Career ownership is the decision to take active, ongoing responsibility for your direction, skills, relationships, and choices at work rather than waiting for your manager or employer to hand you a path. It does not mean doing everything alone. It means you are the one steering.
Most professionals have never been taught how to do this. They get stuck, drift into the wrong role, or spend years wondering why they feel under-used. This interview with career ownership expert Andy Storch cuts through the noise. Below you will find his core framework, the most useful advice from the conversation, and a set of action steps you can use this week.
Key Takeaways from This Interview
Andy Storch’s career ownership framework comes down to six connected practices:
- Self-reflect first. Know your strengths, values, and what actually energizes you before making any career move.
- Set a flexible vision. A 3- to 5-year direction gives you a filter for decisions without locking you into a rigid plan.
- Build your network before you need it. Relationships built under zero pressure are worth far more than emergency outreach during a job search.
- Own your personal brand. Your reputation travels ahead of you on LinkedIn and in every room you enter. Choose what it says.
- Keep learning continuously. Adaptability is the skill that outlasts every specific tool or technology.
- Own your life, not just your job. Health, family, hobbies, and rest are not separate from career ownership. They are part of it.
Who Is Andy Storch?
Andy Storch is an author, keynote speaker, facilitator, consultant, coach, and podcaster focused on career ownership and talent development. He wrote Own Your Career, Own Your Life, a practical guide to stopping career drift and building a more intentional professional life. His follow-up book, Own Your Brand, Own Your Career (co-authored with Mike Kim), focuses specifically on personal brand strategy for working professionals.
Storch is the founder of the Talent Development Think Tank, a conference and professional community for learning and development practitioners. He hosts three podcasts, including The Talent Development Hot Seat and The Own Your Career Own Your Life podcast. He is also a cancer survivor, which shapes how directly he talks about making the most of the time available.
His work focuses on a core premise: nobody cares more about your career than you do, so the responsibility for managing it has to stay with you.
What Does It Mean to Own Your Career?
Owning your career means treating your professional development as an active, ongoing project rather than something that happens to you. It involves regularly assessing where you are, deciding where you want to go, and taking deliberate steps to close the gap.
This matters more now than it did a decade ago. According to recent data compiled by eLearning Industry, only 23% of employees worldwide feel engaged at work, while 77% are either disengaged or actively checked out. Gallup estimates the cost of global disengagement at roughly $8.9 trillion in lost productivity each year. A large part of that disengagement comes from workers who feel their careers are going nowhere but are not doing anything to change the direction.
Career ownership is the antidote to that pattern. It is not about working harder. It is about working with more clarity about what you want and why.
Andy Storch’s Career Ownership Framework
Start with Self-Reflection
The starting point for owning your career is honest self-assessment. Storch is direct about this: most professionals skip this step entirely and jump straight to tactics, which is why so many end up optimizing the wrong path.
The questions worth sitting with are:
- What are my actual strengths, not just the skills listed on my resume?
- What drains my energy even when I do it well?
- What kind of work makes a day feel short rather than long?
- What do I want my career to look like in three to five years?
Writing out the answers matters. Storch recommends doing this periodically rather than as a one-time exercise, because your answers will change as you gain experience and your priorities shift. The point is not to arrive at a perfect answer but to have a current, honest picture of where you stand.
Set a Flexible Vision for Your Career and Life
Once you have a clearer read on yourself, the next step is setting a direction. Storch is specific about the word “flexible.” A rigid five-year plan tends to become either a source of anxiety or a reason to ignore good opportunities that do not fit the original script. A flexible vision functions as a filter: it helps you say yes to the right things and no to everything else without needing to overthink each decision.
His practical advice is to define what a good outcome looks like in three to five years across a few dimensions: the type of work, the kind of organization, the lifestyle you want to be able to afford, and the contribution you want to make. You do not need every detail mapped out. You need enough clarity to orient your next move.
This vision also makes it easier to evaluate opportunities as they come up. Instead of asking “Is this a good job?” you can ask “Does this get me closer to where I want to be?”
Build Your Network Before You Need It
One of the more consistent points in Storch’s work is that your network is your net worth, and most people only remember to build it when they are already in crisis. The result is that their outreach feels transactional and tends to get weaker responses.
His recommendation is to invest in relationships continuously, even when you are not looking for anything. That means reaching out to former colleagues to catch up, engaging with content from people in fields adjacent to yours, and asking for conversations before you need a favor. The goal is to be a familiar name rather than a cold email.
This also applies to LinkedIn. Storch is consistent about the platform’s role in career management. LinkedIn users with complete profiles are 40 times more likely to receive opportunities through the platform, according to LinkedIn’s own data. The profile is not just a resume backup. It is a live, searchable signal of who you are and what you know.
Strengthen Your Personal Brand on LinkedIn
Professional presence is one of the most underleveraged career assets for mid-career professionals. Most people set up a LinkedIn profile early in their careers and then let it sit unchanged for years, which means their current expertise and trajectory are not visible to anyone looking.
Storch’s view on personal brand is that it is less about self-promotion and more about consistently showing up. The mechanics are simple: share what you know, engage with others’ content, and be clear about what you do and who you help. Over time, that consistency builds a reputation that works on your behalf.
The data on this is worth taking seriously. According to a 2025 report cited by influenceflow.io referencing LinkedIn’s own workplace research, professionals with active personal brands receive 47% more inbound opportunities than those with dormant profiles. That gap widens further for people who post regularly, with only 1% of LinkedIn users posting weekly yet generating 9 billion impressions per week.
