Career Transition After Reorganisation: A Strategic Guide for Senior Professionals
Nobody tells you about the Tuesday afternoons.
The reorganisation announcement was on a Monday. The meetings, the handshakes, the carefully worded HR conversations, those happened quickly. And then came the Tuesday afternoon when there was nowhere to be, no team message to answer, no strategic problem pulling at the corner of your mind.
That is when it gets real.
If you are a senior professional navigating redundancy or a restructuring that has upended your role, this article is for you. Not the tactical advice, though we will get to that. First, the honest part: what is actually happening, and why it is harder than people expect.
The Identity Shock of Losing a Role
Let me tell you about Stefan. (Name changed, details adjusted.) Sixteen years in a senior operations role at a global energy company. Respected leader, trusted voice in the boardroom, known throughout the industry. When the restructuring came, he was given an excellent package and a generous transition timeline.
Six months later, he was still sitting with a blank strategy document on his laptop, unsure where to start.
"I keep waiting to feel like myself again," he told me. "And I don't know who that is without the role."
This is not a weakness. It is a deeply human response. For high achievers, and most senior professionals are, identity and role become fused over decades. You are not just someone who does the job. You are the job. The title, the organisation, the authority, the rhythm of the week, all of it becomes part of how you experience yourself.
When that disappears overnight, it does not feel like a professional setback. It feels like a loss of self.
The first and most important thing to understand about career transition after reorganisation is this: the disorientation you feel is not a signal that something is wrong with you. It is a natural response to a significant change. And like all significant changes, it has a process, one you can navigate intentionally rather than endure passively.
Separating Title from Value
Here is the trap that catches almost every senior professional after a restructuring.
You have been VP, Director, Partner, or Head of Something for years. You are accustomed to being introduced that way, positioned that way, respected that way. And so when it comes time to think about what is next, the natural question is: where can I get that title back?
But your title was never your value. It was a container. What went inside it, the judgment, the relationships, the expertise, the ability to navigate complexity, that is the actual substance.
This matters enormously for your next move.
When you anchor your search to a title, you limit yourself to roles that mirror your last one. You are essentially betting that the same container exists at another organisation, and that they will want it filled by someone carrying your specific history. That is a narrow bet in any market. In 2026, when organisations are restructuring specifically to flatten hierarchies and redesign roles, it is an unnecessarily narrow one.
When you anchor to value, the landscape opens.
Ask yourself: what did my last role actually enable me to do that was genuinely valuable? Not what the job description said. What you actually did, at your best, that created outcomes others could not create. What problems did you solve that others could not? What capabilities do you have that took twenty years to build?
That is your asset base. And it fits into more containers than you think.
How to Reposition Decades of Experience
Repositioning at a senior level is not a cosmetic exercise. It is not about finding new buzzwords for your CV or updating your LinkedIn headline. It is a genuine reckoning with what you have built and how it applies to where you want to go. There are three questions I work through with every client in this phase. What did you actually learn in the last chapter? Not what you did, but what you learned. What makes you a better strategist, communicator, leader, or problem-solver today than you were ten years ago? This is often the most underdeveloped part of a senior professional's narrative. We talk about outcomes. We rarely talk about what produced them. What do you see that others miss? After decades in an industry, sector, or function, you have a perspective that is genuinely rare. What patterns do you recognise? What mistakes do you know how to avoid? What future do you see that a less experienced person cannot? This perspective is often your most competitive asset, and most professionals never learn to articulate it. What would you build if you could design it from scratch? This question breaks the frame. It moves you from reactive, what role can I slot into, to generative, what would actually be worth doing. The answers are sometimes surprising, and often more realistic than they initially appear.
Creating Momentum in the Job Market
Here is a paradox of senior-level job searching: the higher the level, the less visible the opportunity. Most executive and senior professional roles are filled through networks, headhunters, and direct outreach, not through job boards. Which means that the most important thing you can do in the first ninety days of your transition is not submit applications. It is have conversations. Not transactional networking. Genuine, substantive conversations with people in your industry who respect your work, understand your context, and move in the circles where your next opportunity is likely to emerge. This requires overcoming a significant psychological hurdle. Senior professionals, particularly those who have always been in the position of helping others, often find it deeply uncomfortable to be the one asking. There is a fear of appearing diminished, of revealing vulnerability, of being seen as in need. But here is the reality: most people want to help someone they respect who is navigating a transition. They are not judging you. They are glad to hear from you. And the conversations that feel most uncomfortable are often the ones that create the most significant outcomes. A practical structure for the first ninety days: - Month one: internal clarity and narrative work. Get clear on what you want and why, before you start telling anyone else. - Month two: targeted conversations with twenty to thirty people in your extended network. Not to ask for a job, but to share your direction and ask for perspective. - Month three: focused outreach to specific opportunities that align with what you have clarified. Designing Your Next Chapter Intentionally The professional who treats reorganisation as a turning point rather than a setback, and I have watched this happen dozens of times, is not the one with the best CV or the most connections. It is the one who does the transition work intentionally. That means sitting with uncomfortable questions. It means building a clear picture of what the next chapter should actually look like, not just defaulting to the most obvious next step. And it means investing in the support structures, coaching, peer networks, career frameworks, that give you both accountability and perspective. Career transition is not a deviation from your professional journey. For many senior professionals, it is the moment when the journey gets most interesting. Work with a career coach at The Change Republic to navigate your transition with strategy, clarity, and confidence: www.thechangerepublic.com/careercoaching Tünde Lukacs is an executive coach and founder of The Change Republic. She works with senior professionals navigating career transitions, personal reinvention, and leadership development across Switzerland and Europe.
Separating Title from Value
Here is the trap that catches almost every senior professional after a restructuring.
You have been VP, Director, Partner, or Head of Something for years. You are accustomed to being introduced that way, positioned that way, respected that way. And so when it comes time to think about what is next, the natural question is: where can I get that title back?
But your title was never your value. It was a container. What went inside it, the judgment, the relationships, the expertise, the ability to navigate complexity, that is the actual substance.
This matters enormously for your next move.
When you anchor your search to a title, you limit yourself to roles that mirror your last one. You are essentially betting that the same container exists at another organisation, and that they will want it filled by someone carrying your specific history. That is a narrow bet in any market. In 2026, when organisations are restructuring specifically to flatten hierarchies and redesign roles, it is an unnecessarily narrow one.
When you anchor to value, the landscape opens.
Ask yourself: what did my last role actually enable me to do that was genuinely valuable? Not what the job description said. What you actually did, at your best, that created outcomes others could not create. What problems did you solve that others could not? What capabilities do you have that took twenty years to build?
That is your asset base. And it fits into more containers than you think.
How to Reposition Decades of Experience
Repositioning at a senior level is not a cosmetic exercise. It is not about finding new buzzwords for your CV or updating your LinkedIn headline. It is a genuine reckoning with what you have built and how it applies to where you want to go. There are three questions I work through with every client in this phase. What did you actually learn in the last chapter? Not what you did, but what you learned. What makes you a better strategist, communicator, leader, or problem-solver today than you were ten years ago? This is often the most underdeveloped part of a senior professional's narrative. We talk about outcomes. We rarely talk about what produced them. What do you see that others miss? After decades in an industry, sector, or function, you have a perspective that is genuinely rare. What patterns do you recognise? What mistakes do you know how to avoid? What future do you see that a less experienced person cannot? This perspective is often your most competitive asset, and most professionals never learn to articulate it. What would you build if you could design it from scratch? This question breaks the frame. It moves you from reactive, what role can I slot into, to generative, what would actually be worth doing. The answers are sometimes surprising, and often more realistic than they initially appear.