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ASAP Career Stages Framework

Each stage marks a shift from tactical to strategic work

Read on for the latest tips, tricks, and skills that are most in demand for today's executive assistants and administrative professionals.

ASAP Career Stages Framework

Each stage marks a shift from tactical to strategic work

What is the ASAP Career Stages Framework?

Introduced in our State of the Profession Report, this framework validates what many in our community already know: titles alone don’t tell the whole story. It’s a practical guide to help you pinpoint where you are, what’s next, and how to get there. Inconsistent job titles have long made it challenging for administrative professionals (APs) to map career growth and benchmark skills, but our Career Stages Framework changes that. It defines four clear stages of progression in the administrative field: Assisting, Supporting, Partnering, and Leading.

See how this is implemented at our annual in-person training events: Administrative Professionals Conference and EA Ignite.

Assisting

Early-career APs typically under five years of experience, focused on scheduling, document organization, and foundational tasks.

Supporting

Builds on Assisting tasks with greater autonomy. APs at this stage support projects and manage more complex day-to-day operations.

Partnering

Shifts from tasks to more strategic contributions. APs at this stage collaborate on business plans, manage large projects, and often oversee teams.

Leading

At this stage, APs lead large-scale initiatives, advise senior executives, and act as strategic partners who drive business innovation.

Why Does It Matter?

The report confirms that moving through these stages brings real benefits:

Higher Pay:

Average annual salary climbs steadily from around $57,000 at the Assisting stage to more than $84,000 at the Leading stage.

More Influence:

Higher stages come with greater input on strategic decisions and more opportunities to shape company priorities.

Clearer Development Goals:

You can better identify what skills to build next, from AI tools to executive-level leadership.

How to Use the Framework

Ready to put the framework into action? Here’s how:

Identify Your Stage

Review your daily responsibilities. Are you mostly handling core scheduling and document tasks? Or do you manage projects, lead initiatives, or advise executives? Use the descriptions in the State of the Profession Report to see where you fit.

Spot Your Skill Gaps

The report highlights essential skills at each stage, from technology and communication to leadership and efficiency. For example, AI tools, project management systems, and strategic planning are top priorities for advancement.

Set Development Goals

Once you know your current stage and what’s next, set specific goals. That might mean improving your proficiency with automation tools, boosting your public speaking skills, or taking on projects that build your leadership experience.

Pursue Targeted Training

Invest in training that bridges the gap. In addition to our two annual conferences, APC and EA Ignite, ASAP’s digital training library is packed with webinars, courses, guides, and reports to help you build the skills that matter most at every stage.

Advocate for Your Growth

Use the framework and salary benchmarks to have informed conversations with your manager about responsibilities, compensation, and professional development opportunities.

Rewrite your role with ASAP.

Join ASAP Premium Membership today and pair it with our in-person training for even greater results. Demonstrate the value you bring every day.

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