AI prompts to help burned-out executives and senior professionals explore their next career move
AI tools have completely changed how I help clients explore potential career changes in some exciting ways.
What used to take weeks of research (identifying potential roles, understanding different industries, mapping out transition paths) can now happen in a single conversation. My clients can use a variety of AI tools to generate dozens of future career options in a matter of minutes.
I’m genuinely excited about this because AI is making career exploration faster and more thorough than it’s ever been. People can uncover possibilities they might never have found on their own, see how their experience translates to different fields, and explore options without the limitations of their own knowledge or experience.
Here are 10 detailed AI prompts you can use:
1. Practical Pivot Options
Act as a career transition strategist. I currently work as [your current role] in [your industry]. Generate 10 specific job titles or career paths that would be realistic pivots from my background, requiring minimal retraining. For each option, explain: (1) why it’s a logical transition, (2) typical timeline to make this move, and (3) what makes this role sustainable long-term and unlikely to be heavily automated by AI in the next 5-7 years. Present your response as a table.
2. Industry Cross-Mapping
Act as an executive recruiter specializing in career transitions. I have [X years] of experience in [current industry]. Map my background to opportunities in [target industry 1], [target industry 2], and [target industry 3]. For each industry, identify 5 specific roles where someone with my background could add immediate value. Focus on roles that might not be obvious to someone outside these industries.
3. High-Value Combination Roles
Act as a workforce trends analyst. My background uniquely combines [aspect 1] and [aspect 2]. Identify 10 roles or emerging career paths where this specific combination creates disproportionate value and competitive advantage. For each, explain why this particular combination is valuable in today’s market and what types of organizations are actively hiring for this profile.
4. Work Environment Match
Act as an organizational psychologist and career strategist. I’m seeking work environments characterized by [specific attributes, e.g., “high autonomy, minimal meetings, deep work focus”]. Based on my background in [your field], identify 10 specific roles that typically offer these conditions. Include typical company sizes, industries where this environment is common, and realistic salary ranges.
5. Remote and Location-Flexible Options
Act as a remote work specialist and career advisor. Given my background in [your field], identify 10 career paths that are genuinely remote-friendly or location-flexible (not just “temporary remote”). Focus on roles where remote work is standard practice, not a special accommodation. Include information about typical hiring regions and whether these roles are open to international candidates.
6. Adjacent High-Growth Areas
Act as a labor market economist. I currently work in [your field] and I’m interested in [adjacent area or emerging interest]. Identify 8-10 careers at the intersection of these domains that are experiencing growth. For each role, explain current market demand, typical entry points for someone making this transition, and what’s driving growth in this area.
7. Problem-Solving Style Match
Act as an industrial-organizational psychologist. I’m energized by work centered on [specific type of work, e.g., “navigating ambiguous problems with incomplete information” or “synthesizing qualitative insights from diverse stakeholders”]. Given my background in [your field], identify 10 careers where this cognitive approach is central to daily work. Explain what the day-to-day reality looks like in each role.
8. Company Stage and Size Preferences
Act as a startup ecosystem expert and corporate recruiter. I have experience in [your field] and I’m most interested in working at [e.g., “early-stage startups,” “mid-size companies,” “enterprise organizations,” “non-profits”]. Identify 10 specific roles that are common in organizations of this type where my background would be valued. Explain how the role differs across different organizational contexts.
9. Income-Viable Options
Act as a compensation analyst and career strategist. I currently earn [salary range] and need to maintain or increase this level. Given my background in [your field], identify 10 career options meeting these financial parameters that are also unlikely to be heavily automated by AI due to requirements for human judgment, relationship-building, or complex decision-making. Present as a table including: Role, Typical Salary Range, Current Market Demand (High/Medium/Low), Transition Difficulty (Low/Medium/High), and AI-Resistance Factors. Focus on what’s realistically available at these compensation levels right now.
10. Non-Obvious Career Paths
Act as a contrarian career advisor with deep knowledge of labor market trends. Based on my background in [your field/role], suggest 10 unexpected career paths I likely haven’t considered that could be strong fits and are unlikely to be automated due to their reliance on uniquely human capabilities (creativity, emotional intelligence, ethical reasoning, complex negotiation, or ambiguous problem-solving). Include at least 3 options quite different from my current trajectory. For each, explain why someone with my background might actually thrive in this role, even if it seems like an unusual match at first glance.
A Quick Disclaimer on Using AI for Career Research: AI tools can hallucinate information, especially when it comes to specifics like salary ranges, market demand data, or whether certain roles typically offer remote work. Treat everything AI generates as a starting point that needs verification through additional research, conversations with people in those roles, and your own investigation.
What to Do If You’re Still Confused
If you’ve made list after list of possible career moves, and you still feel lost, it usually means one of two things. Either you haven’t found the root of your dissatisfaction yet, or you don’t have a clear way to sort through which options fit this phase of your life best. When you’ve spent most of your adult life meeting other people’s expectations, it’s easy to lose touch with your own interests.
Sometimes when you can’t choose, the problem isn’t your job title at all. It might be burnout flattening your drive and motivation, difficult workplace dynamics keeping you in survival mode, or personal life circumstances limiting your options. Often, it’s a combination of things.
My comprehensive workplace assessment looks at four areas: role fit, workplace dynamics, psychological patterns, and life circumstances. The goal is to help you understand all the factors contributing to your dissatisfaction before you make any big career decisions.
If it turns out you really do need a career change, I offer a structured, assessment‑based process designed to help you move from feeling trapped and overwhelmed to having a clear plan and direction.
If you’d like support sorting this out, you can schedule a consultation here.



