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Grow Your Team, Grow Your Self - MAC100

Managing A Career

Release Date: 07/15/2025

Career Speedrun - MAC109 show art Career Speedrun - MAC109

Managing A Career

Welcome back to Managing A Career, the podcast that helps you put yourself on the fast track for promotion. I’m your host, Layne Robinson.   Today’s episode is all about a concept I’m calling the Career Speedrun. If you’re into gaming, you probably know what a speedrun is: it’s when players try to beat an entire game as fast as possible, skipping unnecessary parts, using shortcuts, and optimizing every move.   Now, when it comes to your career, you can’t literally warp-jump from your first job straight to the corner office—but you can learn to recognize what slows...

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Early Promotion to Career Success - MAC108 show art Early Promotion to Career Success - MAC108

Managing A Career

Reframing the Premature Promotion Back in , I tackled the tricky terrain of getting promoted too soon—when the title lands before the readiness does. That episode unpacked the complications that can follow a premature promotion: skill gaps, team tension, imposter syndrome, and even layoff risk. This week, I’m flipping the script. Instead of focusing on the pitfalls, let’s talk about how to turn that early promotion into a strategic advantage. Because if you play it right, what starts as a stumble can become your fastest leap forward.   The Risks Beneath the Ribbon-Cutting ...

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Career Stagnation - MAC107 show art Career Stagnation - MAC107

Managing A Career

Has your career quietly veered off course—not with a dramatic crash, but with a slow, almost imperceptible drift? One missed opportunity. One unchallenging role. One “maybe next year” that turned into five. Then one day, you look up and realize you’re nowhere near where you thought you’d be. Here’s the good news: every detour has a reentry point. You won’t fix it overnight, but you can start with one small, intentional correction. And that shift—however minor—is how momentum begins.   How Did We Get Here? Before we talk solutions, let’s rewind. Career drift...

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Non-Verbal Communication - MAC106 show art Non-Verbal Communication - MAC106

Managing A Career

In last week’s podcast episode of the podcast, Episode 105 – Communication Etiquette (), I talked about how seemingly small, everyday actions can shape how others perceive you at work. While these habits may not directly earn you a promotion, they quietly build your reputation with the very people who influence those decisions. This week, I want to take that conversation further by focusing on something even more subtle but just as powerful: non-verbal communication cues.   Why Non-Verbal Communication Matters Whether you’re in a casual hallway conversation, presenting in a...

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Communication Etiquette - MAC105 show art Communication Etiquette - MAC105

Managing A Career

On other episodes of the Managing A Career podcast, I tend to focus on the big-picture strategies that can propel your career forward—things like building influence, earning visibility, and positioning yourself for future opportunities. But advancement isn’t just about the major moves. Sometimes, it’s the subtle, everyday actions that shape how others perceive you. This week, I want to zoom in on one of those seemingly small details that won’t directly earn you a promotion, but will absolutely impact the impression you leave on colleagues, managers, and executives: communication...

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A Seat At The Table - MAC104 show art A Seat At The Table - MAC104

Managing A Career

You Need to Be in the Room Where It Happens — But How? You’ve heard the phrase before: “You need to be in the room where decisions happen.” It sounds powerful—exclusive even—but no one ever hands you the playbook for getting in that room. Working hard isn’t enough. Being the best at your job isn’t enough. The truth is, opportunities to sit at the table where decisions are made don’t simply appear—they’re earned, often through deliberate actions, strategic visibility, and building the right kind of influence. So the real question becomes: how do you earn that seat at the...

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What Are You Prioritizing? - MAC103 show art What Are You Prioritizing? - MAC103

Managing A Career

What You Prioritize Is What You Grow In your career—just like in life—whatever you prioritize is what takes root, grows, and ultimately defines your trajectory. Whether you’re intentional about it or not, your attention acts like sunlight and water: it nourishes certain parts of your professional life while leaving others to wither. Even worse is when you don’t make a conscious choice at all—when your career just “happens to you.” That passive approach can lead to years of drifting, missed opportunities, and invisible ceilings. So take a moment to reflect: what are you truly...

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Creating a Career Vision When You Don't Know What's Possible - MAC102 show art Creating a Career Vision When You Don't Know What's Possible - MAC102

Managing A Career

We've recently gone through a reorganization at my job, and with that change, I now have several new team members reporting to me. In my one-on-one meetings, I like to focus on more than just status updates—I emphasize career development. One of the tools I’ve consistently found to be effective is the Individual Development Plan, or IDP. If you’ve been following this podcast, you may remember Episode 37 () where I broke down the Vision and Roadmap section of the IDP. It’s a framework I believe in deeply.   But here’s the thing: many of my new team members are struggling with...

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Leadership Isn't Assigned -- It's Taken - MAC101 show art Leadership Isn't Assigned -- It's Taken - MAC101

Managing A Career

“Being a leader isn't an assignment that is given to you, but an assignment that you TAKE.” Let that sink in. Leadership isn’t about waiting for permission. It’s about stepping up when others step back. In today's episode of the Managing A Career podcast, we’re diving deep into what it really means to TAKE leadership.   Anyone can be a leader—because leadership is a quality you demonstrate, not a job title you hold. Sure, some roles come with authority baked in, but real leaders don’t wait for the title. They lead because they choose to. If you have ambitions to advance...

