10 min 17 sec

Next Move, Best Move: Transitioning Into a Career You'll Love

By Kimberly Brown

Stop reacting to job openings and start driving your career. This guide offers a strategic framework for aligning your personal values with professional opportunities to achieve meaningful, long-term success.

Table of Content

Think about the amount of time and energy you invest in your career. For most of us, work occupies the vast majority of our waking hours, yet surprisingly few of us approach our professional lives with the same level of intentionality we might apply to a financial investment or a major life purchase. Instead, many talented professionals find themselves in a state of drift. They float from one role to the next, responding to recruiters or jumping at the first available promotion simply because it’s there, rather than because it fits into a larger, more meaningful picture.

What if you could stop being a passenger in your own career and finally take the wheel? The throughline of this journey is simple but profound: your career is your own responsibility, and the most fulfilling path is one you’ve mapped out yourself. It’s about shifting from a reactive mindset to a strategic one.

In the following segments, we’re going to explore how you can transform your professional trajectory by making every transition a calculated, high-value step. We will break down the essential moves you need to make to ensure that you aren’t just finding another job, but are actively building a legacy of leadership and satisfaction. We’ll look at how to audit your past, plan for a future that honors your values, build a reputation that opens doors, and finally, execute with the kind of confidence that demands results. If you’re ready to stop settling for ‘fine’ and start reaching for ‘best,’ then let’s dive in.

Before you can decide where you are going, you must have a clear and honest understanding of exactly where you have been.

Success is hollow if it doesn’t align with your core values, making a personal mission statement essential for long-term career satisfaction.

Your brand is the reputation that works for you when you aren’t in the room, making its intentional design a career necessity.

Moving from planning to action requires the courage to speak up for your worth and negotiate for the future you deserve.

As we wrap up this exploration of Next Move, Best Move, the most important takeaway is that your professional destiny is not a matter of luck or timing. It is the result of intentional choices. We’ve seen that a truly successful career transition requires a blend of deep reflection, values-based planning, proactive branding, and courageous execution.

By taking the time to audit your past, you gain the clarity needed to avoid old traps. By aligning your goals with your core values, you ensure that your success actually feels like success. By building a brand that reflects your true potential, you invite the right opportunities to find you. And by advocating for yourself, you ensure that your contributions are recognized and your worth is compensated.

This is a living, breathing strategy. It isn’t something you do once and then put on a shelf. It’s a way of approaching your work life that keeps you in the driver’s seat. Your next move doesn’t have to be a lateral step or a move out of desperation. It can be a strategic leap toward the life you want to lead. So, take that first step today. Start that audit, define those values, and begin the work of making your next move your very best one.

About this book

What is this book about?

Next Move, Best Move is a strategic roadmap for professionals who feel like they are drifting through their careers rather than steering them. It addresses the common frustration of feeling stuck in a cycle of reactive job-seeking, where one moves from one role to another without a clear sense of purpose or a long-term vision. The book promises to shift your perspective from being a passive employee to becoming the CEO of your own career path. Through a four-step framework—Review, Plan, Brand, and Execute—this summary explores how to audit your past experiences, define your non-negotiable workplace values, and craft a personal brand that precedes you in every room. You will learn the importance of self-advocacy, the nuances of managing both up and down, and how to bridge the gap between your current skills and your dream leadership role. By the end, you’ll have the tools to ensure that every professional transition you make is not just another move, but your best move yet.

Book Information

Rating:

Genra:

Career & Success, Entrepreneurship & Startups, Management & Leadership

Topics:

Career Planning, Entrepreneurship, Job Search, Leadership, Mindset

Publisher:

Wiley

Language:

English

Publishing date:

June 9, 2021

Lenght:

10 min 17 sec

About the Author

Kimberly Brown

Kimberly Brown is a career and leadership development expert recognized for her thought leadership in career strategy, intentional personal branding, and empowerment for historically underrepresented communities. Brown is also the founder of Brown Leadership and the host of the Your Next Move podcast.

Ratings & Reviews

Ratings at a glance

4.5

Overall score based on 32 ratings.

What people think

Listeners find the guide highly perceptive, with one listener noting how it helped them re-evaluate their 16-year career. Furthermore, the text delivers practical, step-by-step advice for managing professional transitions.

Top reviews

Saowalak

Finally finished this career roadmap and the 'Career Inventory' exercise alone made it worth the purchase. I’ve been feeling stagnant lately, just reacting to whatever emails land in my inbox instead of steering the ship. To be fair, some of the networking tips feel a bit standard, but the way she frames you as the 'CEO of your career' really clicked for me. It’s about taking that bold, values-driven action instead of waiting for a boss to notice your hard work. The section on Review, Plan, Brand, and Execute provides a clear structure that I desperately needed. If you’re tired of the same old platitudes found in typical HR advice, this feels much more like a strategic partnership.

