To get promoted, excel at your 'day job' for credibility, but actively seek out the messy, hard problems others don't want. Raising your hand for these challenges demonstrates leadership, builds confidence, and earns you more responsibility.
To accelerate your career, focus on developing 'agency'. This means moving beyond assigned tasks to proactively solve unspoken, systemic problems. Instead of chasing high-visibility projects, look for the unaddressed issues that keep leaders up at night. Solving these demonstrates true ownership and strategic value.
Employees who strictly adhere to their job description are likely to remain in the same role for years. Going above and beyond, such as cleaning a boss's station to simply be in their orbit, builds a reputation and relationships that lead to unexpected opportunities.
The higher you climb in an organization, the more your role becomes about solving problems. Effective leaders reframe these challenges as rewarding opportunities for great solutions. Without this mindset shift, the job becomes unsustainable and draining.
Don't wait for a promotion or for the perfect role to be created. The most effective path to leadership is to proactively identify and take on critical, unowned tasks within your organization. This demonstrates value and allows you to carve out a new role for yourself based on proven impact.
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.
When his promotion was blocked by external factors, an engineer didn't scale back his efforts. He continued to take on work well above his level (IC4 doing IC5/IC6 work). This proactive approach during a frustrating period led to a top-tier rating and promotion once the freeze lifted.
Don't wait for a promotion or new job opening to grow. Proactively identify other teams' pain points and offer your expertise to help solve them. This proactive helpfulness builds relationships, demonstrates your value across the organization, and organically opens doors to new skills and responsibilities.
Well-meaning professionals often take on "glue work" like improving onboarding or team culture. While valuable, this work often doesn't align with promotion criteria for senior roles. Audit your energy and focus on activities directly tied to the expectations of the role you want.
In fast-growing companies, your role constantly expands. To keep up, you must delegate responsibilities you've mastered (your 'Legos') to tackle new, larger problems. Hoarding tasks you're good at will ultimately limit your career growth and bury you under a pile of work you've outgrown.
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.