Career Promotions: A Mysterious Unknown or Clear and Logical Roadmap?

All too often, at different types of companies, we hear from our clients that the promotional process is a big mystery. People don’t know why they received their recent promotion, nor do they know what is required to achieve the next career level up.

These are not uneducated people nor are they professional neophytes. Most of them have been in the corporate world for some time. Yet the ways of management remain baffling, frustrating, and sometimes quite suspicious. Words like “political,” “opportunistic,” and “self-serving” are sprinkled through conversations aimed at trying to figure out how to understand what’s going on in the promotional arena.

While many of our clients have been savvy enough to not fall victim to company politics, some of them have been so averse to being caught up in the mystery they’ve decided they need to work for themselves as a form of protection resigning and in short order creating a start up under their own command.

So what can managers do to help correct this confusion?

The promotional process needs to be spelled out for all concerned. That means that every level of management and all employees need to be on the same page about this process.

I recommend that you develop a process that incorporates all or at least some of these elements, as well as others that I hope to hear about in your Comments:

— OKRs
OKRs stands for Objectives and Key Results.
It is a method that many corporations of all sizes now utilize, requiring their employees to define and track their objectives and their outcomes.

When a manager reviews an employee’s OKRs, s/he needs to provide feedback as to the appropriate level of scope, challenge, and potential growth—both in the development of the list and then in the review of results—as measures of professional competence, growth, and future career implications.

— Performance Reviews
Some companies do not require managers to provide full disclosure feedback to their team members regarding how they were rated during Performance Reviews. This is a huge error as it leaves managers unaccountable and team members in the dark.

No matter what form of Performance Review you utilize in your company, this is a process that needs to be aimed at providing detailed information to the recipient about where they are in the career building process, the promotional process, and for some the exit process. Critique and Recognition should both be provided so that excellent performance is acknowledged while critique provides the guidelines for professional and career growth.

— One-on-One Behavior and Availability
All too often managers overlook or even ignore both excellent as well as acting out behavior of team members during coaching/management/supervision sessions. Sometimes it’s the result of bad behavior by the manager—coming late, last-minute cancellations, taking phone calls during meetings for example—but oftentimes it’s simply ignored as a venue for professional evaluation.

By that I don’t mean the content of the meeting. I’m talking about the opportunity to evaluate and provide feedback on the employee’s conduct. Are they on time? Are they prepared? Do they present themselves in a professional manner? How well do they accept critical and/or praiseworthy feedback (both are important)? Do they engage in providing you feedback? Do they leave on time or try to get extra advantage by pushing the time boundary? This list is practically endless when you start paying attention to your employee’s behavior and not just the content of what they present.

— Ownership and Accomplishments
Not only can you acknowledge and appreciate a team member’s ownership over a project that they helped imagine, plan, spear-head, and bring to life, you can acknowledge that person’s visionary leadership beyond current projects, their ability to inspire with lofty but real BHAGs - Big Hairy Audacious Goals.

Don’t ignore speaking ability and presentation bookings outside the company, nor do you want to ignore professional publications and/or patents for the company. Anything that amplifies the individual’s ability to lead, motivate, and promote can be important elements of your promotional consideration.

— Leadership and Mentoring
It’s important that your promotional candidates exemplify your company’s culture and we trust that running meetings with confidence, control, and caring are part of that. Therefore it’s important that you observe how well your candidates run their own team meetings and yours when appropriate as they should be able to stand in for you when that’s called for.

How well do they stand in for and represent you at meetings you cannot attend (getting feedback from your colleagues who are there)? How well do they mentor people who are not on their own team re: career development, professional behavior, leadership presence, managing up to executives, etc? This will require you to get feedback from the mentees and perhaps even the mentees’ supervisors/managers.

— The Key
The key is public clarity about promotional requirements and evaluation processes so that everyone knows the roadmap and the important “street signs” that are used to get to a promotion. Your values may be very different from what I’ve just suggested and that’s fine. But either way, your definitive promotional specifics will help your employees and/or team members feel informed, trusting, and clear about how to proceed.

What have you found are the most important elements that set someone up for promotional success within your business?

(Photo: roadmapStewela/Flickr)

*****

Judith Sherven, PhD and her husband Jim Sniechowski, PhD (https://JudithandJim.com) have developed a penetrating perspective on people’s resistance to success, which they call The Fear of Being Fabulous tm. Recognizing the power of unconscious programming to always outweigh conscious desires, they assert that no one is ever failing—they are always succeeding. The question is, at what? To learn about how this played out in the life of Whitney Houston for example, and how it may be playing out in your own life, check out their 6th book: https://WhatReallyKilledWhitneyHouston.com

Currently consultants on retainer to LinkedIn providing executive coaching, leadership training and consulting as well as working with private clients around the world, they continually prove that when unconscious beliefs are brought to the surface, the barriers to greater success and leadership presence begin to fade away. Their core program is called “Overcoming the Fear of Being Fabulous.”

Note: Their 7th book, short and to the point, “25 Power Speaking Tips That Will Leave Your Audiences Wanting More” has been recently published in a Kindle edition.

Youssef A.

Asset Management Technology Specialist at Nova Scotia Power | Technical Consulting | Data Analytics & Integration

10 年

When career promotions are "A Mysterious Unknown", they will lose their significance and value, and therefore, employees will also lose their interest in such promotions.

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Kumar Madduri MVNK

ERP Functional & Implementation Consultant | Clicklearn, IFS & QA Specialist

10 年

Very few organisations are later... Mostly unknown and try to moviate with immediate requirements....

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Ravi Kant Pandey

Automotive Professional with cross functional experience of over 24 years in Sales & Operations with expertise in areas of Brand building, Product Marketing, Customer Experience, Corporate Strategy & Business Expansion.

10 年

Even if you give your best of the best your promotion is still based on your immediate Boss's recommendation. Management can't see beyond your Boss verdict and that is why most of us has seen that the successful candidates believe to look for next challenging role within a short span of time of 2-4 years in the organisation. HR managers have to really understand that keeping the best talent within the organisation and to retain them is not an easy task now a days keeping in mind the competitive environment we all are. Secondly, most of the organisations are developing managers only no one seems to be interested in developing leaders, thus everyone is self-centric and working towards achieving individual growth rather than the Organisational growth which is by all means the trend followed by each of us.

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Sanjay Mishra

Managing Director - KInetic Electromechanic Ltd

10 年

The career promotion in any organization is the most desired destination and it depends many a times on many internal and external dynamics beyond the anticipation of HR function. It is more than accomplishment of Key Results areas,leadership and behaviours.It looks simple at grass root level but becomes complex as the organization moves smaller to larger.It has been observed that some time one employee is underrated in one organization or by one boss but the same employee is best rated in another organization or by another boss. It is also important that some one who was best at one point of time gets sidelined on the joining of another best employee. It is also true each employee can be best rated throughout the employment time scale. The organizational pyramid becomes thinner and thinner at top level so whatever one does he can not vertically move beyond certain point. Money and position does not keep employees motivated all the times. The organizational bottom-line, culture, philosophy, politics and general economy play grate role in shaping the career promotion in most of the time and these invisible forces always remain in force.

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Andrew Wall

Head of Technical Data Management UK

10 年

After reading this I can see it’s crystal clear….. so why isn’t everyone doing it and delivering high performing individuals and fast track promotions? I think it’s because there is more to the politics and the network you have to develop as you progress, which becomes more and more important as you gain recognition in the various informal power structures of the company. After a while it is nothing to do with how you perform and only about who you are connected with and likely to support, leading to a trend of gaming and politics. Don’t get me wrong this isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but it should be considered as part of your road map.

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