGA, 2020), published in OECD (2021): Career Guidance for Adults in a Changing World of Work.