Business, Organizational and Leadership Acumen - Lessons from my career journey by Sudha Ranganathan

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How to Grow Your Career: From Functional Acumen to Leadership Acumen

In the various stages of our careers, we all go through learning curves, make mistakes and, importantly, grow from them. In this blog post, which is based on a 18-year long career in marketing, I’ll share three practical tips that can help you navigate your own career journey. This advice comes from my own experience—from starting as an entry-level manager to leading large teams at LinkedIn.

Functional Acumen: The Foundation of Any Career

At the start of my career, my proficiency in my work got me promoted. I was doing everything right and demonstrating functional acumen on a day-to-day basis. But then, to my surprise, my peers started rising to senior positions while I seemed to be stuck. One of my first managers taught me a hard but crucial lesson: Early in your career, you are rewarded for doing good work. But to progress further, you must cultivate business acumen.

From Functional Acumen to Business Acumen

Business acumen involves prioritising what's impactful to the business over what you're assigned. It's figuring out what drives growth in your business and aligning your team's OKRs to drive said goals. And it's about setting boundaries so your time isn't consumed by urgent requests that may or may not directly impact the business. Here are three steps to building your business acumen:

  1. Know the key levers that will help your specific company or business grow in the next couple of years.
  2. Understand how your team's OKRs can directly impact business objectives.
  3. Prioritize and set boundaries to focus on tasks that impact the business and resist being distracted by less significant tasks.

Organizational Acumen: Being Able to Influence Decisions

Gaining business acumen wasn't the end of my career growth. Now that I could prioritize, I needed to learn organizational acumen—the ability to influence decision-making. To achieve this, I developed what I call the "Architecting Influence Framework", which involves these three steps:

  1. Understand the decision maker and the decision at hand.
  2. Understand their current belief and the gap between that and what you want them to believe.
  3. Bridge this psychological gap through priming, prewiring, and storytelling.

Leadership Acumen: Bringing Out the Best in Your Team

The final stage of career growth is cultivating leadership acumen—knowing how to manage and bring out the best in your team members. One way to exemplify this skill is through the "Four Gs Framework", which has four primary goals:

  1. Glow: Create psychological safety, show care and support, and appreciate your team's skills.
  2. Grow: Stretch your team and hold them accountable.
  3. Get Things Done: Unlock barriers, know when to coach, teach or do, and reward invisible work.
  4. Go Their Own Way: Foster autonomy, support flexibility, and encourage career mobility.

By focusing on functional, business, organizational, and leadership acumen during different stages of your career, you'll be better able to navigate your personal growth and take meaningful strides in your professional journey. Remember, your growth depends on your willingness to learn and adapt to new scenarios throughout your journey in the professional world.


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