#63đ„ How to cultivate the courage to pursue a promotion when you have ADHD
Taking control of your promotion by learning the language required to make the leap.
Welcome to Tech Atypically đ, your weekly blog for navigating the challenges of ADHD and being in the tech industry.
I am a coach specializing in ADHD and product management. I help you change one belief and take one action each week.
Part 6 of the Performance and Productivity series.
đŒTackle your challenges of working in tech and having ADHD with me
đŠ The Takeaways
The Belief: Despite encouragement, I believe I'm unready for promotion.
The Reality: Promotions gauge abilities - not self-worth.
The Action: Use a framework to understand promotion procedures.
âïž Introduction
Last week Michael talked about ambiguity in work projects. This week I follow up with another common ambiguous work challenge, promotions.
Iâve struggled with titles throughout my career in tech. Iâve either felt overqualified or underqualified for the titles Iâve held. Am I a senior PM? Staff? CPO?
Who I am in life is hard enough for me to figure out. How am I supposed to live up to externally bestowed titles?
Todayâs issue isnât about the direct strategies to get promoted. For those strategies, I recommend you check out the Magic Loop by
or PM role guidelines byInstead, I discuss the challenges of negative self-esteem related to ADHD that can hold you back from pursuing promotion and a framework for you to use for your next promotion process.
đ”âđ« The Belief - Iâm not worthy
My ADHD tendency towards low self-esteem and self-worth means I shy away from pursuing and believing I should be promoted. Despite my managerâs encouragement, Iâll tell myself Iâm not ready.
Iâm not alone in my belief.
Having ADHD is often associated with having lower rates of self-worth. Itâs often due to the constant criticism that people with ADHD endure due to mistakes from the disorder.
Combine it with emotional dysregulation and rejection sensitivity dysphoria and you have a recipe for someone who often thinks theyâre never worth their title and experience the pain of rejection far higher than their peers.
Thoughts like, "I'll just screw it up", "Other managers would never approve me", or "Iâll never be as good as my new peers" can stop you from ever even trying for a promotion.
So what do you do?
If youâre me, you suffer in silence and while taking no action.
đ€ The Reality - Promotions gauge abilities - not self-worth
Promotions can be scary but can help you recognize who youâve grown to become. They are a measure of your experiences and abilities, not a judgment of self-worth.
This is an important differentiator because as someone with ADHD, it can often feel like promotions are another âlife testâ for you to fail.
Itâs not your fault, however. If I had to guess, I would assume that most promotion processes are often not built with people with neurodiversity in mind.
Acknowledging the system is often not built for you is the first step in accepting how to move forward in it. The system might not be friendly to you but it doesnât mean you canât succeed in it.
You might not be able to change how the promotion process happens at your company. However, you can choose to learn how it works and use your beautiful ADHD mind to hack it to your advantage.
Hyperfocus that shit and make it your own.
Similar to the old saying âDon't hate the player hate the game.â
Donât hate the game, learn it so well that you play it in your way.
đ ïž The Action - MTIE Framework
Hereâs a way to create your own approach to your next promotion cycle. Itâs designed for you to organize the key points I think managers and companies often use for promotions.
I choose to believe that good companies and managers want to promote their employees. However, they need some help to fill out the checkboxes to make it happen.
Use the Measure, Tell, Identify, and Execute or MTIE framework to help you approach your next promotion.
Measure - Do role guidelines exist at the company?
If so, where do I stand today and where do I need to grow to get to the next level? What are the domains of a next-level PM and where am I now?
If role guidelines donât exist, create one or use Raviâs role guidelines. You might have to change the titles slightly to calibrate your companyâs titles.
Tell the story - How and to whom do I need to tell my promotion story?
Do you write a narrative document? Powerpoint? Bullet list? Every place is different.
What metrics or KPIs do your manager and their manager care about when they review a promotion request?
What are the other stakeholders involved in a promotion that you should be aware of besides your manager and skip? A tech assessor? A partner org leader?
Doing this earlier in the process reduces the chance that youâll miss a stakeholder or requirement when your promo request is reviewed.
Identify - Are there opportunities currently available that would allow me to demonstrate my ability at the next level?
Sometimes this answer is a no. If thatâs the case, I encourage you to work with your manager to create or find one.
The higher you go up the ladder, the more youâll be expected to find the ânext levelâ projects on your own.
Execute - Do the tasks or projects needed.
Deliver on the projects needed for your promotion.
Update your narrative from the checklist youâve created from the previous sections.
Deliver the narrative when everything is done.
If your promotion gets rejected, you can use the content for your resume for your next job.
âš Conclusion
Promotions are ultimately external measures created by imperfect humans in imperfect company systems.
I say this to remind you that titles are imperfect reflections of work abilities, not your self-worth. One companyâs staff-level PM is another personâs standard PM. The calibrations or titles are only relevant to those companies.
They shouldnât be used as a way to calibrate your self-value. Iâm not saying itâs a bad thing to chase titles. Overcoming the challenge of getting promoted is a great feeling that should celebrated.
It shouldnât be the only one you chase. Itâs more important to chase the âtitleâ you find the most fulfilling. The ones that matter most when you die: dad, friend, wife, partner, husband, etc.
The ones that you donât have to to present a narrative doc for.
đŒWant to talk to me privately about your ADHD struggles?
âïžNext Week
Guest author Dr Megan Shen writes âCoping with Loss at Work: Navigating Grief with ADHD for Improved Mental Health and Job Performanceâ




Extremely insightful content, keep it coming