What does it take to be successful in your career? Read these tips from 10 leaders in business, community, nonprofit, and more.
![[Featured image] Red text on a white background that reads "Women's History Month" with a photo of a woman speaking into a microphone](https://d3njjcbhbojbot.cloudfront.net/api/utilities/v1/imageproxy/https://images.ctfassets.net/wp1lcwdav1p1/7lnyElQtVFG2W6lMd11vV5/5965e013a9cb76e84f76b010b1076791/1200x628.jpg?w=1500&h=680&q=60&fit=fill&f=faces&fm=jpg&fl=progressive&auto=format%2Ccompress&dpr=1&w=1000)
An effective leader may use servant leadership, focusing on the well-being and growth of their community members to move toward collective progress.
As a woman in leadership, you should start before you’re ready and maintain a growth mindset, seeking out opportunities to learn and evolve.
You can use rejection and redirection as learning opportunities, allowing you to shift your mindset.
You can broaden your leadership potential by finding a sponsor or mentor who can answer your questions and provide guidance.
Discover inspiring tips from esteemed women in leadership to guide your journey. If you’re ready to develop your leadership skills, consider enrolling in the Strategic Leadership: Impact, Change, and Decision-Making Specialization. You’ll have the chance to learn how to balance rational and emotional leadership decisions and how to advance your leadership skills in as little as two months. Upon completion, you’ll possess stronger leadership skills that will benefit you in your career.
What you consider the best leadership advice will depend on what resonates with you and your goals. However, much leadership advice revolves around concepts related to keeping a healthy perspective during highs and lows along the journey, managing with empathy, staying genuine, and clearly defining the responsibilities and tasks of your team.
“Most of the time, you’re not going to feel 100 percent ready, or 100 percent prepared, or 100 percent not scared at all,” says Sarah Paiji Yoo, serial entrepreneur and co-founder and CEO of Blueland. “Think of how far you can be by next year if you just start today.”
One key aspect of succeeding is trying—you simply can’t accomplish anything without it. Self-doubt can be a major roadblock to getting started, and, she adds, “these doubts kill way more dreams than failure ever will.” So give your dreams a chance by just beginning.
“Every goal is achieved by taking one step at a time,” says Lestraundra Alfred, founder and host of the podcast She's So Lucky. “We often get overwhelmed trying to accomplish large tasks all at once without gaining the skills and insights we need to get there.”
Aspiring creatives often turn to Alfred with technical questions about microphones and audience growth; her first piece of advice is usually to take a few steps back. “Without having a solid message and knowing who it's for, the microphone they use won't matter, and the listenership they're looking to grow won't find them,” she says. “We all have to start from where we are and get clear on our why.”
“Worry more about how you are going to learn and grow than about what role you are going to have next,” advises Kim Caldbeck, Chief Marketing Officer at Coursera. Focusing on the opportunities in front of her—even when they weren’t directly related to her ultimate goals—is how she built the foundational knowledge she uses today in leading across functions.
And ask questions along the way, she adds. “Until you are able to form your own opinions, get a lot of feedback, and work to improve and grow each day.”
“Every one to two years, really think about what you want to do and ask yourself if you’re currently doing that or working towards it,” says Imee Chan, who leads strategy and analytics at a major tech company. Avoid passively riding momentum—actively pursue your path.
To help you stay on track, Chan recommends focusing on the most important things you want to accomplish in a set timeframe. “Say ‘no’ to everything else,” she says—but drop in the occasional unexpected ‘yes.’” “Go check out that networking event, volunteer for that working team at work, schedule that one-on-one with an interesting person,” she adds. “You never know who you’ll meet, what you’ll learn, and what you may achieve when you do.”
“I think all rejections are good,” Michelle Songy, start-up founder and CEO of Press Hook, says. “They help you learn.”
It may feel better to receive positive feedback, but shifting your mindset around rejection can only make you stronger in the long run, Songy adds. Rejection invites you to rebuild better and makes you more prepared for the future. “You don't have to do everything that everyone says—people are going to have their own opinions—but if you do get a rejection, it's a good way to look back at it and say, ‘okay, there's something I can look at, change, and adapt.’”
