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Working in a different office from a manager creates a forcing function for taking initiative. This autonomy, born from necessity due to distance and time zones, leads to a higher-than-expected success rate, building confidence and career momentum far faster than with direct oversight.

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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.

Don't blame a manager for a lack of promotion. True career acceleration comes from radical self-accountability. You must proactively step into the role you want *before* you have it and demonstrate your worthiness, rather than waiting for someone to grant you a raise or new title.

Volunteering for a role in a less popular location, like Japan in the 1980s, can provide unparalleled experience. Nick Rohatyn gained ten years of experience in four, managing 50 people by age 28, because he went where others wouldn't, proving opportunity lies off the beaten path.

The most potent advice for career growth is to take more risks. This includes moving across the country for an opportunity or even taking a job that appears to be a step down in title or pay if it aligns better with your long-term goals. The potential upside of such calculated risks often outweighs the downside.

Requiring inside sales reps to be in the office is a talent filtering strategy. Those willing to make the sacrifice of a commute for the benefit of accelerated learning and career development are the driven, exceptional individuals you want to build a winning team with.

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.

When entering a new region or industry without a network, accepting a role slightly below your experience level is a powerful strategy. It lowers the barrier to entry and allows you to quickly prove value, earn trust, and ultimately get promoted faster than if you had held out for a more senior role from the start.

To encourage a return to the office while offering flexibility, one founder told his 100% remote team that only the top 25% of performers could continue working from home. This created a strong incentive for performance across the company.

Individual effort is like climbing a ladder, but working at a rapidly growing company puts that ladder on an escalator. The company's momentum creates opportunities and upward movement for you that are independent of your own climbing speed, drastically accelerating your career progression.

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.