For his Principal Engineer promotion, the work alone wasn't enough. He identified critical leaders (VPs, Directors), proactively sought their mentorship, and held monthly check-ins. By the time the promotion cycle began, all key decision-makers were already aligned and supportive, making it a formality.
Goldcast's founders actively connected their marketing leader with an experienced CMO and sponsored the engagement. This demonstrates a powerful, tangible investment in professional development that accelerates a leader's growth in navigating executive and board-level challenges.
The path to senior engineering levels is tied to the scope of your work's influence. Rather than explicitly seeking promotions, focus on projects with natural potential to grow from solving a team's problem to solving an organization's. The promotions will follow the impact.
The journey from individual contributor to VP of Product at Descript wasn't about formal promotions. Instead, it was a gradual process of adding so much value in product discussions that she was invited into progressively more strategic meetings. When you're consistently indispensable in "the room," you eventually belong there permanently.
The transition from a hands-on contributor to a leader is one of the hardest professional shifts. It requires consciously moving away from execution by learning to trust and delegate. This is achieved by hiring talented people and then empowering them to operate, even if it means simply getting out of their way.
At Menlo, peer-driven promotion decisions hinge on a crucial question: "Does the rest of the team perform better when you are part of that project?" This evaluates an individual's value based on their ability to elevate others, prioritizing team amplification over solitary excellence.
To assess an internal candidate's readiness for promotion, give them the responsibilities of the higher-level role first. If they can succeed with minimal coaching, they're ready. This approach treats promotion as an acknowledgment of proven performance rather than a speculative bet on future potential.
To persuade superiors to adopt a change, remove as much friction as possible. Don't just present an idea; deliver a fully formed plan where their only step is to approve it. Presenting a pre-written memo or a populated list makes it easy for them to say 'yes' by demonstrating you've handled the execution.
When meeting with senior leaders, shift the focus from your status updates to their priorities. Ask what's top of mind for them, what challenges they face, and how you can help. This reframes you from a direct report into a strategic ally, building trust and social capital.
Instead of asking managers for a checklist to get promoted, focus on delivering significant impact. This approach is more effective and viewed more favorably by leadership. Genuine impact is what gets recognized and rewarded, while simply 'checking boxes' can backfire.
When progress on a complex initiative stalls with middle management, don't hesitate to escalate to senior leadership. A brief, well-prepared C-level discussion can cut through uncertainty, validate importance, and accelerate alignment across teams or with external partners.