Identify Your Strengths & Skills (7‑Day Evidence Sprint)
Clarity before speed. A practical sprint to surface transferable strengths with real‑world evidence you can use on resumes and in interviews.
What to do next
- Write your next‑step sentence: “In 30 days, I will …”
- Block two 45‑minute sessions this week to move it forward.
- Ask one trusted person for quick feedback.
- Scan your resume honestly; fix the top 3 issues.
- Take the clarity quiz to prioritise what matters.
Careers shouldn’t be a guessing game. We give you honest signals, proof‑first tools, and a path you can follow.
Start My Plan →Why this problem happens
Most people try to find strengths by taking a quiz. Quizzes are fine, but they struggle with context. Strengths are situational: the same person can look weak in a cluttered role and exceptional in a clean one. The fastest way to discover transferable strengths is a seven‑day evidence sprint.
A practical way to approach it
Start by collecting three peak stories—moments where you created value and felt alive. Extract verbs (mapped a system, simplified a mess, persuaded a team), outcomes (saved 8 hours a week, reduced churn by 3 points), and context (remote team, legacy stack, tight deadline). Translate the verbs into repeatable skills. Repeat across stories and look for themes.
Design experiments that create proof
Ask three people who have seen you at your best for a sentence: “When you’re at your best, I see you …” Cluster their words and compare with your self‑view. The overlap is your high‑confidence zone. Use it to write proof bullets for your resume: action + outcome + metric + context.
Tell a sharper story
Next, map strengths to roles. Don’t chase titles; choose problems you want to own. If your verbs cluster around synthesis and facilitation, roles like ops, program management, or research‑driven product work may fit—even if your degree says something else.
Make a decision with data
Prototype tiny samples. Create a 2‑page operating cadence, a dashboard sketch, a facilitation guide, or a teardown. Recruiters care less about pedigree and more about whether you can do the job. Samples answer that before the interview.
Protect your energy and momentum
Finally, practice telling the story. “Across projects, I turn noise into clear decisions. In my last role I cut onboarding time by 22%% by mapping failure points and fixing two bottlenecks. I want more of that in a role that mixes systems and collaboration.” That’s specific, memorable, and transferable.
Your 30‑60‑90 next steps
Finally, practice telling the story. “Across projects, I turn noise into clear decisions. In my last role I cut onboarding time by 22%% by mapping failure points and fixing two bottlenecks. I want more of that in a role that mixes systems and collaboration.” That’s specific, memorable, and transferable.
Signals that you’re on the right track
Finally, practice telling the story. “Across projects, I turn noise into clear decisions. In my last role I cut onboarding time by 22%% by mapping failure points and fixing two bottlenecks. I want more of that in a role that mixes systems and collaboration.” That’s specific, memorable, and transferable.
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