



Most executive leaders think opportunity is earned through performance.
But in today’s market, opportunity is increasingly driven by interpretation.
So we have performance vs. interpretation; 2 very different things.
Some of the most capable leaders I speak with every week are not struggling because they lack results, experience, or executive presence.
They’re struggling because the market no longer knows how to categorize them.
That shift is subtle and expensive.
Especially for high-performing revenue leaders who built their careers inside organizations where promotions, referrals, and reputation handled visibility for them for years.
Until suddenly it shifts.
Over the past two weeks, one theme has come up repeatedly in my conversations with executive leaders:
“I know I’m valuable. I just don’t know why the right opportunities aren’t finding me anymore.”
That sentence matters.
Because usually the issue is not capability.
It’s your LinkedIn profile being stuck in the past and not positioning you for the future.
The market places you before it evaluates you.
Meaning before a recruiter reads your achievements… before a board member opens your resume… before an investor responds to your outreach… before a hiring executive takes your call…
your positioning has already shaped the conversation.
And most leaders never realize where that categorization quietly breaks.
That’s what this week’s content series has been about.
Let’s walk through the five biggest patterns I’m seeing right now.
It doesn’t create opportunity.
Interpretation creates it.
I shared a photo recently standing outside a leadership event I attended, and the conversation that followed was fascinating because executives resonated with one uncomfortable truth:
You are not always overlooked.
Sometimes you are being filtered.
Quietly, systematically, and repeatedly.
And it’s not because you lack value.
Your positioning is the issue because it’s communicating where you were instead of where you now operate.
That distinction changes everything.
One of the biggest misconceptions in executive transition is believing hard work naturally translates into market visibility.
It used to more often than it does now.
Today, executive hiring increasingly happens through perception shortcuts.
People make decisions fast.
They scan, categorize, then interpret.
And if your profile, messaging, or executive narrative creates ambiguity, you don’t necessarily get rejected.
You simply don’t get into the room.
Last Thursday I shared a short video that sparked a lot of private messages from leaders who admitted something they hadn’t said out loud before:
“I’ve been trying to increase visibility, but I still feel invisible.”
That’s because visibility alone doesn’t solve interpretation problems.
You can: optimize your LinkedIn profile, network more aggressively, post constantly, attend events, increase recruiter outreach,
and still attract the wrong opportunities if your market positioning is unclear.
Because every opportunity flows through categorization first.
The market wants to know:
Who are you now.
What level do you operate at.
What business problems do you solve.
Why does your perspective matter.
And most executives are still presenting themselves like high achievers inside a company instead of strategic assets in the broader market.
That difference is costing leaders interviews, influence, compensation, and momentum.
This is the part almost nobody talks about.
When you’ve spent 15 or 20 years being the person people rely on… the fixer… the operator… the rainmaker… the calm executive in the room…
asking for help can feel deeply uncomfortable.
And it’s not because of ego.
It’s because your identity has always been tied to being capable.
So many executive leaders stay stuck in silent loops:
Tweaking headlines endlessly.
Second-guessing resumes.
Avoiding recruiter outreach.
Staying “busy” instead of getting strategically clear.
Trying to solve a positioning problem with more effort.
But executive transition is no longer just about qualifications.
It’s about narrative clarity.
The market has changed faster than most leaders realize.
And brilliance hidden behind outdated positioning becomes invisible surprisingly fast.
One of the polls I shared this week revealed something important:
Nearly half of respondents admitted visibility fears were their biggest challenge.
Another large percentage said lack of clarity was stopping them.
Very few said resumes alone were the issue.
That’s because executives usually don’t struggle with experience.
They struggle with articulation.
Especially when they’re in transition.
A lot of leaders are trying to move toward something they haven’t clearly defined yet.
And when your internal direction feels foggy, your external positioning becomes diluted.
You cannot position what you cannot clearly explain.
And recruiters, boards, and investors feel that immediately.
Clarity creates traction.
Without clarity, executive branding becomes generic very quickly.
This is why I tell clients:
Your next role is rarely found through more applications.
It’s found through stronger positioning.
Vote in this week’s poll here: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/christinegravesexecutivecareercoach_you-cant-position-what-you-cant-speak-to-activity-7460022369458278401-rPBV?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAAFnz9kBJfCMGafmPlVgkGMV6g0vBjIw4tg
Here’s what many leaders still underestimate:
Top-tier executive opportunities often begin quietly.
Long before a public posting exists.
Long before interviews start.
Long before recruiters officially engage.
They begin through: reputation, positioning, market perception, strategic visibility, and trusted executive signals.
The leaders being pursued right now are not necessarily louder.
They’re clearer.
They know how to communicate strategic value before they ever ask for anything.
And that changes how the market responds to them.


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