Close Menu
Earth & BeyondEarth & Beyond

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    12 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Grace Ives, Underscores, BTS, and More

    WSL: Would it be ready for Fifa’s female coach requirements?

    Major industry survey finds that, surprise surprise, 9/10 game devs think generative AI use should be more fully disclosed on Steam

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Earth & BeyondEarth & Beyond
    YouTube
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Gaming
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Sports
    • Technology
    • Trending & Viral News
    Earth & BeyondEarth & Beyond
    Subscribe
    You are at:Home»Technology»how to be strategic about your research direction
    Technology

    how to be strategic about your research direction

    Earth & BeyondBy Earth & BeyondMarch 20, 2026004 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    how to be strategic about your research direction
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    A post it note with the words "no thanks" written on it is stuck on top of a pile of paperwork

    Credit: EikoTsuttiy/Getty

    A decade or so after earning a PhD is a pivotal stage in a person’s academic career. The urgency of establishing your career has faded — you are probably no longer scrambling to secure your first grant or write your first independent paper, and you might be tenured — however, you are not yet a senior academic. You occupy a middle space that is rarely discussed.

    The scientific system leans on mid-career researchers heavily, but this time period can feel surprisingly precarious: expectations rise, responsibilities multiply and maintaining a clear research direction becomes difficult.

    I am a palaeoclimate scientist at UiT The Arctic University of Norway in Tromsø. My research seeks to understand how changes in ocean circulation and carbon cycling have shaped Earth’s climate in the past, using a multidisciplinary approach that combines marine fieldwork, laboratory geochemistry, plankton biology and model–data integration.

    Saying ‘no’ in science isn’t enough

    In the first few years after I completed my PhD in 2015, when I was taking part in postdoctoral fellowships at the University of Cambridge, UK, and the Arctic University, my default response when asked to do something was ‘yes’. I said yes to collaborations and to sitting on committees, peer reviewing papers, supervising students and doing other forms of unpaid academic service.

    This approach was successful, even if it meant working late into the evening to keep up. It built my network, increased the visibility of my work and advanced my CV in ways that helped me to secure fellowships, grants and eventually a tenured position.

    After acquiring enough funding to establish my own laboratory and research group in 2021, the number of opportunities that I received increased rapidly. I was offered new collaborations, some because of genuine scientific alignment, and others simply because I was now ‘in the right career stage’ to attract the necessary funding or to manage the appropriate team. The number of administrative tasks that I was responsible for accumulated. I became the main mentor for several PhD students and postdocs. I took on leadership roles in large-scale initiatives. My habit of saying yes continued, and I was a magnet for further responsibilities.

    Step up to leadership for mid-career growth

    Individually, each task seemed reasonable; collectively, they filled every corner of my schedule. My days were busy and productive, but my research direction became increasingly fragmented. Instead of driving a unified research agenda that would advance my field, I found myself pulled in many directions, responding to immediate demands rather than pursuing long-term growth.

    In the past two years or so, I began to sense that I was entering a period of academic maintenance rather than growth. I felt that I was experiencing an ‘accidental drift’ — slow deviation from a research path not by intention, but by accretion.

    And ultimately, this might not be sustainable. Staying busy can keep a lab functioning, but it leaves little space for the focused thinking and long-term planning that allow a research programme to flourish.

    This, I have learnt, is one of the defining features of the mid-career stage: opportunities and responsibilities grow at the same time, often faster than our ability to integrate them meaningfully. This realization prompted me to reflect on how to navigate these competing demands.

    Balancing commitments while redefining direction

    To navigate mid-career challenges, I have developed a set of guiding principles to help me evaluate new commitments and get better at saying no:

    • Is this responsibility aligned with my long-term identity as a researcher?

    • Is this the right time for this project?

    • Does it serve my students and collaborators well?

    • Does this opportunity harmonize with my group’s scientific direction or create a distraction?

    • Does this commitment or collaboration align with my long-term goals?

    • Will this project produce the kind of research outputs that reflect the scientist that I want to become?

    These questions did not reduce my workload, but they changed how I approached it. I began to realize that publications and other research outputs not only record my past research interests, but also reflect the areas that I want my research programme to move towards.

    Direction research strategic
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleWe’re upgrading Honeywell — plus 2 positions we’d like to build up
    Next Article Trump pressures Congress to pass strict voter ID and farm bills – live | Donald Trump
    Earth & Beyond
    • Website

    Related Posts

    NASA Glenn Opens Applications for Free Summer Engineering Institute

    March 20, 2026

    Newegg Promo Code: 10% Off in March 2026

    March 20, 2026

    Amazon acquires Rivr, maker of a stair-climbing delivery robot

    March 20, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Latest Post

    If you do 5 things, you’re more indecisive than most—what to do instead

    UK ministers launch investigation into blaze that shut Heathrow

    The SEC Resets Its Crypto Relationship

    How MLB plans to grow Ohtani, Dodger fandom in Japan into billions for league

    Stay In Touch
    • YouTube
    Latest Reviews

    NASA Glenn Opens Applications for Free Summer Engineering Institute

    By Earth & BeyondMarch 20, 2026

    Newegg Promo Code: 10% Off in March 2026

    By Earth & BeyondMarch 20, 2026

    Amazon acquires Rivr, maker of a stair-climbing delivery robot

    By Earth & BeyondMarch 20, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    Blackpink Share New Song “Jump” Amid Deadline World Tour: Watch the Video

    July 13, 202547 Views

    Bitcoin in the bush – crypto mining brings power to rural areas

    March 25, 202513 Views

    Honor of Kings breaks esports attendance Guinness World Record 

    November 10, 202511 Views
    Our Picks

    12 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Grace Ives, Underscores, BTS, and More

    WSL: Would it be ready for Fifa’s female coach requirements?

    Major industry survey finds that, surprise surprise, 9/10 game devs think generative AI use should be more fully disclosed on Steam

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2026 Earth & Beyond.
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Newsletter Signup

    Subscribe to our weekly newsletter below and never miss the latest product or an exclusive offer.

    Enter your email address

    Thanks, I’m not interested