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BB#058 - đ§ How to (finally) get promoted
6 easy steps to go from just another employee to superstar (in less than 6 months)

Building BalanceTM
By Matt Verderamo
How to (finally) get promoted
Read time: 5 minutes 20 seconds
As an AEC professional, it can be challenging to get promoted.
Most companies will not give you clear direction on how to get your next title, but with the right process, you can create your own opportunities.
In this newsletter, Iâll share 6 simple steps for AEC professionals to crush work and get their next promotion.
From start to finish, itâs a clear way to prove youâre ready, gain credibility, and learn skills even before the job becomes available.
It will transform your attitude from âIâll never get promotedâ to âWhat job do I want next?â
So, if youâre ready to get promoted, read on for the 6 simple steps.
Step 1: Find an organizational problem
The best way to start your journey to a promotion is to find an organizational problem. If youâre not sure what I mean, organizational problems are problems that consistently cost the company:
Time
Money
Resources
Relationships
All problems cost the company something.
Itâs your job to find one that is especially painful that no one else has the expertise (or time) to correct.
Example:
Submittals are consistently submitted past the due date. This costs the organization:
Time- to scramble to complete the submittals
Money- late submittals could delay the project and cost money
Resources- more people fixing late submittals = less people working in other areas of the business
Relationships- owners and contractors donât have time for companies that canât get submittals done right
Step 2: Identify the root cause
Now that you identified an organizational problem, you need to identify the root cause.
Root cause analysis is a process that asks the question, âWhy is this happening?â until you can't answer it anymore.
The purpose is to ensure you are getting to the heart of the issue, rather than a surface-level cause.
Example:
Organizational Problem: Submittals consistently submitted past their deadlines.
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Why is this happening? Assistant Project Managers (APMs) not meeting submittal deadlines.
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Why is this happening? APMs donât know about new projects early enough to meet submittal deadlines.
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Why is this happening? Estimators not notifying the team of project awards fast enough.
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Why is this happening? The organization has no set expectation of when Estimators should notify the team of project award.
We did it!
Without root cause analysis, we probably would have just yelled at the Assistant PMâs and been on our way (âBe faster!!!!!â).
With root cause analysis, we know the problem is deeper, and you need to set an expectation for Estimators to notify the team of new project awards FASTER.
That brings us to our next step.
Step 3: Fix it
This is the key.
Now that you know the problem, you need to fix it. This is where you prove your worth.
Example:
Organizational Problem: Submittals consistently submitted past their deadlines.
Root Cause: The organization has no set expectation for when Estimators should notify the team of project award.
The Fix: Estimators must notify the APMs immediately after a project award and provide the submittal deadline date.
Pretty simple, right?
Step 4: Write the new process
Itâs important that your âfixâ comes to reality and is repeatable. This is how you save the company time, money, resources, and relationships well after youâve moved on to the next problem!
In order to make it a reality and repeatable, you need to write a formal process.
Example:
Estimator notify APM of project award immediately
APM set up meeting with Estimator to review project within 1 week of project award
Estimator prepare all project specifications, quotes, and proposed manufacturers/contractors
By end of meeting, APM and Estimator agree on specs, quotes, and proposed manufacturers/contractors
APM compile and submit submittals by [DEADLINE]
Write this down and distribute it to all the impacted parties. Make sure you have their buy-in before proceeding to Step #5.
Step 5: Implement it
Once you have everyoneâs buy-in (make sure they know how many headaches this will save), you can implement the new process.
Add to your to-do list every week for 3-6 months: âCheck in with Estimators and APMs to make sure they are following the new submittal process.â
Once it starts becoming a part of the routine, you wonât need to check in. Youâll know if itâs working based on whether you hear about submittals being late again or not.
Step 6: Repeat
Congratulations, you just saved your company a lot of time, money, resources, and relationships.
Depending on the size of the problem, this may be enough to get you promoted!
More likely than not, though, this is just a drop in the bucket of many organizational problems worth solving.
If thatâs the case, then go do it again for another problem. In 6-12 months, you could solve 5-10 problems that benefit the organization!
Make sure you are communicating each one with your boss, and quantify how it is saving the company time, money, resources, and relationships.
You will leave them with no choice but to promote you- whether that be in title or compensation (all organizations are different).
And if they donât, then at least:
You learned how to solve organizational problems
You know this company wouldnât have promoted you any way
You are more prepared to take on your next role at another company
Itâs really a win-win.
Spark Notes
Iâve heard many business owners say, âDonât wait for me to give you a promotion. Go take it.â
This process is exactly how you do that:
Find the organization problem
Identify the root cause
Fix it
Write the new process
Implement
Repeat
Now go start on Monday.
And get that next promotion.
Hope that helps.
Can't wait to talk to you all again soon.

Sounds good but want to go deeper?
Our company, Well Built Construction Consulting, stands for creating positive change in the construction industry. We help construction companies run smarter businesses, make more money, and develop happier, more well-rounded employees. We do this through strategic planning, communication training, leadership development, and much more.
If you'd like those kinds of results but don't know where to start, let's talk.
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