| ▲ | ThalesX 4 hours ago | |||||||
Am I missing this, or are you assuming that I am incapable of finding opportunities myself, within or without the organization that the manager is beholden to? I honestly can't understand this framing, of the manager's job as a sort of opportunity finder for those 'under' them, and somehow being more impactful at this than the individuals themselves. I'll give you this, some people need to be managed and for some reason presented with opportunities by a 2nd party. But some people just don't, they need to be collaborated with. | ||||||||
| ▲ | jjav an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> Am I missing this, or are you assuming that I am incapable of finding opportunities myself Somewhat, yes. It has nothing to do with you. Some opportunities you can create yourself, go for it. Other opportunities only arise in the context of leadership meetings you are not a part of (by definition, if you're not the manager). Having a manager in those meeting push for your opportunities is priceless. Having had many managers who don't do this for me and a few that do, definitely want the second kind. | ||||||||
| ▲ | theevilsharpie 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
This is a pretty odd take, from my perspective. If one of my direct reports came to me and said they were interested in working on, say... AI observability (replace with whatever interests you), and that was something I had any influence over (even if only indirectly), I'd be finding whatever way I could to connect my report with that kind of work. It's all well and good to say that you're in control of your own career advancement, but that's not in conflict with working with your manager on supporting your career development. Even if they don't have anything to teach you, they will necessarily have some influence of your scope/area of work, so it only makes sense to work them on aligning your work with your interests. | ||||||||
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