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February 1, 2026

Managing Up: A Skill Nobody Teaches

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Why you need to manage up

When it comes to career growth, most professionals focus on doing their job well. We complete tasks, hit targets, and aim to exceed expectations. But there’s one critical skill that is rarely taught and can have a huge impact on your career: managing up.

Managing up isn’t about politics, flattery, or “playing the game.” It’s about working effectively with the person who has the biggest influence on your priorities, visibility, and growth: yes, that's your manager.

Yet, many of us assume our manager should know everything and need no guidance from us. That’s where friction, missed opportunities, and career frustrations often begin.


What Managing Up Really Means

Managing up is the ability to:

  • Understand your manager’s expectations, pressures, and decision style. Do they prioritize speed, data, risk, or stakeholder alignment?
  • Communicate progress and risks clearly. Make your work and its context visible without overloading them.
  • Anticipate needs instead of reacting to urgency. Proactive support reduces last-minute crises.
  • Create alignment before problems escalate. Prevent misunderstandings and misaligned priorities.

Managing up is not about control. It’s about clarity, shared accountability, and building a more effective working relationship.


Why Managing Up Matters

Many career challenges aren’t caused by a lack of competence. They’re caused by:

  • Misaligned priorities
  • Assumptions left unspoken
  • Different definitions of “good work”
  • Silence where context was needed

Without managing up, even top performers can:

  • Feel misunderstood or undervalued
  • Face last-minute requests or shifting goals
  • Be overlooked for key opportunities

The issue isn’t skill or effort—it’s how your work lands within the system.


5 Practical Ways to Manage Up

Here are actionable strategies to strengthen this often-overlooked skill:

1. Learn their language
Pay attention to what your manager values most and tailor your updates accordingly.

2. Make the invisible visible
Document progress, highlight decisions, and clarify trade-offs. Effort alone isn’t always noticed.

3. Clarify expectations early
Ask questions like: “What does success look like for you on this?”
This simple step prevents weeks of misalignment.

4. Flag issues with options, not just problems
Help your manager make faster, informed decisions by presenting possible solutions.

5. Don’t wait for feedback—invite it
Proactively request input to reduce misunderstandings and build trust.


Managing Up is Not Managing Around

Managing up doesn’t mean bypassing authority or compensating for poor leadership.
It means taking ownership of the working relationship, even when it feels uncomfortable.

Careers don’t grow in isolation—they grow in systems. And relationships are a big part of that system.


If you’ve ever thought:

  • “My manager doesn’t see what I do”
  • “We’re not on the same page”
  • “This shouldn’t be this complicated”

Chances are, managing up—not working harder—is the missing skill.

Developing it can increase your impact, visibility, and ultimately your career growth.

At Ni-Cons, we help professionals strengthen skills like these, so your career moves are strategic, intentional, and visible.

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