There are two types of senior leaders in today’s marketplace. The first group works exceptionally hard behind closed doors, believes their results speak for themselves, and thinks about their professional image only when they need a new role. The second group does the same extraordinary work, but they also make sure the right people know about it constantly.
The first group gets upset when they lose their jobs. The second group calls the field.
This article is about how to move from the first group to the second.
invisible executive problem
I work every day with VPs and C-suite executives who have remarkable track records. He has led huge teams, driven revenue growth, managed complex change and delivered results most professionals only dream about.
And no one outside his company knows.
Their LinkedIn profiles read like job descriptions from 2018. Their networks have become inactive. He hasn’t published a single opinion piece about his industry in years. If you searched them online, you would find almost nothing that reflected their ability as a leader.
Then they are removed from the job. Or they hit the ceiling. Or they realize they are unhappy and need to take action.
And now they’re trying to build credibility, reenergize relationships, and communicate their value while managing the stress of unemployment or career dissatisfaction.
That is not positioning; This is called a scramble.
Why “Keep Your Head Down, Do Good” Doesn’t Work Anymore
For decades, the unwritten rule in corporate leadership was simple: Do excellent work, and the right people will notice. Will get promotion. Recruiters will call. Opportunities will materialize.
That rule has been broken.
AI-powered sourcing tools now crawl LinkedIn profiles, published content, and digital footprints to create a longlist of candidates before any human recruiter engages.
If your online presence does not reflect your current abilities and accomplishments, you are filtered out before anyone even reads your resume.
Boards and investors form their first impression of you digitally. Before you get the call, before you get the meeting, someone is already looking for you. What they find, or don’t find, determines whether that call will ever happen.
Executives who understand this are not treating their professional visibility as a one-time project. They are considering it as an ongoing practice, like staying physically fit or keeping their skills updated.
What does “always in demand” look like?
Always being in demand doesn’t mean posting motivational quotes every morning or becoming a LinkedIn influencer. It means something more practical and more powerful.
This means that your LinkedIn profile is a current, accurate, compelling representation of what you bring to the table, not a historical record of where you’ve been.
This means that you occasionally share a perspective on a challenge in your discipline that reflects how you think. Not every day. Not demonstratively. This is enough to remind your professional community that you are active, current and thinking about issues that matter.
This means you maintain real relationships with people in your industry, not transactional relationships that you only activate when you need something, but ongoing business relationships built on genuine interest and mutual value.
This means your resume is a strategic marketing document that positions you as the obvious choice, not a career history that reads like everyone else’s.
When all these pieces are in place, you won’t have to chase opportunities. You become the person other people recommend. The recruiter already knows. The person who gets the call before the job is posted.
compound effect of consistency
Executive marketing works like compound interest. Small, consistent actions over time produce inconsistent results.
A thoughtful commentary on this week’s industry discussion. A meaningful conversation with a former co-worker next week. A short post a week later about lessons learned from a recent project.
Personally, none of these tasks seem important. But in six months, twelve months, two years, they create a professional presence that creates opportunities you might not have predicted or planned for.
I experienced this firsthand. A journalist was recommended at a weekend gathering with colleagues. That recommendation resulted in a published article. That article led to an appearance on CNN. There was no plan for this. All this happened because I invested in relationships without knowing where they would lead.
This is what “you never know” networking produces when you do it consistently.
The real cost of being invisible
When you don’t proactively communicate your professional value, typical and predictable results result.
Your network forgets you. The people who might open doors, make introductions, or recommend you for opportunities aren’t the ones thinking about you when those moments come. Not because they don’t respect you, but because you’re not present enough to stay on their radar.
You lose awareness of your own market value. Executives who remain focused exclusively internally for years often have no idea how valuable their skills are in the broader marketplace. When they finally need to make a move, they struggle to express their value in terms that resonate with today’s hiring decision makers.
You negotiate from a position of weakness. When you have no visible presence, no recent thought leadership, and a passive network, you accept whatever is offered rather than having to choose between multiple options. The difference in compensation between those two scenarios can be hundreds of thousands of dollars over the course of a career.
You become dependent on channels that don’t serve you. Only 10% of executive hiring is through recruiters, and those recruiters work for the companies paying their fees, not for the candidates. Meanwhile, about 70% of recruitments happen through referrals, social media contacts and personal connections. If you’re not visible in those channels, you’re competing for only a fraction of the opportunities available.
From crisis management to career strategy
The shift from invisible to inevitable does not require any dramatic change. This requires a change in mindset and a commitment to sustainability.
Start with an honest assessment. Google yourself. View your LinkedIn profile through the eyes of someone who has never met you. Does what they find accurately reflect the leader you are today? Or does it look like a profile that someone created years ago and never updated?
If your profile needs work, this is your first priority. This is the most common place where hiring managers, recruiters, board members, and potential connections form their impression of you. Make sure it puts you where you want to go, not just where you were.
Next, identify three people in your professional network with whom you have not connected in the past year. Access to. Don’t ask for anything. Just let them know what they’re working on and share what you’re focused on. Rebuilding dormant relationships is one of the highest return-yielding activities you can do for your career.
Then, contribute a piece of substance. Write about a trend you are seeing in your discipline. Share a lesson from a project that didn’t go according to plan. Comment thoughtfully on someone else’s post on a topic you know well.
There is no target quantity. The goal is to demonstrate how you think.
officers who lead
The executives I see playing great roles, often with many to choose from, have some common traits.
They regard their professional visibility as an ongoing responsibility, not a response to crisis. They invest time in relationships before they need anything from those relationships. They keep their marketing documents updated so that they are never troubled by any unexpected opportunity or unexpected layoff.
They understand that their expertise, their track record and their professional reputation are independent of who currently signs their pay cheque. And they make sure those assets are visible and identified.
This is what it means to be “always in demand”, not because you are constantly looking for a job. Not because you’re promoting yourself at every turn. But because you’ve created a professional presence that consistently communicates your value to those who need to know about it.
bottom line
The market is competitive. Job applications have tripled in recent years at comparable unemployment levels. AI is changing how candidates are sourced and evaluated. The officials who win in this environment are not necessarily the most qualified. They are the most visible and in the best condition.
You can’t control the economy. You can’t control layoffs. You can’t control what companies decide to do with their workforce.
But you can control how visible, how prepared, and how well positioned you are for whatever comes next.
Executive marketing is not about vanity. It’s about career security. The real kind, the kind that lives within you and travels with you regardless of your employment status.
The best time to start was five years ago. The second best time is now.
