When overlooked or sidelined, don't just get frustrated. A product manager who lost a key project created a personal pitch deck. She used it in one-on-one meetings with VPs to articulate her brand, story, and impact, ultimately winning back the project and gaining senior leadership buy-in.
Designers often focus on selling their craft to design managers, but the final hiring decision frequently lies with product leaders. To succeed, designers must frame their value as a business investment, emphasizing the ROI and metric impact that resonates with the ultimate approver.
Product leaders often feel they must present a perfect, unassailable plan to executives. However, the goal should be to start a discussion. Presenting an idea as an educated guess allows for a collaborative debate where you can gather more information and adjust the strategy based on leadership's feedback.
Not all design impact can be quantified with metrics. When data is unavailable, frame your value by highlighting contributions to competitive parity, internal team efficiency, or bug reduction. This holistic view of business health resonates with leadership beyond just product managers.
A one-page slide outlining your current role, next desired role, skill gaps, and personal preferences creates an actionable career plan. Sharing this with managers and mentors turns it into a collaborative tool that can create an implicit 'contract' for promotion.
Instead of being discouraged by over 100 rejections, Canva's founder treated each one as a data point. She added new slides to her pitch deck to pre-emptively address every objection—such as market size or competition—making the pitch stronger and more compelling with each "no."
Everyone has a personal brand, whether intentional or not. The key is to close the gap between how you see yourself and how others perceive you. Proactively define what you want to be known for, then consistently communicate and demonstrate that brand to prevent misunderstandings and career stagnation.
Structure your final presentation by calling out specific problems you learned from individual contributors by name. Then, immediately pivot to show how solving their problem directly contributes to the high-level business objective owned by the executive decision-maker. This makes every stakeholder feel heard and demonstrates their strategic value.
To get leadership buy-in for a new media project, use a two-step pitch. First, show a best-in-class example from another company to paint a clear vision of the desired outcome. Second, explicitly anchor your project to a core strategic narrative or go-to-market message for that quarter.
Bypass C-suite gatekeepers by interviewing lower-level employees who experience the problem daily. Gather their stories and pain points. Then, use this internal "insight" to craft a highly relevant pitch for executives, showing them a problem their own team is facing that they are unaware of.
To make your work visible to leadership, shift your communication from discussing activities to highlighting outcomes. Instead of listing tasks, explain the tangible business result your work generated and how it aligns with broader company goals. This frames your contribution strategically.