Versuchen GOLD - Frei

Stop playing it safe to drive career growth

Saturday Star

|

November 01, 2025

YOU'VE probably been told to be patient, prove yourself or trust the process and you do. You work hard, deliver and keep things running smoothly. Without realising it, you start playing it safe professionally.

- TIFFANY UMAN

Stop playing it safe to drive career growth

Taking on assignments that stretch your skills will show decision-makers you're ready for the next step in your career.

You take on projects you've already mastered. You wait to be noticed instead of speaking up. You prioritise reliable productivity and hold back on the ideas that could actually set you apart because you worry they haven't been perfectly worked out yet.

But while playing it safe might protect you from mistakes, it will also prevent you from growing. It keeps you comfortably dependable, and not recognised in the way you deserve. Moreover, it quietly convinces decision-makers that you're great where you are, and not quite ready for what's next. This is the trap I see many career-driven professionals in the corporate sector fall into one that often costs them both promotion and tangible long-term career progression.

Most professionals don’t stall because they lack capability. They stall because they have unknowingly become too good at being comfortable. Of course, this is not a deliberate strategy; being “too” dependable and reliable often creeps slowly but surely into your professional persona. You become the steady hand and the go-to team player - but not the one your executive team pictures leading the next big initiative.

Every time you hesitate due to an unwarranted lack of confidence, you're reinforcing the perception that you're not ready for more. And decision-makers will start to assume you're content where you are.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Saturday Star

Saturday Star

Dumi Bee's mic goes silent

THE radio industry is mourning the loss of one of its well-known voices.

time to read

1 mins

November 01, 2025

Saturday Star

Saturday Star

We need to embrace the nerves and pressure, says Mashimbyi

PROTEAS women's coach Mandla Mashimbyi remains adamant that the processes that they’ve put in place in preparation for matches will help keep the team in the moment and not stray because of nerves and pressure.

time to read

2 mins

November 01, 2025

Saturday Star

Rights and well-being of children

AS WE OBSERVE National Children's Day on 1 November, it is timely to view the progress made globally towards safeguarding the rights and promoting the well-being of our children.

time to read

2 mins

November 01, 2025

Saturday Star

Saturday Star

Stop playing it safe to drive career growth

YOU'VE probably been told to be patient, prove yourself or trust the process and you do. You work hard, deliver and keep things running smoothly. Without realising it, you start playing it safe professionally.

time to read

3 mins

November 01, 2025

Saturday Star

Proteas Women inspire next generation of cricketers

WOMEN'S cricket in South Africa has come a long way. The game went from being fully amateur to now fully professional, even in domestic cricket, where it has been professional for three seasons.

time to read

2 mins

November 01, 2025

Saturday Star

Nara Smith's stunning post-baby transformation

MODEL and food content creator, Nara Smith, is trending on social media because of how great she looks shortly after giving birth. At the same time, she is also facing backlash for trying to be \"relatable\".

time to read

1 mins

November 01, 2025

Saturday Star

Saturday Star

Hold onto your hard-earned cash

IF YOU are thinking of splurging this Black Friday, economists are warning that with an economy in the doldrums, it would be wise to keep your cash.

time to read

2 mins

November 01, 2025

Saturday Star

No room for complacency as Boks open November tour against Japan

THE Springboks are taking nothing for granted ahead of their November tour opener against Japan at Wembley Stadium this evening (6.10pm kickoff), with captain Siya Kolisi stressing the importance of treating the Brave Blossoms with full respect.

time to read

1 mins

November 01, 2025

Saturday Star

The people who refuse to use AI

SOME of Ellen Rugaber’s high school teachers allow students to use artificial intelligence for schoolwork, but she prefers not to.

time to read

2 mins

November 01, 2025

Saturday Star

Saturday Star

ETFs 25 years on will they displace unit trusts?

EXCHANGE traded funds (ETFs) launched in South Africa in 2000, 25 years ago. Although their growth was initially slow compared with the United States and other countries, the local industry is now expanding rapidly, especially since the introduction of actively managed ETFs (AMETFs) in 2023. Will ETFs, in the years to come, displace unit trust funds as the instrument of choice in the collective investments space? There's a lot going in their favour.

time to read

3 mins

November 01, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size