
Career breaks aren't a setback: How returning professionals can reclaim relevance and confidence
It's time we changed that. Because today, relevance is no longer about tenure, it's about your current capability, clarity, and conviction.
The gender gap in how we view career breaks
According to LinkedIn's Gender Insights Report (2024), 38% of women in India list parenting as the reason for a career break compared to only 9% of men. This isn't just a statistic. It reveals how career breaks are still judged, especially for women and mid-career professionals.
It's not the gap that's damaging, it's the outdated assumptions attached to it. I've worked with hundreds of returning professionals who assumed they'd have to 'settle' for less after a break. What they actually needed was a reframe, not a downgrade.
How hiring managers evaluate relevance today
The good news? Hiring priorities are evolving. A 2024 study by Indeed shows that 67% of hiring managers now value hands-on skills and problem-solving more than traditional certifications.
I asked a senior leader CHRO from a reputed Power/ Infrastructure industry on how he views a career break. He said: 'There are two parts to it, one is practise and the other is attitude. How can the potential candidate demonstrate that they have already done what is required on the job? I am open to assess and evaluate the credentials of potential candidates. It all depends upon how updated they are and what is the kind of confidence they reflect. However line managers are less open to candidates with career breaks and that is a mindset issue'.
Kalpan Desai, CHRO, Atrangii, said – ' I am open to candidates with a career break provided they have upgraded themselves in terms of skills and whether they have a clear blueprint which is aligned to their goals. And if they have collaborative skills in place, it makes a difference because they can then grasp and co-ordinate with domain experts within the company and be up and running soon'.
In practice, here's what that means they're looking for:
Familiarity with current tools or platforms.
Evidence of problem-solving, not just knowledge.
A mindset that's adaptable, self-directed, and up-to-date
Your resume doesn't need to hide the break. It needs to show what you did with it.
Rebuilding technical capability the right way
Let's be clear: you don't need to have worked at a company during your break to stay relevant.
As the senior HR Leader from the power/ infrastructure sector mentioned – 'In case you are returning to manufacturing sector, pay a visit to the plant/unit and get yourself updated on the advancements made'. Kalpan Desai goes on to share – 'For roles like Finance, HR and Accounting, the basic fundamentals remain the same so you as a candidate need to focus on updating your industry knowledge. Yes, for technical roles, you need to have your technical domain skills updated which you can do through multiple sources, for example LinkedIn Learning and be up to speed.'
Here's what works:
Contextualise the gap. Mention it directly and with clarity. Don't tiptoe.
Show proof of learning. A few well-chosen certifications, mock projects, or freelance gigs go a long way.
Build a portfolio. It could be GitHub repos, dashboards, strategy decks, or case studies. Let your work speak.
Use a skills grid in your resume. A simple table showcasing tools you know and tasks you've done helps recruiters quickly assess relevance.
I've seen returnees land interviews simply because they presented their skills in a clearer, more digestible way.
Munira Thanwala , General Manager, HR, Mahindra Holidays and Resorts India Ltd. shared three tips for candidates returning to work – 'a] Update your skills to show continuous learning such completing short online courses or certifications (from Coursera, LinkedIn Learning).
B] Talk about your break with confidence, talk about what you did and what you learned.
C] Use your network, reach out to old colleagues, ex-managers or friends in the industry. Apply to 'returnship' programs / internships offered by most companies'
Framing the story: What to say in interviews
Most returnees fumble the 'Tell me about the gap' question. Here's a structure that helps: Reason → Learning → Action → Readiness.
Example: 'After a 15-month break for caregiving, I used the time to update my cloud skills through hands-on labs. I've built two freelance dashboards and now feel fully ready to return to a technical role.'
It's not about covering up the gap, it's about showing what you built during it.
Breaks uncover hidden strengths
Let's flip the narrative. People who return after breaks often bring:
Higher emotional resilience
Improved time management.
Greater retention and loyalty
In fact, according to Bain & Company's Returners Report (2023), 45% of professionals who return after a break stay longer at companies than those who didn't take one. That's not a weakness. That's a value-add.
Conclusion
Career breaks don't erase your potential. They don't make you less capable unless you let the world believe that.
In today's workplace, your comeback is only as strong as your clarity. So stop defending the break. Start demonstrating the readiness.
(arabjeet Sachar is Founder & CEO, Aspiration, and Career Transition Coach)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
a day ago
- Time of India
Who is Gaza journalist Mohammed Abu Aoun who puts his camera, press shield on sale on LinkedIn for food?
