From Vision to Action: Why Career Plans Break Down (and How to Follow Through)

By this point in the year, you may already have done some thinking about what you want from 2026. You might have mapped out the life you want more of, and even sketched a career plan to support it (see our January articles for support).

Yet many women find that, even with more clarity, not much changes in their day to day work.

Emails still dominate.
Meetings still overflow the calendar.
The “big picture” intentions quietly move to the bottom of the list.

This article is about that gap. Not between confusion and clarity, but between clarity and execution. Why do well-thought-out plans stall, and what can you do to keep moving?

1. The plan is clear, but the priorities are not

You can have a solid vision and still feel stuck if everything feels equally important.

Common signs:

  • You have multiple goals but no clear order.
  • Your week fills with urgent tasks, while strategic work gets pushed back.
  • You feel busy but not necessarily moving toward what you said you wanted.

What helps:

  • Choose one or two career priorities for this quarter, not five.
  • Ask, “If I could only move one thing forward in the next three months, what would make the biggest difference?”
  • Put that priority visibly into your calendar each week, before other tasks fill the gaps.

Clarity only matters if it translates into focus.

Tip for Women Rising program alum: Go back and check on your grit map and goal hierarchy from module 7, this will help.

2. There is no time budget for the plan

Many women have a clear plan, but their calendar does not reflect it. Their week is booked almost entirely for delivery, meetings and other people’s urgency.

Questions to ask:

  • Where in my week is there protected time for my own development and career strategy?
  • What could I stop, delegate or streamline to free up even 60–90 minutes a week?

What helps:

  • Block recurring time for “career and strategy” (for example, one hour on a Friday morning).
  • Treat that time as a meeting with yourself that cannot be casually moved.
  • Use it to work on relationships, goals, networking, skills development or visibility, not admin.

If your development is not in your calendar, it will always lose out to the immediate work priorities.

3. The plan does not match your current capacity

Sometimes the plan is sound, but it was created without factoring in your real bandwidth, home responsibilities or health.

This can lead to guilt, self-criticism and disengagement rather than progress.

What helps:

  • Revisit your plan and ask: “Is this realistic for this season of my life?”
  • Scale the goals to match your current capacity, not an imagined one.
  • Reduce the number of active goals and extend timelines where needed.

A smaller, realistic plan that you follow is more powerful than an ideal plan that never leaves the page.

4. You are trying to do it alone

Many women try to progress their careers quietly and independently. They do not want to be a burden, or they are unsure how to ask for support.

The result is isolation and slower progress.

What helps:

  • Share your goals with your manager and ask for alignment on projects, visibility and development opportunities.
  • Identify one or two colleagues, mentors or peers who can act as sounding boards.
  • Consider a structured program or community where others are working on similar shifts.

Support is not a sign of weakness. It is a lever that accelerates growth. If you could do it all by yourself, you would have by now. We all need support!

5. Unseen beliefs are still running the show

Even with a clear plan, internal beliefs can quietly block action. For example:

  • “I need to be fully ready before I put myself forward.”
  • “I do not want to seem demanding or ungrateful.”
  • “If I slow down to work on my own goals, I am letting others down.”

These beliefs are rarely written down, but they influence decisions every day.

What helps:

  • Notice where you hesitate, delay or say no to opportunities that align with your goals.
  • Ask: “What am I telling myself in this moment?”
  • Challenge the belief and experiment with one small action that contradicts it (for example, having a conversation, putting your hand up, or asking for what you need).

Mindset work on its own is not enough, but it is a critical part of follow-through.

Bringing vision and action together

If you took January to map out your life and career more intentionally, you have already done important work. February is about implementation:

  • Narrowing your focus.
  • Adjusting your plan to your real capacity.
  • Putting time and support around your goals.
  • Addressing the beliefs that keep you from acting.

You do not need to move everything at once. You just need consistent progress in the right direction.

If you are ready to actively step into this next chapter of your career, the Women Rising program is designed to give you the structure, tools and community to do it with clarity and confidence. Join us for the March cohort here. Early Bird rates ending this week.

Author(s)

  • Founder & CEO Women Rising | Author | Women's Leadership, Empowerment & Wellbeing

    Megan Dalla-Camina is a globally recognized leader in women’s leadership, best-selling author, and trusted guide for spiritual growth and feminine wisdom. She is the founder of Women Rising, a global movement and platform redefining how women lead, live, and thrive. Through her programs and initiatives, Megan has empowered thousands of women across the world to achieve success with authenticity and purpose. She has received accolades such as the Women’s Economic Forum honour for women’s empowerment, Woman and Mentor of the Year by B&T, and the 2024 Telstra Best of Business Award for Accelerating Women. Her work is featured in top media outlets like Forbes, Marie Claire and CNN, and her popular Psychology Today column has more than 2 million readers. With over two decades of experience in leadership, well-being, and personal development, Megan has built a global reputation for helping women navigate professional and personal challenges with authenticity and grace. As the author of the best-selling books Women Rising and Simple Soulful Sacred, and a PhD researcher in women’s spirituality, Megan weaves together evidence-based tools, sacred wisdom teachings, and her own deeply rooted spiritual practice. Her work bridges the worlds of leadership and spirituality, uniquely positioning her to offer women practical pathways to thrive in both their outer and inner worlds. Through her programs, books, and teachings, Megan empowers women to rise into their power, awaken to their inner wisdom, and create lives of meaning, purpose, and balance. You can find Megan on most social media platforms @megandallacamina.