A warm, painterly oil painting of a chess board on a wooden desk near a window. Several chess pieces are positioned mid-game with translucent curved arrows showing a sequence of three moves. Golden afternoon light streams through the window, with a cup of tea and a leather-bound journal nearby.

The Three-Move Problem

I was on a video call last week with a mentee who had just finished laying out her plan. She wanted to change her role, change her team, and change her country. All at once. All within the year. She had this energy that I recognized immediately, the kind that comes from finally knowing what you want and not wanting to wait another minute to get there.

She was less than a year out of school, working in a sales engineering role at a large tech company. Her undergraduate work was in electrical engineering, and she’d done several internships in the healthcare technology space. She loved that work and wanted to get back to it. Specifically, she wanted to move into a full-time software engineering position, on a health-focused product team, in a different country. Three big changes, stacked on top of each other like a wish list written on a napkin.

I get it. I’ve felt that same pull. But I’ve also learned, sometimes the hard way, that trying to change everything at once is one of the surest ways to change nothing at all.

The Napkin Problem

Here’s the thing about goals that try to do too much at once: they aren’t really goals. They’re dreams. And I don’t say that dismissively. Dreams are important. But a dream without a plan is just a source of frustration.

There’s a saying I first heard from early SREs at Google that has stuck with me ever since: “Hope is not a strategy.” They meant it about production infrastructure. As in, “I hope the service doesn’t fall over during a traffic surge” is not a valid entry in your runbook. But I’ve found the phrase applies just as well to careers. “I hope all three of these changes work out simultaneously” is not a career plan.

When I asked her to think about what was really being asked of each of those changes, the picture got clearer. Changing from sales engineering to software engineering means proving yourself as a developer, building a portfolio of work, and earning the trust of an engineering hiring manager. That’s a significant lift on its own. Changing teams means building relationships with a new group, learning a new domain, and demonstrating relevance to that team’s mission. And changing countries involves visas, relocation logistics, and finding a manager in a different office willing to sponsor the move.

Each of those is a meaningful project. Stacking all three together doesn’t just triple the difficulty. It creates dependencies and friction between the moves that make the whole thing fragile. One delay in the visa process stalls the team change. One rejection from the health team stalls the role change. The goals aren’t S.M.A.R.T., and that sets us up for disappointment.

Sequencing the Moves

What I suggested was something simpler, but not easier: make a plan, and sequence the steps.

The first move would be to transition from sales engineering to software engineering locally. She was already doing real engineering work in her current role, building demos, writing integration code, debugging customer issues in production systems. Sales engineering isn’t a non-technical job, it’s a different job family. The gap wasn’t in her ability, it was in how that work was recognized. The key was to make her engineering contributions visible in the right context. Start picking up tasks on the engineering backlog. Get her code into the codebase, not just into customer-facing prototypes. Build credibility with the people who would eventually be her peers.

I also suggested she build a relationship with a nearby engineering team and start contributing to their work in her off hours. Those contributions go a long way towards building trust, and if she does good work for them, the next time they have headcount available, she’ll be the person they think of. It’s extra effort, and it means your work-life balance shifts for a while. But there’s a difference between an unsustainable grind and a conscious, temporary investment in a plan you believe in. When you’re making a change on your own terms, that extra work doesn’t feel like a burden. It feels like building something.

The second move, once she was established as a software engineer, would be to get closer to the health space. There were health-adjacent teams in her local office. Not the exact team she wanted to join, but teams working on things like fitness tracking or cloud services for healthcare providers. They weren’t her destination, but they were a lot closer than where she was now. This might even be a two-part move: first into an SWE role on her current team, then a lateral transfer to one of those local health-adjacent teams. With an engineering role already in hand, that lateral move becomes a natural step rather than a leap. And her internship background in healthcare technology becomes an asset in the conversation, not a footnote on a resume that’s asking for too many things at once.

The third move, once she was on a health-focused engineering team with a track record, would be the international transfer. At that point, she’s not asking a manager in another country to take a chance on someone changing roles, changing domains, and relocating all at once. She’s a software engineer on a health team who wants to continue that work in a different office. That’s a much easier conversation.

Each step captures real benefit along the way. After the first move, she’s a software engineer. That’s not a waypoint, that’s a career milestone. After the second, she’s working in healthcare technology, which is what she’s passionate about. The international move becomes the capstone, not the foundation.

The Long Game

I shared my own experience with her, because I think it helps to hear that this kind of sequencing isn’t just advice I give. It’s how I’ve navigated my own career. When I decided to move from leading large teams back to an individual contributor role, I didn’t just resign from management one morning and start writing code the next. It took years.

I started by slowly shrinking my management scope, which gave me more time for technical work. I began contributing to open source projects, rebuilding muscles that had atrophied during years of calendars full of meetings. Then I moved into technical projects at work, building credibility as a builder alongside my leadership responsibilities. Only after I had demonstrated that I could do the work, and that I wanted to do it for the right reasons, did I make the formal transition.

It wasn’t fast. But at every stage I was capturing benefit. I was learning, contributing, and building the case for the next step. And because I had a plan, the waiting didn’t feel like stalling. It felt like progress.

Goals That Actually Work

The temptation to change everything at once comes from a good place. It comes from clarity about what you want. But clarity about the destination isn’t the same as clarity about the route. The best career plans I’ve seen, both in my own life and in the lives of the people I coach, are the ones that break a big ambition into a sequence of achievable moves, each one valuable on its own.

This is actually where our conversation started. Before we talked about sequencing or strategy, I asked her one question: “What needs to be true to allow you to make this move?” That’s the question that unlocks everything. Write down where you want to be, then work backwards. What needs to be true before you can get there? What needs to be true before that? Keep going until you arrive at something you can start doing next week.

My mentee left our conversation with the same ambition she walked in with, but now she had concrete goals and a sequence of moves to get there. Step one was already something she could act on Monday morning. That’s the difference between hope and a strategy.

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