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    Home»Business»Why being good at your job isn’t enough to get promoted anymore
    Business 4 Mins Read

    Why being good at your job isn’t enough to get promoted anymore

    Business 4 Mins Read
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    If you’ve been in the corporate world long enough, you might have seen technical specialists hit a career ceiling. They’re brilliant at what they do, but they can struggle to advance to leadership positions.

    That’s because management requires a different type of thinking: less task-oriented, more focused on the big picture. This is a mindset that’s common in successful company founders, who employ knowledge, experience, and intuition to maximize value creation within the given context. And it’s a mindset that’s increasingly relevant today.

    For instance, the World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs survey from 2025 names analytical thinking as the top core skill employers say they need today. Rapid changes like the rise of autonomous AI agents are reshaping the way people get hired for senior and managing positions and the way we think about skills. This is why companies are interested in those with human mindsets: analytical, critical, and able to work with both data and intuition.

    I’ve observed this shift from up close. Starting as a software engineer in both software product and outsourcing companies, I quickly found that being a top-notch coder with excellent and deep knowledge of software libraries has diminishing returns. Today, I lead Sombra’s technology direction and delivery strategy, balancing execution with client success and commercial reality.

    Here are my five practical moves that helped me make this transition and will do the same for you. No matter whether you’re in tech, ops, marketing, finance, or anywhere else.

    1) Start thinking like your manager

    Understand your manager’s personal and business goals. To achieve this, you need to get a grip on business basics. Start by allocating one hour a week. If you want to get closer to a decision-making position, you need to know how and why companies are making these decisions in the first place.

    From there, make sure to dedicate a part of your schedule to helping your manager achieve their goal. In turn, this frees their time to do more strategic work.

    2) Think more about the total outcome, less about the next KPI

    Before pushing for a solution, set goals and clarify them in plain language. One of the paramount characteristics of business thinking is getting people on the same page. While isolated key performance indicators (KPI) like retention rate make perfect sense at a specific moment, they aren’t enough to keep the team motivated in the long run.

    Your job is to identify priorities for the total outcome. Is it risk reduction? Speed? Trust? If you can’t tell how KPIs tie to the bigger picture, you most likely aren’t doing strategy, just some regular activity.

    3) Take more ownership

    There’s always a better, more creative way to complete a task. You need to be constantly experimenting and evaluating to find optimal ways to achieve your goals. This is extremely critical to business thinking. And you need to take ownership of this process by always staying on top of it.

    Say a task is divided between two people or teams. Don’t just split the work and forget about the other party. Be sure to regularly check in and provide assistance when someone needs it. This is a great sign of leadership, which can’t go unnoticed by your management.

    4)  Reduce uncertainty for yourself and others by being honest

    This tip goes beyond honestly telling what you’ve accomplished and what you haven’t. Honesty is about your personal motives, your feelings about uncomfortable situations, and bringing up inconvenient topics before they become conflicts. Start by being honest with yourself. That’s a nice stepping stone to becoming more open about your motives to the management.

    Honesty helps make the progress visible to the stakeholders, too. Communicate early and often. This way, you’ll foster alignment at all stages of value creation. Feedback loops with people directly involved also help you come up with more creative solutions.

    5) Be adaptive and celebrate change

    During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020-2021, everyone was talking about how fast things change in the world. Fast forward to 2026, and those changes seem like a walk in the park. Global uncertainty only grows, and professionals need to adjust their plans and roadmaps weekly or even daily. Doing so is just one piece of a puzzle. Another one is actually learning to celebrate this flexibility and unpredictability. This means being receptive to change and embracing it rather than becoming frustrated by each change of your oh-so-perfect plan.



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