COVID spotlighted the Greats: the Great Retirement, the Great Resignation, the Great Reshuffle, the Great Rethink, etc. Now, the transition to post pandemic is highlighting the Quiets: Quiet Promotion, Quiet Quitting, Quiet Promoting, Quiet Thriving, etc. Just like the Greats were in play with or without COVID, the Quiets are not new. It’s just that now employees feel empowered to discuss them openly and employers are pushing back. We’re going to devote the next four weeks to exploring the rise of the Quiets. First up: Quiet Promotion.
What Is It?
A Quiet Promotion happens when you are given more tasks and/or responsibilities beyond your job description, but no increase in compensation. It can be tricky to spot because going above and beyond your job description is the traditional path to a genuine promotion. You typically have to prove you can do more before you are given more (especially if you identify as a woman; don’t get me started…). Here are a few clues that you were quietly promoted:
- You have the same job title as your colleagues, but you have more work than they do
- You have absorbed all the duties of a coworker who left and there is no end in sight
- Your manager asked you to be a “team player” and you don’t feel like you can refuse
If these sound familiar, you have a couple of options. One is to ask for a real promotion. The other is to get another job. Either way, these three ideas can help.
Document
- Update that “Atta Baby!” file on your desktop (DM me if the concept does not sound familiar)
- Keep a daily activity log including what you did (especially the extra duties), when, and approximately how long it took
- Note (with statistics, if possible) how what you do (especially the extra duties) moves the organization closer to their goals and aligns with their mission
Communicate
- After gathering your documentation, schedule a 1:1 with your manager
- Prepare for it as you would a performance review
- Begin the conversation with a curious mindset. For example, lead with something like: “During several weekly reflection exercises that I do to self-monitor my job performance, I noticed something interesting…” and present your case
- Note your manager’s reaction. It will be very revealing
Strategize
If your employer just lost a major client, or your company is in a hiring freeze, then no one is getting promoted. If you can be patient, do. It allows you to accumulate more documentation and contemplate whether this job and/or company is still the right fit for you. If you can’t be patient, the documentation you gathered sure looks good on a resume.
By the way, the phrase “other duties as assigned” is included in most job descriptions. That can be a good thing. You want your job description to iterate. It allows you to grow and advance. The problem comes when an organization uses the phrase as a loophole to assign an employee responsibilities beyond minor tasks related to the employee’s position.
Have you ever received a Quiet Promotion? Please share your experience in the comments.
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