Mindsets and Methods for Managing Up

Episode 496 | Host: Emilie Aries | Guest: Melody Wilding

How you communicate with your boss can deeply impact your career success.

The ability to manage people is vital for directors and those in charge of employees, but it’s just as important for anyone who has to interact with an authority figure. We all need to manage up on occasion.

Despite its ubiquitous nature, it’s a skill many of us are never taught or tend to overlook unless we’re in a formal leadership role. Melody Wilding, an author, therapist, and professor of human behavior at Hunter College, combined years of experience and research around this topic in her new book, Managing Up: How to Get What You Need From the People in Charge, out today!

Melody was named one of Insider’s Most Innovative Career Coaches, and she excels at combining her background in evidence-based neuroscience and psychology with professional development. After writing her first book, Trust Yourself, she got feedback that the book helped people feel more confident in their interactions with others but that dealing with leaders felt particularly challenging.

Influencing and persuading can feel sneaky or disingenuous if it’s not something you’re used to, but people who can accommodate both their own communication style and that of the person they’re communicating with drastically change how they are perceived and how they rise through the ranks at work. And best of all, it’s a completely learnable skill.

In this episode, Melody shares some key points from Managing Up that can help all of us reconsider how we think about and improve our communication with those in positions of power.

Get into your boss’s head - for both your sakes

All of us have interacted with someone with a different communication style at some point. You think you’re saying all the right things, but at the end of the conversation, you feel frustrated that you haven’t accomplished what you hoped.

Melody kicks off Managing Up with communication alignment: in order to have productive conversations, you need to understand where your boss (or whomever you’re speaking to) is coming from. 

Asking them to list their priorities can help, but questions that really get to the heart of their goals will net you even more details. If you have a supervisor who isn’t great at detailing the nitty gritty, say, phrasing questions as binaries instead of leaving them open-ended makes a huge difference. Try swapping “What’s the best approach?” with “Do you think approach A or approach B is better?” 

In addition to the emotional labor of catering to multiple communication styles and influencing workplace outcomes (something women, for better or worse, naturally excel at), the extra prep can feel like you’re doing their job for them—isn’t it up to them to provide helpful answers and clear guidance? 

In fact, you’re serving both your own and their interests with this approach. When you show up armed with options, you highlight that you’ve thought about the situation and have ideas—you’re there now to align those ideas with their priorities. With simple adjustments to how you seek guidance, you present yourself as a trusted partner to your boss instead of simply a direct report. 

It’s up to you to teach people how to treat you

One important part of managing up is setting clear boundaries around your time and responsibilities. Take the person who responds to every email in seconds, for example. As soon as you flash-reply to a few emails, you create an often unattainable standard that others might come to expect. 

Likewise, we need to check ourselves before offhandedly apologizing. For so many people, it becomes a crutch—sorry, I was just thinking…; sorry, I can’t help with that; sorry I missed your unexpected phone call. If we auto-apologize for every question and unaccepted task, we imply that our opinion and our time shouldn’t be taken as seriously as the person who avoids this knee-jerk response.

Balance being a team player and pushing back

Melody points out that, as we’ve heard for years now, “no” is a complete sentence…just not always in the office. We might have to be softer in our negatives to ensure we come off as the team players we truly are.

To strike the balance between responding in the negative and agreeing immediately, Melody suggests using requests as springboards to highlight risks and tradeoffs your manager may have overlooked.

They’re focused on something that needs to be checked off their list—maybe their manager is demanding it be done. Instead of refusing to take on a task, ask for specifics about how urgent it is, why you were tagged for it, and who else will be involved. Now, you can frame your response in a way that shows you’re dedicated and organized even if you pass on it: if you tackle task A, it will mean that tasks B and C need to be reassigned or delayed. You know more about task A, so you can confidently ascertain whether or not those delays are wise and express this opinion to your boss.

Plant the seeds for your next promotion

At the end of Managing Up, you’ll be a pro at communicating with your boss. But how does all that hard work translate to the promotion or pay raise you’ve been striving to secure?

It’s been bred into us that if we keep our heads down and do good work, we’ll be recognized eventually. However, countless workplace horror stories disprove this. Rather than waiting patiently for that promotion, Melody stresses that we have to seed our interest and prime our managers along the way.  

If you’ve ever walked into a performance review certain your promotion is in the works, only to be shocked and disappointed when talk of advancement doesn’t even come up—or worse, see the look of surprise on your boss’s face when you mention it—you’re far from alone. 

Don’t wait for that meeting to bring up your interest in future opportunities. As soon as you complete a successful project, build on that win by telling your boss that you’d love to do more. This not only puts the bug in their ear early and repeatedly, but it also helps you feel out any objections along the way. If they mention someone else will be handling the next project, you can facilitate a conversation about what more you need to earn that distinction. Put the onus on your leader to be clear about what you need to do to succeed.

At the end of the day, taking these steps might show you that you’ve hit the proverbial wall in your position. If you are setting boundaries, communicating proactively, and highlighting your wins, and you’re still not getting any promotion bites, you need to gather up that hard-won integrity and leave. Take your top-notch conversation skills and career experience to a company where you can thrive.

What do you make of the art of managing up? Have you always been good at it, or does it feel like a huge chore? Does the added emotional labor feel unfair or worthwhile? Join the conversation in the Courage Community on Facebook or our group on LinkedIn, and share your take on Melody’s psychology-backed recommendations for improving your communication skills and confidently driving your career progress. 

Related links from today’s episode:

Order “Managing Up: How to Get What You Need From the People in Charge”

Melody’s website

Episode 218, “Managing Your Inner Critic”

SPEAK UP: An Assertive Leadership Course for Women in the Workplace 

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

Uncover more strategies for
assertive communication with SPEAK UP:

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