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.
An engineer recalled being an IC4 and thinking IC7 was an undesirable level of intensity. This fear shifted upward with each promotion; at IC6, he became open to IC7 but then felt the same about IC8. This shows how our perception of the "next level" changes as we grow and our ambitions evolve.
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.
True long-term career growth isn't about climbing a stable ladder. It's about intentionally leaving secure, successful positions to tackle harder, unfamiliar challenges. This process of bursting your own bubble of security forces constant learning and reinvention, keeping you relevant.
Actively pursuing a promotion often leads to frustration because it depends on factors outside your control. The path to growth and happiness is to focus entirely on maximizing your impact in your current role. Promotions and recognition will eventually follow as lagging indicators.
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.
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.
An engineer landed a career-defining project not by chance, but by design. He cultivated a reputation as a subject matter expert and high performer. When an unexpected staffing gap appeared (due to a senior's paternity leave), he was the obvious choice. This illustrates how to increase your "luck surface area" for opportunities.
The relationship between work and career growth isn't just linear; it's super-linear due to compounding. Managers give the most valuable work to those who prove they can handle an extreme workload, creating a powerful feedback loop for rapid advancement, making it crucial to cultivate a high tolerance for pain early on.
A Meta engineer was denied a promotion despite a "Greatly Exceeds" rating due to a behavioral gap in cross-functional collaboration. This shows that lagging promotions hinge on consistently demonstrating the behaviors of the next level, not just delivering high impact at the current level.
To deliver a high-stakes project on a tight deadline, an engineer took on product management responsibilities like defining scope and getting alignment. This ability to resolve ambiguity outside of pure engineering, which he calls the "product hybrid archetype," is a key differentiator for achieving senior-level impact.