Creating opportunities rather than waiting for them
Advancing your career also requires creating opportunities by raising your hand for stretch roles and strategic initiatives, even when it feels risky. “Every time we volunteer, we risk rejection. But you have to accept the discomfort,” said Jordan.
Chekroun encouraged cultivating curiosity, not just focusing on performance.
“Take time to initiate conversations without a fixed agenda. Open the discussion and listen. You don’t always need to speak,” she said, adding that many senior-level opportunities arise informally, through relationships and conversations.
Making yourself vulnerable and asking for help is another way to create opportunity. “I’ve never seen one senior leader who doesn’t feel flattered when you ask for help,” said Jordan. She shared her experience when asking colleagues for advice resulted in opportunities she wouldn’t have accessed otherwise.
The panel also clarified the difference between mentorship and sponsorship.
A mentor advises you; a sponsor – someone senior – takes a positive risk on you. Their reputation is on the line. To position yourself for sponsorship, formal or informal, Jordan recommended reflecting on what people say about you when you’re not in the room and framing how your achievements help the organization and those around you succeed.
Sponsorship programs are sometimes formally assigned by organizations, but Chekroun noted that you can also identify potential sponsors inside or outside your company, depending on your goals.
For more senior roles, leaders are looking for evidence that you can manage complexity, take on strategic, cross-functional work, deliver results through others, and think at the enterprise level. ‘Ask: What would my CEO want me to do?’ advised Jordan.