The personal brand does not need to be elaborate. Storch is specific about this: start with a current, professional profile photo, a headline that explains what you do and the value you bring, and a simple habit of sharing one useful thing per week.
Keep Learning for the Future of Work
Continuous learning is the thread that runs through all of Storch’s advice on career ownership. His argument is that skills have shorter shelf lives than they used to, and the professionals who stay valuable are the ones who treat learning as a regular practice rather than a one-time credential.
This is particularly relevant with AI reshaping a wide range of job functions. A 2025 Pew Research Center survey found that 52% of workers said they were worried about AI’s impact on their jobs, compared to 36% who described themselves as hopeful. The concern is legitimate, but the response is skill development rather than avoidance.
Storch’s approach to continuous learning includes reading across fields, seeking out mentors who have done what you want to do, and staying curious about adjacent areas even when they are not directly related to your current role. That kind of cross-functional awareness tends to make professionals more useful in complex, ambiguous situations.
LinkedIn data also supports the ROI of this behavior. Research from LinkedIn Learning (via Peoplebox.ai) found that 94% of employees would stay at a company longer if it invested in their career development. From the individual’s side, the same logic applies in reverse: companies that do not invest in your growth are costing you something tangible.
Career Ownership vs. Life Ownership: Why Both Matter
The title of Storch’s book is not accidental. Career and life ownership are connected, and one tends to suffer when the other is neglected.
In the interview, Storch talks about coming back to what he calls “priorities or those things that you care about” as a practical check on where time is actually going. Family and health come up immediately for most people, but so do hobbies, friendships, and activities that have nothing to do with work. The question is whether those things are getting real calendar space or just good intentions.
His framing is seasonal and flexible rather than permanently balanced. At different points in a year, or a career, it makes sense to lean more heavily toward work or toward personal life. The key is doing that intentionally rather than letting it drift by default.
This is where future-proofing your career intersects with life design. If your professional strategy does not have room for rest, health, and the relationships that matter to you, it is not a sustainable strategy. Storch is direct about this: “We only get one life.” Treating career ownership as purely professional misses the point of why it matters.
How to Start Taking Ownership of Your Career Today
The following six steps translate Storch’s framework into a practical sequence you can begin this week.
- Write down your current assessment. Spend 30 minutes writing answers to three questions: What am I genuinely good at? What do I want more of in my career? What would I change right now if I had full control? Do not filter. Write what is actually true.
- Define your direction. Set a flexible vision for where you want to be in three years. It does not need to be detailed. It needs to be directional enough that you can use it as a filter.
- Update your LinkedIn profile today. Add a current photo, rewrite your headline to reflect what you do and the value you bring, and update your most recent experience section with specific outcomes rather than job descriptions.
- Reach out to one person in your network. Make it a check-in with no ask attached. The goal is to strengthen a relationship before you need it.
- Identify one skill gap. Based on your current vision, pick one skill that would make you more effective or more competitive in the direction you want to go. Find one resource to start on it this month.
- Block 30 minutes per week for career work. This is the most commonly skipped step. Without dedicated time, every other item on this list gets crowded out by daily urgency. Put it on the calendar and protect it.
Conclusion: Career Ownership Starts With One Decision
Owning your career does not require a perfect plan. It starts with one decision: to stop waiting for someone else to define your next step.
Andy Storch’s message is direct because it needs to be. Your manager may support you. Your company may offer resources. Your network may open doors. But the responsibility for your direction, growth, relationships, and choices ultimately belongs to you.
That does not mean you have to figure everything out alone. Career ownership works best when you pair self-reflection with the right support, tools, and accountability. Whether you are updating your LinkedIn profile, building a stronger network, clarifying your next move, or learning the skills you need for the future of work, the most important step is to begin intentionally.
Your career shapes more than your job title. It affects your confidence, your opportunities, your relationships, your time, and the way you experience your life. When you take ownership of your career, you give yourself a better chance to build a life that feels aligned with who you are and where you want to go.
Take the Next Step With Pathwise
If this conversation with Andy Storch made you think differently about your own career, Pathwise can help you turn that reflection into action.
- Explore career support for individuals:
Start with Pathwise’s resources for individuals if you want practical guidance for managing your career with more clarity and confidence.
- Work one-on-one with a coach:
If you are navigating a career crossroads, preparing for a transition, or trying to define your next step, Pathwise coaching can help you build a clearer plan and stay accountable to it.
- Strengthen your career skills:
Use Pathwise career courses to build skills that support long-term growth, including communication, leadership, self-awareness, and career planning.
- Get broader career development support:
Explore Pathwise career services for tools and guidance designed to help you take a more active role in your professional future.
Career ownership is not a one-time exercise. It is a practice. Start by choosing one next step, then build from there.
Social Media
When it comes to using social media effectively, some people would advise you to have and maintain a presence on every possible platform. William Arruda, however, is not one of those people. Instead, he recommends being selective and mindful about the platforms you’re on in order to avoid burning yourself out. When selecting the social media platforms that are right for you and your brand, consider whether each platform:
Irrespective of which platforms you choose, Arruda has some universal advice for those looking to increase their brand influence via social media. First, ask yourself the following question whenever you post: “Will this be valuable to my target audience?” If you cannot answer this question in the affirmative, rethink and rework your post. Second, use hashtags, and be considerate of the hashtags you use. According to Arruda, the right hashtags have the power to “put you on the radar of people who are interested in what you have to offer.”