The people who get promoted into senior leadership are often not the sharpest technically. They are not even always the hardest workers. Something else is determining who breaks through mid-management and who stays there. This is what that thing actually is - and why so few career guides talk about it honestly.
When I was at Zendesk, there was an analyst I will call Rajan who was, by any measure I had, one of the sharper minds on the floor. He could model a problem faster than anyone on the team, saw things in data that others missed, and had saved at least one major account from churning through a piece of analysis nobody had asked him to do.
Three years in, he was still a manager. Someone sitting two levels above him had been at the company half as long.
I asked a senior leader about it once, in what I thought was a casual way. The answer came back without hesitation: "Rajan is the best at what he does. That's the problem."
I did not fully understand what that meant until later.
The Competence Trap That Keeps Mid-Managers Stuck
The word "trap" sounds dramatic. It is not. It is just accurate.
Mid-management is where solid, reliable people land when they are good at getting things done inside their job. The problem is that senior leadership is not a reward for getting better at that. It is a different job entirely - one that is more about making calls when you do not have all the answers, and getting things done through people and situations that are not in your direct control.
The most capable mid-managers are often the ones who stall. They have become expert at the current level. That expertise is real and valuable. But it is also what keeps them there, because they are the person the organisation needs right where they are. Promoting them creates a problem - it removes the person holding things together - so the promotion never quite happens.
This is not conspiracy. It is organisational gravity. And most people inside it cannot see it happening.
At Intelegencia, I have had to think consciously about this. The person who runs a function extraordinarily well is essential to that function. Making them available for the next level means creating a gap, which means the timing is always slightly wrong, and "slightly wrong" has a way of becoming indefinitely delayed.
What Senior Leaders Are Actually Doing That Mid-Managers Are Not
The simplest version of this: senior leaders are making decisions that affect people outside their team.
That sounds obvious. It has a real implication that most people underestimate. If your impact has been limited to your direct team and your defined remit, the people above you have no evidence you can operate at a broader scope. They may believe in your potential. But belief is not evidence, and organisations make promotion decisions on evidence.
The people who actually move through tend to have found ways to work at the next level before they hold the title. They are running projects that cut across teams. They are in conversations above their grade. They are the person a senior leader calls when something is unclear and they need a straight read from someone they trust.
None of that just happens. It requires being known outside your own team and picking up responsibility that your current title does not ask for.
I have met senior leaders across Adobe, Zendesk, and Intelegencia who said some version of the same thing: I started doing the job before I had the title. Not in a performative way. They just took on more than they needed to and got good at it. And eventually the title followed.
It does not always follow quickly. That is the part nobody enjoys acknowledging.
What Actually Shifts Things When the Stall Has Already Set In
If you have been at the same level for two or three years, the assumption working against you - whether anyone says it out loud or not - is that you have found your ceiling.
That is not necessarily true. But it starts to work like truth if nothing changes in what people see you doing.
The people I have watched break out of a real stall did not do it by working harder at what they already did. What they did was find something outside their lane - a problem with real stakes, nobody clearly owning it - and they made it theirs without being asked. Not a side project. Something that mattered to people above them, where the outcome was not certain and they were a reason it worked.
I am not sure how much of this can be planned versus how much it requires the right opening at the right moment. Probably both. What I can say is that every person I have seen break through became visible to people who had not previously thought of them in a senior context. That visibility did not come from doing the same job better.
It came from showing up somewhere they were not expected.
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Varun Goel leads Customer Success and Digital Marketing at Intelegencia. With 22 years across Adobe, Zendesk, and Intelegencia, he writes about the career dynamics that most professional advice skips.