Women worldwide continue to encounter barriers to skills development in certain areas, including generative AI, according to Coursera’s 2025 Global Skills Report [1]. Courses like the University of Pennsylvania’s Positive Psychology: Resilience Skills, part of the Positive Psychology Specialization, can help women build essential skills for facing these challenges, especially as they pursue senior positions in the workforce.
“There’s no such thing as a right or wrong decision. It’s simply a learning opportunity,” says Angela Kim, Chief Product Officer at Chief, an executive leadership community for women.
Before transitioning into product, Kim started her career in consulting—and quickly realized it wasn’t the right path for her. Rather than spinning into self-doubt, she took the opportunity to build self-awareness, seeking to understand what she didn’t like about consulting and how to move forward with that new insight. “Reframing it into a decision and not adding judgment made it all that much easier to learn from the experience and apply what I learned to my future career in product and tech,” she says.
“Imposter syndrome is a real thing,” says Natasha Davidson, Coursera’s Chief Marketing Officer for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. “We all have that voice in our ear telling us we shouldn’t, we can’t, don’t you dare—but it’s all in your mind.”
Combat those thoughts by reminding yourself that you are worthy, capable, and you belong—and save the evidence to back it up. “Keep an ‘I am wonderful file,’” Davidson suggests. “This is a folder where you store positive feedback and notes about your work and the impact you’ve had. On those tough days, go to that file, and remind yourself of how wonderful you really are.”
“Having the answer to everything is not the answer. Sometimes it's just being able to formulate the question,” suggests Amira Barger, an Executive Vice President at a large communications agency. And having someone to ask those questions to can be crucial. Barger recommends seeking sponsorship.
A sponsor is someone who goes one step beyond mentorship by coaching you through career obstacles in addition to helping you advance in your career by actively elevating your contributions and highlighting your value to people with decision-making power in the workplace.
Start your search for a sponsor with the person you feel you can trust the most. “There is so much trust that's needed to have these conversations,” Barger says. “And if you don't have [that person] yet, what are the characteristics that you would look for such that you could take steps to have someone become that trusted partner so that you can advance these conversations?”
Keep those qualities in mind as you look for jobs, interact with new colleagues, and move along your path.
Read more: How to Find a Mentor and Grow Toward Your Goals
“Really think about what those things are that you value, what are those things that you need, and look for a work environment that will value your right to pursue those things,” Jaime Koppel, founder of the non-profit Bilingual Education for Central America, says. Centering your work experience around your own sense of well-being will, ultimately, enable you to show up as your best self.
But expect to navigate shifting priorities. “Things should happen in seasons,” Koppel says. In moments when things are tough, she advises examining—with guidance from your mentor or sponsor—whether the discomfort is just a season or if it’s a long-term issue.
Learn techniques to increase your happiness and build more productive habits in The Science of Well-Being. This course, offered by Yale University, was the top course on Coursera among women globally in 2021 [2].
“Learn small things every day about your area of interest, not just the skills it takes to do the job,” Divya Hillier, Director of SEO & Strategic Content at Coursera, says. “Take a few minutes to look at industry news, influencers, or subject matter experts. Over time, this can help you build confidence to communicate in interviews and with your new colleagues.”
In interacting with your field in this gradual way, you can better prepare yourself to notice emerging patterns and trends, and you can broaden your perspective to extend beyond the boundaries of your current role. “You can’t work at every company in the world, but there’s nothing to stop you from critically evaluating any business, figuring out who the people are behind the business, and why they do what they do,” Hillier adds.
Stay current with career trends and tips by subscribing to Career Chat, our weekly LinkedIn newsletter. Then, access these resources to further enhance your leadership skills:
Watch on YouTube: 5 Powerful Leadership Skills to Start Building Today
Hear from an expert: 6 Questions with a Microsoft Data Analytics Leader
Bookmark this page: Project Management Terms and Definitions
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Coursera. “Global Skills Report 2025, https://www.coursera.org/skills-reports/global/pdf/gsr-2025.” Accessed November 6, 2025.
Coursera. "Women and Skills Report 2021, https://about.coursera.org/press/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Coursera-Women-and-Skills-Report-2021.pdf." Accessed November 6, 2025.
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