Career Streams

Tulane's five distinctive career streams, with 5–6 levels each, were developed for the learning and growth of staff. The design includes:

  • Mapping pathways for career and professional development.
  • Providing a clear understanding of what is essential to advancing one's skills and competencies.
  • Defining universal competencies and factors across career streams:
    • Impact: The nature and scope of influence the level has on its area of responsibility.
    • Problem Solving: Degree to which the level needs to identify and devise solutions to problems and the level of autonomy to make decisions.
    • Communication and Influence: Describes the nature of communication the level is responsible for and the level of influence required.
    • Leadership: Responsibility for people's development, including supervision, training, coaching, and performance management.
    • Knowledge: Level of expertise required to fulfill level responsibilities as defined by minimum levels of formal education and/or work experience.

Career Streams Level Guide

OperationalBusinessTechnicalProfessionalManagement
    M6 Assistant Vice President
   P6 Lead Specialist II, ConsultantM5 Executive Director
   P5 Lead Specialist IM4 Director
  T5 Lead TechnicianP4 Senior SpecialistM3 Assistant/Associate Director
 B5 Lead CoordinatorT4 Senior TechnicianP3 Specialist IIIM2 Manager
O5 Lead OperatorB4 Senior CoordinatorT3 Technician IIIP2 Specialist IIM1 Supervisor
O4 Senior OperatorB3 Coordinator IIIT2 Technician IIP1 Specialist I 
O3 Operator IIIB2 Coordinator IIT1 Technician I  
O2 Operator IIB1 Coordinator I   
O1 Operator I    

Career streams reflect increasing levels of responsibility, expertise, and leadership from bottom to top.

About the Career Streams

Management

  • People leaders spend the majority of their time overseeing their area of responsibility and achieving goals through direct and/or indirect reports.

Professional

  • Individual contributors with responsibility in a professional or technical discipline or specialty.
  • Spends the majority of their time overseeing the design, implementation, or delivery of processes, programs, and policies using specialized knowledge and skills normally acquired through advanced education (typically university).

Business

  • Individual contributors who provide organizational-related support or service (administrative or clerical).
  • Spends the majority of their time in the delivery of support services or activities, typically under supervision.
  • Opportunities for progression outside this career band are typically limited without additional education or significant training and experience.

Technical

  • Individual contributors who focus on technical, scientific, or analytical tasks.
  • Jobs typically require advanced skill training, specialized external certification, or a completed technical school education.

Operational

  • Individual contributors who focus on technical or operational tasks to support ongoing university operations.
  • Includes skilled technicians in a hands-on environment that is often highly specialized.
  • Jobs typically require advanced skill training, specialized external certification, or a completed technical school education.