Gaza photojournalist puts his camera, press shield on sale on LinkedIn to buy food for his family. A LinkedIn post by a Gaza-based photojournalist broke hearts as Mohammed Abo Oun said he is ready to put his camera and press shield on sale so that he could buy food for his family. "I am the photojournalist Mohammed Abu Aoun from Gaza, I want to offer my equipment and the press shield for sale so that I can buy food for me and my family," the post read. His LinkedIn profile shows his works have been used by New York Times, ABC News, Sky News. "I have extensive experience covering Gaza, including the 11-day flare up with Israel last year, during which my work was distributed by Storyful. I often distribute my footage through Storyful," he wrote. "The hungry journalist conveys the voice of hungry children. We are dying of hunger," another post by Mohammed Abu Aoun read. The peace negotiation situation in Gaza is at a stalemate while Gaza stares at an imminent famine. US President Donald Trump Friday said Israel and the US exited the negotiations with Hamas as the group did not really want a ceasefire and hostage release deal for Gaza. "Trump's remarks are particularly surprising, especially as they come at a time when progress had been made on some of the negotiation files," Hamas official Taher al-Nunu told AFP. "So far, we have not been informed of any issues regarding the files under discussion in the indirect ceasefire negotiations", he added. Israel said it will allow foreign nations to parachute humanitarian aid to Gaza as children have die of malnutrition. Jordan and the United Arab Emirates were expected to begin airdrops in the coming days, according to COGAT, the Israeli military agency that regulates humanitarian affairs in Gaza. The Israeli announcement came amid rising international condemnation of the present situation in Gaza, with many countries, including some of Israel's traditional allies, holding the Israeli government responsible for the situation. Israel says it is doing everything it can to allow aid into the Palestinian enclave. "The humanitarian catastrophe that we are witnessing in Gaza must end now," the governments of Britain, France and Germany said in a joint statement Friday. Experts said Israel's announcement to allow aids to be airdropped is only symbolic and that will not provide for the 2 million Palestinians in Gaza. Nearly 1 in 3 people in the territory is not eating for days at a time, according to the United Nations' World Food Program. Gaza health authorities say that acute malnutrition is rising and that children have died.


Mint
a day ago
- Mint
Intern spends ₹30,000 to join Gurugram startup, sacked in 23 days: 'Regret believing the founder'
A Reddit post by a user named @Regrets_only_ has gained traction online after the intern shared a troubling experience of being laid off just 23 days into an internship at a startup in Gurugram. The anonymous poster revealed they had left home and spent ₹ 30,000 from personal savings to relocate for the role, only to be dismissed abruptly. They said they worked 10 to 12 hours a day, including some weekends, before being told their position was no longer needed after a client backed out. According to the post, the startup's founder had assured the intern of close mentorship and a full-time role after three months, with a starting salary of at least ₹ 40,000. However, less than a month in, those promises collapsed. "I was shocked... I regret believing the founder," the intern wrote, calling the experience 'a disaster.' Now unemployed and disheartened, they are struggling through a tough job market in Gurgaon's competitive startup ecosystem. The post has since sparked debate on scial media. Here are some of the reactions. Screengrab from the viral post. Supportive responses poured in from fellow Redditors. "Something similar also happened with me. Please don't let negative thoughts get into your head and start applying mindlessly on LinkedIn, though 90% of job listings are fake there, but you can very well get 2-3 calls a month if you keep applying daily," one user commented.


Mint
a day ago
- Mint
Intern spends ₹30,000 to join Gurugram startup, sacked in 23 days: 'Regret believing the founder'
A Reddit post by a user named @Regrets_only_ has gained traction online after the intern shared a troubling experience of being laid off just 23 days into an internship at a startup in Gurgaon. The anonymous poster revealed they had left home and spent ₹ 30,000 from personal savings to relocate for the role, only to be dismissed abruptly. They said they worked 10 to 12 hours a day, including some weekends, before being told their position was no longer needed after a client backed out. According to the post, the startup's founder had assured the intern of close mentorship and a full-time role after three months, with a starting salary of at least ₹ 40,000. However, less than a month in, those promises collapsed. "I was shocked... I regret believing the founder," the intern wrote, calling the experience 'a disaster.' Now unemployed and disheartened, they are struggling through a tough job market in Gurgaon's competitive startup ecosystem. The post has since sparked debate on scial media. Here are some of the reactions. Screengrab from the viral post. Supportive responses poured in from fellow Redditors. "Something similar also happened with me. Please don't let negative thoughts get into your head and start applying mindlessly on LinkedIn, though 90% of job listings are fake there, but you can very well get 2-3 calls a month if you keep applying daily," one user commented. Another added, "It happens. If you go back in time and think about it, you would still have accepted this offer. At that point in time this was the best decision you could take given the information. Talk to the founder and see if he has founder friends that are looking for someone like you. Don't get disheartened. In this economy, you will have to fight harder, but you will find something eventually."