• entrust cross-functional projects,
• provide greater scope for decision-making,
• create increased visibility in the company,
• offer greater opportunities for influence, or
• Offer targeted skills development.
All of these forms of development share a common feature: they increase a person’s impact without necessarily changing their formal position. Careers thus shift from structural movement to increasing effectiveness.
Establish alternative recognition mechanisms
But impact alone is not enough if it is not visibly noticed. Because what is often underestimated is the symbolic function of promotions. Titles are not only organizational markers, they are also social signals of appreciation. If these no longer apply, organizations must establish alternative recognition mechanisms. Targeted salary development, additional resources, greater autonomy or strategic involvement in decision-making processes can be such signals.
What is crucial is that these forms of visible recognition are actually lived. Without it, it is easy to get the impression that performance is not sufficiently appreciated, even if development opportunities are objectively present.
What organizations should do specifically now
The development described leads to a fundamental structural shift that affects not only HR instruments, but the entire organizational value logic.
I recommend that companies that want to actively shape this change design career architectures that function independently of continuous expansion. This includes in particular,
• to establish development paths beyond hierarchy,
• to systematically design horizontal and project-based mobility,
• develop clear models for impact, influence and expertise,
• communicate structural boundaries transparently, and
• to anchor non-hierarchical development institutionally.
Ultimately, what matters is that employees have the opportunity to expand their area of responsibility and their impact without this necessarily having to involve a change in title or hierarchy.
The era in which career development was closely linked to organizational expansion is coming to an end. The key transformation is therefore not about creating more promotion options, but rather about redefining professional development. In the future, a career will not primarily mean achieving a higher position, but rather continually expanding one’s sphere of influence.
Organizations that understand this and reflect this in their structures secure central competitive competence in talent management in the long term. (mb)
