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	<title>growth mindset Archives - WardNet</title>
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		<title>2025 a professional summary</title>
		<link>https://www.wardnet.co.uk/2025-a-professional-summary/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jonathan Ward]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 29 Nov 2025 14:27:35 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Career]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Epicor]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[AI]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[artificial intelligence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[coaching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[growth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[growth mindset]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[promotion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[security first]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[solutions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Work]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.wardnet.co.uk/?p=705</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>In 2025, I embraced purposeful change as I transitioned from maker to manager. I enhanced team capabilities, focused on smarter shipping practices, and prioritized security and compliance. Through learning to listen and adapting my leadership approach, I aimed for consistent, effective team dynamics, setting the stage for greater achievements in 2026.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.wardnet.co.uk/2025-a-professional-summary/">2025 a professional summary</a></p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<h2 class="wp-block-heading">My 2025 Year of Change: From Maker to Manager, and Back Again</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">If I had to give 2025 a headline, it would be <strong>change with purpose</strong>. This year stretched me in the best ways—stepping into new leadership responsibilities, growing a team, tightening the way we ship, and learning to listen harder than I speak. Here’s the personal version of that story—no brand names, no customer specifics—just what changed in me and how I showed up.</p>



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<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Stepping Up: The Promotion That Changed My Calendar (and Mindset)</h3>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Early in the year I moved into a bigger role. The real shift wasn’t the title; it was the lens. I stopped optimising only for “what I can build” and started optimising for <strong>“what the team can deliver repeatedly.”</strong><br>That meant trading some deep maker time for clearer goals, sharper priorities, and better guardrails. I learned that great leadership isn’t louder—it’s more <strong>consistent</strong>.</p>



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<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Building the Team: Capability Before Headcount</h3>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">I focused on <strong>capability first</strong>: the skills we need, the outcomes we own, and the habits that make our work sustainable. Then I hired for those.<br>Recruiting became less about “finding a unicorn” and more about <strong>complementary strengths</strong>: pairing systems thinkers with strong communicators, matching builders with patient debuggers, and balancing speed with steadiness. The win wasn’t filling seats—it was creating a team that could cover for each other and still raise the bar.</p>



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<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Shipping More (and Smarter): Extensions That Reduce Friction</h3>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">This was a <strong>shipping year</strong>. We delivered and refreshed a number of small-but-mighty <strong>extensions</strong> that simplify everyday workflows—things that make sending, tracking, auditing, and revising feel lighter.<br>My guiding principle was simple: <em>remove one step, add one check.</em> Fewer clicks, clearer states, better logs. The result was a set of releases that felt invisible in the best way: they just worked.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">How we kept momentum:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Micro‑sprints:</strong> fifteen‑minute weekly checkpoints to unblock decisions fast.</li>



<li><strong>One‑page runbooks:</strong> enough guidance to get anyone productive, without a wall of text.</li>



<li><strong>“Prove it’s live” checks:</strong> lightweight verification steps built into our deployment flow.</li>
</ul>



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<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Owning the Plumbing: Pipelines, Permissions, and Environment Boundaries</h3>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Shipping more forced me to become a student of the <strong>plumbing</strong>—credentials, pipelines, environments, and deployment rights. When automation faltered, I documented a clear <strong>manual path to production</strong> with artefact verification and rollback notes.<br>I also nudged us toward <strong>true test vs. production separation</strong>, tightened access, and wrote down the things future‑me would otherwise forget. Unsexy work, essential outcomes.</p>



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<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Raising the Floor: Security, Compliance, and Clarity</h3>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Trust isn’t a feature you bolt on—it’s a <strong>minimum standard</strong> you live by.<br>This year I helped translate policy into practice: tightening recording rules for sessions, clarifying what AI tools are appropriate in meetings, and setting sensible defaults that make safe behaviour the <strong>path of least resistance</strong>.<br>I learned to treat security as an experience challenge: <strong>make the right thing obvious, quick, and documented.</strong></p>



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<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Listening More: Field Signals, Release Notes, and Community Threads</h3>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">A big part of my growth was learning to <strong>listen for signal</strong>—especially from upgrade notes and practitioner conversations. Those discussions surfaced tiny changes in behaviour that could become big friction later.<br>By folding that feedback into our defaults and help text, we prevented issues from turning into tickets. Quiet wins are still wins.</p>



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<h3 class="wp-block-heading">What Changed in Me</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>From fixes to systems:</strong> I stopped “hero‑patching” and started designing <strong>repeatable ways</strong> to prevent the same issues.</li>



<li><strong>From shipping to safeguarding:</strong> I now see deployments as both delivery <em>and</em> defence—<strong>verify, limit blast radius, document.</strong></li>



<li><strong>From speaking to listening:</strong> Feedback isn’t noise; it’s an early warning system if you’re humble enough to hear it.</li>
</ul>



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<h3 class="wp-block-heading">The Quiet Wins I’m Proud Of</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>A deployment playbook that works even when automation doesn’t—<strong>with verification built in</strong>.</li>



<li>Extensions that reduce friction and feel intuitive—<strong>less clicking, clearer states, better audit trails</strong>.</li>



<li>Policies translated into practical steps—<strong>not just rules, but workflows anyone can follow</strong>.</li>
</ul>



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<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Looking Ahead to 2026</h3>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Next year is about <strong>consistency at scale</strong>: fully automated pipelines, cleaner environment boundaries, and guardrails that make secure, compliant delivery the default. My personal goal is to spend more time <strong>coaching and documenting</strong>, so the team can move faster with fewer surprises.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Thanks for reading—and for being part of the change. If this year taught me anything, it’s that growth isn’t about doing more; it’s about <strong>doing the right things, repeatedly, together</strong>.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.wardnet.co.uk/2025-a-professional-summary/">2025 a professional summary</a></p>
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