I watched Working Girl on a loop as a kid in the '90s, and on into the early 2000s, and every time the credits rolled I came away with the same verdict: this was exactly what powerful, driven women were supposed to look like. And, I wanted it.

I put Tess McGill on a pedestal, the secretary from Staten Island who clawed her way past the people born into the room and out-hustled and out-nerved every last one of them for the office, the door, the window overlooking the bustling streets of New York City and the assistant who suddenly answered to her instead of the other way around. I put her boss, Katharine Parker, up there too, a notch lower, because where Tess had earned her credibility the hard way, Katharine seemed to have been issued hers at birth, with polish and pedigree. Two women, two completely different routes to the same arrival, and to a kid with big dreams, both of them looked like the same thing, which was success. And, oh shoulder-padded suit, did I want it.

It took me until recently to notice the one thing those two routes had in common, which is that both of them ran straight through the institution. The grit and the pedigree were just different tolls collected on the same road, and the destination in every case was a title that someone else held the authority to grant. The movie ends with Carly Simon swelling and the camera pulling back across a wall of mirrored Manhattan office buildings, my heart aflutter, and the message could not be clearer: Tess made it because the institution finally agreed that she belonged.

The film was already more than a decade old by the time I had it memorized, but the fantasy it was selling hadn't aged a day. Getting in was the whole reward.

But that idea doesn’t land the same way in 2026, and the reason has nothing to do with cynicism about ambition. It is pure arithmetic.

The career most of us were sold was a clean ladder, a tidy resume and a title that proved someone with authority had chosen you, anointed you with the role and the benefits that came with it. In that world, success was something an institution conferred while you stood there and gratefully accepted it, hungrily asking for more like little Oliver Twist.

Contrastingly, the career a growing number of people are now actively seeking to build is almost illegible by those same measures. Perhaps surprisingly, it’s also seeming to be more durable for the simple reason that it no longer answers to a single authority .

The Corner Office Is Now A Four-Year Lease

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics , median job tenure is just under four years, and it is slightly shorter for women, which means the corner office Tess fought so hard for is, statistically speaking, a lease that rarely lasts much longer than one American presidential election cycle.

And we’re seeing that lease stays fragile no matter how well you play the game. The job cuts we're seeing in 2026, and will likely continue to see, are not happening at failing companies but at very profitable ones funding AI buildouts. Oracle, CNBC reported, has been among the companies cutting jobs while pouring billions into data centers and AI infrastructure, which is its own kind of proof that a resume from one of the top companies no longer insulates the person holding it.

Performing the role flawlessly and getting to keep it seem to have quietly come apart from each other.

The Building Stopped Accommodating Ambition

The mechanism pushing women, specifically, to rewrite the definition of success is structural rather than a change of heart. A Flex Index report found that the share of large firms requiring full-time in-office work climbed to about a quarter by the second quarter of 2025, up sharply from late 2024. Mothers absorb that cost unevenly, since the Gender Equity Policy Institute found they spend 2.1 times as many hours as fathers on the unpaid work of running a home.

Meanwhile Census Bureau data shows the gender wage gap widened for a second straight year , with women paid just 81 cents to a man's dollar.

So the point is not that women lost their ambition, but that the building stopped accommodating it, so they, in turn, stopped treating the building as their only address. If the corner office is only a four-year lease, you can hardly blame them for keeping a second address.

Playing For The Back Of The Jersey

Roxanna Couse ran that exit math long before she ever jumped. Now a creator with nearly 700,000 followers, she spent more than a decade in corporate roles, including a stretch during the pandemic when her company rebranded a survival reorg as "Wartime." She describes herself as deeply risk-averse, a first-generation everything, first to college and first to own a home, and so she did not quit in a blaze of glory. She built quietly on the side, replaced her corporate salary while she was still drawing it, and went fractional for three months before she finally walked, approaching the whole exit with the steady-handed precision of a game of Operation, the kind where one careless twitch trips the buzzer and the patient does not make it off the table.

