Practical promotion playbooks shared

Two engineering leaders posted complementary frameworks for escaping the mid‑level plateau: DevLeaderCa stressed passion projects, pairing with seniors and mentoring, while Jeroen Kopczinski offered a visual role‑shift framework to spot misalignment between aspirations and role. Together they form a tactical playbook for raising impact beyond coding. (x.com) (x.com)

Create a one-page "Impact Brief" that opens with BLUF, lists exactly 3 KPIs (current, target, trend), calls out 1 top risk with mitigation, and ends with 1 concrete ask—BLUF/SCARF-style templates are recommended for executive updates. (mayagrossman.com) Turn passion projects into executive artifacts by mapping each project to a single org metric and one-dollar or time-saving figure, then name the senior partner or sponsor who amplifies the outcome so the work reads as leveraged impact rather than solo execution. (x.com) Use Jeroen Kopczinski’s visual role‑shift idea as a slide: column A = current responsibilities, column B = director-level expectations, column C = 3 concrete deltas (stakeholder influence, cross-org KPIs owned, decision authority) and label which delta needs a sponsorship, a pilot outcome, or a structural change. (x.com) Run leadership reviews with a standardized two‑slide packet: slide 1 = 6‑month trend of the 3 KPIs vs. org targets, slide 2 = the role‑shift map plus a single ask for resources or sponsorship; aim to make the packet scannable in two minutes per exec using established executive-update templates. (projectmanager.com) Turn mentoring and pairing into promotion evidence by recording named mentee outcomes, artifacts (PR reviews, design docs), and calibrated feedback; assemble those items into a continuous promotion packet so promotion committees see repeatable impact and rubric alignment. (leaddev.com) Standardize what gets sent to calibration: a one‑paragraph executive summary, 3–5 evidence items mapped to the promotion rubric, and a decision log entry; promotion-process templates and committee scorecards exist to reduce bias and make decisions auditable. (app.hiveresume.com)

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