Why Mid-Career Women Are Trading the Corporate Ladder for Something They Can Build Themselves
Channing Martin lost her job as global chief diversity and social impact officer the day her company’s acquisition closed. “I had to come to the realization that I wasn’t as powerful as I thought I was,” she says. “These corporate systems and structures aren’t designed to do what I want to do.”
After years of climbing the ranks at one of the world’s largest marketing holding companies, Martin finally saw the arrangement for what it was: one-sided. Workers had entered what she calls “a social marriage with work” — with no prenup. When the terms changed, she was left holding the risk.
Her story is far from unique. In conversations with dozens of high-achieving women who were within reach of the C-suite, a consistent pattern emerges: they followed every rule the corporate path demanded, only to discover that the power, security, and fulfillment they were promised never fully materialized.
The Broken Promise of Corporate Feminism
Erin Grau, who co-founded the future-of-work company Charter after eight years at *The New York Times*, spent years believing she could simply outwork the system. “A lot of us in my generation have been fed this corporate feminism that if you just work hard, you can have it all,” she says. She kept investing more time and energy, convinced it would eventually fix the structural barriers. It didn’t.
What often gets labeled as “burnout” is, for many of these women, a clearer-eyed recognition that the bargain no longer pays.
The data confirms the quiet withdrawal. Deloitte’s *Women @ Work 2025* report, surveying roughly 7,500 women across 15 countries, found that only **5%** plan to stay with their current employer for more than five years. Nearly four in ten expect to leave within one to two years. When asked what would most help them succeed, the top response — by a wide margin — was opportunities to advance, the very thing the system continues to withhold.
Why Staying Became the Riskier Bet
The ground shifted under their feet. Employers announced roughly 1.2 million job cuts in 2025, the highest since 2020. Tech alone cut over 52,000 jobs in Q1 2026 — a 40% increase year-over-year — as budgets poured into AI at the expense of people. AI was cited as the reason for 15,341 layoffs in March and accounted for about 16% of all announced cuts by April.
Neha Ruch, founder of The Power Pause, articulates the emotional turning point many experience: “That company that I’ve given 15 years to is actually not my family. Their best interest is not my health and longevity here.” The separation, while painful, proved healthy.
Building What They Can Own
Increasingly, these women are channeling their discontent into ownership. According to Gusto, women started **44%** of new businesses in 2025, up from 29% in 2019. The momentum is especially strong among Gen Z women, whose share of new businesses jumped from 38% to 47% in a single year.
The shift extends beyond traditional startups. MBO Partners reports 5.6 million independent professionals now earning more than $100,000 annually — an 86% increase since 2020 — fueled by fractional executive roles and portfolio careers.
Toni Ronayne founded the C Society, a collective of fractional chief executives, after a layoff left her feeling “disposable.” Fractional work, she says, offers real autonomy: “You get to choose who you work with… There is far less risk to balance multiple clients than investing all of your eggs into one basket.” When that single basket disappears in a reorganization or acquisition, what you own cannot be taken away.
Treating the Anxiety as Information
The women who navigate this transition successfully stop viewing their discontent as a personal flaw to be fixed. Instead, they treat the “friction” and “dissonance” (as Breana Teubner, co-founder and COO of TYB, describes it) as valuable data.
Simi Shah, founder of South Asian Trailblazers, calls it a low tolerance for work that feels misaligned with her higher calling. Channing Martin coaches others to begin with two simple questions: “What is your purpose in this season?” and “What are the things you’re really afraid of that are blocking that?”
Naming the fear precisely often reveals the next actionable step.
Plan from A to B, Not A to Z
Corporate ladders train people to map the entire path to Z and treat any missing rung as failure. Teubner advocates an “A-to-B mindset”: focus on your current position, choose the next concrete move (three conversations, one skill to test), and let B reveal C. “When you break it down like that,” she says, “it actually isn’t that scary.”
Jessica Gioglio built the foundations of her fractional marketing practice while still in-house — growing her network and body of work on the side. Building those muscles while a salary still covers the risk makes the eventual leap far less daunting.
Redefine the Metric Before You Move
Without titles or traditional promotions, Neha Ruch had to create new ways to measure progress: network growth, impact, and learning. The same approach works inside a company — deciding what *you* consider advancement before deciding whether to leave.
For Jordan Taylor, co-founder of the leadership development company Medley, the ultimate metric is ownership over outcomes. Clarifying what you truly want turns vague restlessness into a testable hypothesis.
Rewriting the Terms
All of these women acknowledge that the path they’ve chosen is often harder, less funded, and less certain than the corporate ladder they left. Yet they consistently choose control over illusory security.
As Simi Shah puts it, she is done compressing herself to fit a single title.
These women have read the old bargain clearly — and they are rewriting it on terms they control.
