Thanks. But I'd be way too arrogant to say that (only) I take the credit.
Pretty tough question and it falls into the category of those that I hate answering because it reminds of BS that I can't stand which are motivational speakers and coaches on how to be happy or successful. But I share my point of view, though.
When I worked in the previous jobs it was a handful of everything. I've been into sales, journalism, coordinating teams & administration, CS, finance, you name it. Some company was some, some medium and some multinational corp. There were a lot of people with high school, universities, motivated, non-motivated. All sorts. However, despite the companies profits, the horizontal and vertical promotions were quite tight. There were literally no room for getting up there and grabbing the bucks. You simply had your salary and you can fuck off. Good companies (compared to the west) were pretty non existed or at least closed for me.
What changed? I know people would love to hear how I learned some soft skills, or how I have enrolled some course, but no. It was just two things: luck and opportunity. I had been asked if I wanted to work as a CS agent at some promising company where people are satisfied (which is rare, like I said). I had to accept second and third shifts which was (still is) very hard for me as I value life over work. But I was willing to give it a shot and it turned out it was a great move. My starting wages were that great and considering the shift flaws, I'd say the offer was below average. But I wanted to give it a go. It was very tough at first, way too much work, but everything fell into order. You know what was different (employee related) compared to previous jobs that I had? Nothing. People who worked there were just like in every other place where I worked before. However, in this company they valued how you work, which was new to me, and prize wasn't small at all. I'll also have to mention that it was great getting into gabling industry because it's a gold mine. After 6 months I got promoted to another department. Then I kept staying there and got raises for doing some good work & going extra mile quite often. I'm still an ant there but I'm involved into business decisions and hit meetings with big heads so I've earned some respect down the line. I had periods of 1-2 years without a job with almost zero spending habits. I was furious. But it was a period of time when I was swallowing the books. Sure, it was pure literature, but now when I look back I still think it's one of the most valuable things that I've done for myself. Being an introvert and somebody who loves cinematography since a little boy, I think it gave me a wider knowledge which got recognized and respected. So as a late payback I think it was worth a lot even though I never planned to capitalize it per se. My initial thoughts got shattered because I was expecting some beasts in the company. Turns out it was just regular people and nobody to be afraid of. I had a chance and I gave my best to get recognized. It was not easy and my biggest reward came in the last 4 months (my newst/biggest salary is yet to hit me on Monday). So it was a combination of many things and I'll have to highlight luck and opportunity because it's quite underlooked and very important. I also think I learned so much over the past 2 years, both work and people related. It was a bumpy year so I hope I get to relax more in this one. Despite big salary spikes my feet are on the ground. I'm just a regular guy trying to life for his own bread & not turn into a dickhead. I'm not saying I'm living it the right way but people at my place are really not appreciating what they are getting. Most likely because they don't know for worse. Might be good, but I see that as a weakness. Some opt to waste a huge chunk of their salary on booze, drugs, gamble and cars. I'm actually saving.