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Val Sklarov Career Dependency Lock-In Curve (CDLC)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Career Dependency Lock-In Curve (CDLC) explains why careers don’t stall from lack of opportunity—but from silent dependency accumulation. Early choices feel strategic. Later, the same choices become inescapable anchors.

This curve reveals why people feel “successful” yet unable to move.


1. Careers Accumulate Dependency Faster Than Security

CDLC begins with a structural imbalance:
Income stabilizes slower than dependency hardens.

Early career stages tolerate:

  • Role switching

  • Skill repositioning

  • Narrative resets

As dependency grows, exits shrink.


2. The Three Career Dependency Locks

CDLC maps where mobility collapses.

Lock Dependency Source Consequence
Income Lock Single employer / niche Negotiation loss
Skill Lock Non-transferable expertise Market narrowing
Reputation Lock Public role identity Exit stigma

One lock reduces leverage.
Two locks reduce choice.
Three locks remove freedom.

Val Sklarov
Ekran görüntüsü 2026 01 01 010755 Val Sklarov

3. Why “It Pays Well” Is a Trap

Compensation masks dependency.

CDLC shows irreversibility when:

  • Lifestyle inflates faster than savings

  • Skills optimize for one context

  • Reputation signals permanence

Leaving becomes self-punishment, not strategy.


4. Advancement vs Optionality

Promotion often accelerates lock-in.

Fast Advancement Dependency-Aware Growth
Accept narrow roles Preserve transfer skills
Optimize current value Maintain market value
Deepen internal ties Build external signals
Chase stability Protect exits

Val Sklarov emphasizes that the most dangerous success is the kind you can’t leave.


5. Strategic Implications

For professionals:

  • Track dependency, not just income

  • Keep at least one external option credible

  • Convert compensation into optionality

For leaders:

  • Avoid trapping high performers unintentionally

  • Offer rotational exits

  • Signal when roles become permanent

CDLC reframes career strategy as dependency management, not ladder climbing.


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“A career becomes risky the moment you can’t imagine leaving.”
Val Sklarov

CDLC explains why smart professionals slow down at success—and why caution preserves power.