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Chanida

Wow, I didn't realize how much I was just 'drifting' until I sat down with this book and started the worksheets. It’s easy to get lost in the day-to-day grind and forget that you actually have agency over where you're going next. Kimberly Brown helps you build a professional compass so you stop landing in roles that look 'shiny' but ultimately drain your energy. I found the 3-6 month milestone planning to be the most practical part of the whole guide. No more floating; I finally feel like I have a strategy to advocate for my worth during my next performance review. It gave me the courage to look forward with purpose.

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Amara

Picked this up during a major career transition and the worksheets were a total game-changer for my confidence. It forced me to look back at my first internships and realize that I’ve actually been building a powerful brand for years without even knowing it. The section on 'self-advocacy' was especially convicting—I realized I’ve been waiting to be 'discovered' instead of speaking up. Kimberly’s voice is the perfect mix of a tough-love coach and a supportive mentor. This isn't just about finding a job; it’s about crafting a career that actually makes sense for who you are. I feel much more equipped to handle my next interview now.

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Cherry

After hearing about Kimberly's four 'moves' on a podcast, I had to grab the physical copy to see if the hype was real. I am currently working on a two-year strategy to reach a leadership level, and this book has become my primary reference point. The focus on transferable skills is brilliant—it helps you reframe your past experiences so they actually appeal to where you want to go. I especially appreciated the advice on seeking out mentors and sponsors. It’s an empowering read that makes the daunting task of career planning feel much more manageable and, dare I say, exciting. It’s about time someone wrote a guide this practical.

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Clara

As someone who has spent over fifteen years in the same industry, I was skeptical about whether a new book could offer fresh perspectives. Look, I was pleasantly surprised by how much I needed to audit my own 16-year career path using Kimberly’s framework. It isn't just for entry-level folks; even seasoned professionals can benefit from the reminder that our skills need to match our intended trajectory. I appreciated the emphasis on identifying gaps before they become roadblocks. My only gripe is that the tone can occasionally lean into motivational clichés, but the actionable steps usually pull it back. It definitely helps you stop drifting and start acting with real intentionality.

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Anna

Is this the only career guide you'll ever need? Probably not, but it’s a fantastic addition to any professional’s library if they are feeling stuck. The four-move framework—Review, Plan, Brand, and Execute—is logically sound and very easy to implement immediately. To be honest, I’ve read a lot of these types of books, and while some of it is stuff you’ve heard before, the worksheets make it feel more interactive. The focus on 'intentionality' really resonates in today’s chaotic job market. It’s less about luck and more about being prepared for the right door to open. I'd recommend it to anyone in a transition phase.

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Sureerat

Brown Cummings really nails the idea that leadership is a privilege, not just a rite of passage for high performers. I loved the specific questions she suggests asking your team, like 'What time of day do you want feedback?' or 'How do you like to be rewarded?' It humanizes the management process in a way that most corporate training manuals completely miss. While the execution phase felt a little rushed compared to the heavy planning sections, the overall message is powerful. You have to be the one to drive your development because nobody else is going to do it for you. This is a must-read for aspiring people leaders.

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Supaporn

Truth is, I used to think 'personal branding' was just a buzzword for influencers until I read the chapter on how others perceive you. This book challenges you to find out what people say about you when you're not in the room, which is terrifying but absolutely necessary for growth. I’ve already started reaching out to colleagues for feedback using the prompts provided, and the insights have been eye-opening. The 'Execute' section provides the push I needed to stop overthinking and start making moves. It's a solid 4-star read for anyone who needs a nudge to take their professional identity seriously and level up.

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Hunter

The advice here is solid, but I struggled with the author’s stance on being a generalist. Frankly, I think she confuses having no direction with having a versatile, transferable skill set that allows for agility in a changing market. While her 'Review' phase is excellent for self-reflection, the book seems to assume everyone wants a linear climb to the executive suite. It’s a very intentional, high-energy approach that might exhaust someone just looking for a better work-life balance. Still, for those who are laser-focused on a promotion or a pivot, the branding exercises are quite useful. It is a decent guide, though maybe a bit narrow in its philosophy.

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Bella

Not gonna lie, I felt like I was reading a personal memoir about a missed promotion rather than a comprehensive career guide. The author spends a lot of time on her own story, which is fine, but it leads to a lot of 'Monday morning quarterbacking' that might not apply to everyone's unique situation. I also found it slightly off-putting when she suggests ignoring other advice to follow her specific path. It feels a bit entry-level for anyone who has been in the workforce for a decade. If you like high-level platitudes about 'owning your worth,' you’ll enjoy it, but I was looking for something more data-driven and less anecdotal.

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