What changed for her was not income but where her credibility lived. A manager once told her in a performance review that she needed to play for the name on the front of the jersey, the company's, rather than the one on the back, and she decided that she would rather play for the back. "The only way to do that," she said, "is for people to know you outside of the organization that you work for."

The decision the mandates forced on her is the same one they are now forcing on millions of women, and she frames it as a kind of accounting. "I started to think about how much of my time I'm willing to exchange for money," she said. A two-hour commute is time that counts as neither work nor home, subtracted from both ledgers at once, and once you actually start adding it up the ledger tends to do the arguing for you. The real cost of staying invisible, she came to believe, was opportunity itself, along with the quiet indignity of letting someone else sit in the driver's seat of your own career, and the fear that keeps most people from building in public dissolves the moment you accept how little anyone is actually watching. "We overestimate," she said, "how much people care."

The Fear Isn't Failure, It's The Audience

There is a more specific fear sitting underneath the obvious one, and Couse names it with the precision of a surgeon when she says that what scares her is not failure at all but someone else getting to say, I told you so. Which is, when you sit with it for a second, not really a fear of failing so much as a fear of being seen to try and then come up short in front of an audience that warned you, and most of us, if we are brutally honest with ourselves, are far more afraid of the audience than of the attempt. I know I am.

Credibility That Can't Be Repossessed

It would be easy, and dishonest, to hold Couse up as proof that anyone can swap a paycheck for a following, because she is plainly an outlier and the data underneath the creator economy is unforgiving on exactly this point. Adobe's 2025 survey of more than 16,000 creators found that only about 4% earn six figures, while a large share make less than $15,000 a year .

But monetization was never the actual asset, and treating it as one misses what she really built, which is credibility that does not get repossessed in a restructuring. By that measure the logic holds even for the creator earning nothing at all, because the thing it insures against, a reputation rented entirely from an employer, is precisely the thing that evaporates the morning the layoff email lands.

Couse still remembers describing herself as "moonlighting" even after her side income had already passed her salary, and the word itself tells the whole story of how we have been trained to think about anything built outside the institution, as something faintly illicit and secondary, a thing done in the dark while the real job sleeps. She has since stopped apologizing for it. She treats the platform like the job it actually is, gets dressed every morning, works a structured day and hired a housekeeper on the entirely reasonable logic that being capable of doing everything yourself is not the same as being obligated to. "Just because we can do it all," she said, "doesn't mean we should."

Here’s the pattern sitting underneath all of it: we confused legibility with security. A clean resume felt safe because it was readable by the one institution that mattered, the one you wanted to be hired by, and somewhere along the way we mistook that readability for protection, which it never actually was. The nonlinear path, the portfolio, the career that looks scattered when you flatten it onto a page is not a compromise or a consolation prize for the people who couldn't hack the ladder, but the rational architecture for a world in which the page no longer has a permanent reader. Couse believes the personal brand will eventually replace the resume outright, and on the current evidence it is getting harder and harder to tell her she's wrong.

Tess wanted the office, and the 2026 version of that story isn't about wanting it any less. It's about finally understanding that the only part ever worth wanting was the part she could carry out the door with her.

If anyone reboots Working Girl , the ending has to change to reflect the new reality: Tess gets the office, looks around, and realizes she never wanted it. I'll of course volunteer as a consultant on the project.

If You're Thinking About Building Outside

If you're sitting there reading this, and nodding, thinking you want to build outside of your corporate role, the move is not to quit on Monday and crown yourself an entrepreneur by Friday, which is the version of the story social media oversells.

It is to start, whenever possible, while the salary is still landing, the way Couse did, and to do the unglamorous inventory first: not your title or your reporting line, but what you are genuinely known for, the thing you could talk about all day, the expertise that would still be true if the company vanished tomorrow.

Say the intention out loud even if it makes you wince, because announcing that you are building something is how you take the narrative back from whoever would otherwise write it for you. Accept that the discomfort of being seen is real and that almost nobody is watching as closely as you fear. And then treat the thing like the job it is rather than the hobby you'll get to eventually, because the only version of this that ever becomes an insurance policy is the one you actually show up for.