How To Get Promoted
📖 Bu rehber ToolPazar ekibi tarafından hazırlanmıştır. Tüm araçlarımız ücretsiz ve reklamsızdır.
1. Read the leveling rubric
Getting promoted isn’t about working harder than everyone else. It’s about operating at the next level for 6+ months before the promotion. Your boss doesn’t decide you deserve it — your boss justifies a decision made by a committee based on evidence you’ve provided.
2. You get promoted for the level above you
The goal of this guide is to make the process explicit: what the bar actually is, and how to meet it efficiently.
3. Scope matters more than hours
Most companies publish one. It describes exactly what behavior maps to each level. Read it. Highlight the gaps between your current behavior and the next level’s bar. This is the map — don’t try to navigate without it.
4. Make your work visible
You need to operate at the next level for 6+ months, not just occasionally. A promotion committee looks for a sustained pattern, not a single impressive quarter. Plan for a long runway.
5. Have the conversation early
Shipping 3 big, cross-team initiatives beats shipping 30 small tickets. Promotion is about impact, not volume. If your ticket list is all small stuff, you’re optimizing for the wrong thing.
6. Ask for scope
If nobody outside your team knows what you do, you won’t be promoted. Not because you’re not good — because there’s no evidence. Write design docs. Present at team demos. Share learnings in #eng. Visibility isn’t bragging; it’s necessary evidence.
7. Mentor others
Tell your manager you’re aiming for promotion — at the start of the cycle, not 2 weeks before. Ask exactly what’s missing. Get specific, quarterly goals. Check in monthly. Remove surprises.
8. Document your wins
The work you need to show doesn’t fall on your lap. You often have to ask for it. “I’m aiming for L5 this half — what’s the largest thing you’d trust me to own?” Most managers say yes if you ask.
9. Impact metrics beat adjectives
At senior levels, impact through others matters as much as individual output. Mentoring juniors, reviewing code thoughtfully, running onboarding — these all count. Start doing them before you need them for promo.
10. Get cross-functional allies
Keep a running “brag doc” — every project, its impact, the hard parts. Update it monthly. At promo time, your manager will thank you. You’ll remember details you’d otherwise forget.
11. Ask for feedback relentlessly
“I improved the checkout flow” is weak. “I reduced checkout drop-off 12%, worth ~$2M ARR” is strong. Wherever possible, attach numbers. Get alignment with your PM on what counts as success, then measure it.
12. Be patient but not infinite
Promotion committees often include peers from other teams. If a PM, designer, or adjacent engineer will vouch for you, it helps. Do good work with them — they become free references.