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Grow Your Team, Grow Your Self - MAC100 show art Grow Your Team, Grow Your Self - MAC100

Managing A Career

There’s a common misconception the corporate world: to get ahead, someone else has to fall behind. It’s the old zero-sum thinking — that career advancement is a competitive, cutthroat race. But today, I want to challenge that notion. Whether you're managing a team or just stepping into a leadership role, the truth is that investing in the growth of others doesn’t slow you down — it accelerates your own career trajectory. Helping others succeed is one of the most powerful, and often underestimated, ways to grow yourself.   This zero-sum outlook is rooted in fear and...

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There’s a common misconception the corporate world: to get ahead, someone else has to fall behind. It’s the old zero-sum thinking — that career advancement is a competitive, cutthroat race. But today, I want to challenge that notion. Whether you're managing a team or just stepping into a leadership role, the truth is that investing in the growth of others doesn’t slow you down — it accelerates your own career trajectory. Helping others succeed is one of the most powerful, and often underestimated, ways to grow yourself.

 

This zero-sum outlook is rooted in fear and self-doubt. The mindset of “if I teach others, they’ll outshine me,” or “I need to keep them in check so they don’t leapfrog me,” misses the entire point of leadership. Great leaders aren’t recognized for hoarding knowledge or stifling potential — they’re recognized for elevating their teams. When you help others grow, you signal that you can get results not just as an individual contributor, but as someone who brings out the best in others. And when you can do that with a small team, organizations start asking: what could you do with a bigger one? Leadership is measured by the strength of the people around you. That’s how you prove your value.

 

Elevating your team can take many forms, and it doesn’t require grand gestures — it’s often about being intentional in everyday leadership moments. One way is through strategic delegation. Be on the lookout for team members who are ready for a stretch assignment. Identify work on your plate that aligns with their development goals, delegate it, and then coach them through it. Not only are they stepping up and growing, but you’re also freeing yourself to take on higher-impact work. Another approach is to become a champion. Speak up on behalf of your team’s top talent — especially in rooms where they don’t have a voice. When your peers and leaders hear you advocate for others, it reflects back on your strength as a leader. Then there’s the idea of planning your exit. If you’re serious about moving up, you should also be building someone who can step into your role when the time comes. That kind of foresight signals you’re not just a manager — you’re a leader with vision. Finally, foster a culture of growth. Provide feedback that’s both constructive and encouraging. Your team should feel like they’re being coached, not just critiqued. An open, honest, and supportive environment leads to loyalty, development, and performance — and it all starts with you.

 

When you elevate your team, the benefits aren’t just theoretical — they’re measurable and meaningful. First, you give yourself the space to focus on more strategic work. Moving from manager to director to executive is all about shifting from tactical execution to big-picture thinking. When your team can operate autonomously, you’re free to make the kinds of decisions that affect broader parts of the business. Second, you build loyalty. People want to work for leaders who champion their growth and position them for advancement. When your team sees you investing in them, they respond with higher productivity, stronger commitment, and support when it counts most. Third, the organization begins to see you as a multiplier. Your impact scales because your team becomes an extension of your leadership. Rather than micromanaging, you orchestrate — coordinating efforts across projects, keeping more plates spinning, and delivering more value than someone working in a silo. And ultimately, you open yourself up to bigger opportunities. The more you can lead from a high level while keeping momentum strong, the more trust you’ll earn — and with that trust comes bigger assignments, bigger budgets, and yes, that coveted promotion.

 

Now that you know the what and the why, let’s talk about the how. Start this week. Identify one or two people on your team to focus on. And if one of them could potentially step into your role someday? Even better. Pick something meaningful to delegate — not just drudgework, but a task or project that truly matters to the team. Hand it to them with intention. Tell them, “This is yours to lead — but I’m here to coach you through it.” And then follow through. Be a coach, not a backseat driver. Resist the urge to take over or dictate every step. Instead, ask leading questions that nudge them toward the right answers. Let them struggle a little — that’s part of growth. When they stumble, be the one who picks them back up. And when they succeed? Shout it from the rooftops. Make sure your leaders and peers know who did the work. That spotlight will reflect on both of you.

 

The takeaway? The most powerful thing a great leader can do is make their team better — stronger — by lifting them up. When you focus on developing others, everyone around you takes notice. And while your team benefits from your leadership, your own career grows in the process. Because at the end of the day, great leaders don’t rise in spite of their team — they rise because of them.

 

Need help putting this into action?

A career coach can help you build the skills you need to lead at the next level. If you're looking for guidance, I invite you to reach out to me through the Contact Form at ManagingACareer.com. I’ll schedule a free introductory session where we can explore your career goals and see if we’re a good fit for coaching. If we are, we’ll create a plan to get your career on the fast track to advancement.