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How To Grow Your Scope And Position Yourself For VP Promotion

The biggest promotion red flag no one talks about? It’s not low performance.

It's stagnation.


When your role looks exactly the same year after year, leadership assumes you've hit your ceiling.

And that's the catch: promotions aren't about tenure - they're about trajectory. If you want to understand how promotion decisions actually get made behind closed doors, I break that down in detail here.


For Directors aiming for VP, trajectory is everything. Senior leaders aren’t asking, “Are they good at their job?” They’re asking, “Are they already thinking and operating like a VP?”


Executives don't get promoted for doing their current job well. They get promoted because they've proven they can already handle the next one.


If your scope isn't growing, your perceived potential isn't either. But here's the thing - you don't have to wait for someone to hand you a bigger scope.

With a little bit of creativity and intention, you can create it.


How I Learned This at Microsoft


When I first joined Microsoft, my role was focused and fairly narrow.


The team had clear goals, but my specific responsibilities only touched a small slice of them.


Instead of staying in my lane, I started asking myself a different question:

"How could my work help the team achieve its goals - not just my individual ones?"


That shift changed everything.


I noticed we didn't have anyone thinking about marketing for the entire group.


As a marketer, I could see the potential immediately - the missed opportunities, the lack of alignment, the inconsistent messaging.

So I started small.


I made suggestions, offered to help, and built a case for why this mattered.

Over time, I became the person leading those efforts.


Then I spotted an opportunity to unify our go-to-market strategy.

Different teams were doing different things.


So I went on a listening tour to learn who was doing what, connected the dots, and brought everyone together. It made everyone’s lives easier and grew my influence. Eventually, owning go-to-market became part of my scope. More importantly, I wasn’t just executing. I was thinking across teams, aligning stakeholders, and solving business-level problems. That’s what shifted how leaders perceived me — from strong contributor to strategic operator.

I didn’t steal anyone’s job.


I solved problems that mattered and found opportunities to improve - and proved I could handle more.


Within two years, my role had evolved into something much bigger.

I was leading million-dollar projects, shaping strategy, and driving measurable business impact.


That's when I realized: you don't wait for scope to grow - you engineer it.

Here’s how you can do it too.


The 6-Step Scope Acquisition Playbook


Why Growing Your Scope Is Required for VP Promotion


Every company has different requirements to justify promotions, but one of the most common is to grow your scope.


But how do you do that when you have a job description? It sounds like a catch-22. To grow your scope, you need the title, but to get the title, you need to grow your scope.


Here’s the part most Directors miss: growing your scope is the test. It’s how leadership evaluates whether you can think beyond your lane and handle VP-level complexity.


Growing your scope on purpose requires you to show: strategic thinking, influence, great communication, and initiative. All fall under the umbrella of executive skills.


That means growing your scope is in and of itself proofthat you can operate like an executive. (I know it’s very meta, but once I got it… It made perfect sense.)


So, if you want to grow your impact before you get the title, here's the playbook I used - and now teach my clients.


Step 1. Find a Winnable Scope


Look for problems that are under-managed or opportunities that connect directly to team or company goals.


Start small: one neglected initiative, one process that isn't working, one area nobody's claiming ownership of. Or maybe an opportunity no one has noticed yet, and you can see.


Step 2. Build a Business Case


Don't go to your manager with "I'd like to do more."


Go with a one-pager:

  • The problem or opportunity

  • The scope you'd like to own

  • Measurable outcomes or KPIs

  • Risks and mitigations

  • How it ties to the team's goals

You're not asking for more work - you're proposing more impact. If you want a deeper breakdown of how to position a promotion-ready business case, I shared my framework here.


Step 3. Ask for a Pilot, Not a Promotion


Instead of asking for permanent ownership, suggest a 30 - 60 day pilot.

"Let me own X for two months and measure Y results. We can revisit after."


It feels low-risk to your manager but high visibility for you.


Step 4. Create Capacity Before You Expand Scope


If your current work is already full, make a delegation plan or streamline tasks.

Show that you can scale yourself, not just stretch thinner. That's what executives do.


Step 5. Operate Like an Executive Owner


Track KPIs. Communicate updates.

Make thoughtful tradeoffs and share your reasoning.

Treat it like you're running a mini-business - because you are.


And don’t keep your results quiet. Share updates with the right stakeholders — not as self-promotion, but as business reporting. Scope only helps your promotion if the people who decide promotions can see it.


Step 6. Convert Results Into Official Scope


At the end, show data and results:

"What we achieved, what I learned, and what I'd do next with full authority."


Then make the ask for official scope and budget.

This is how you create executive-level scope before anyone offers it.



The Bigger Promotion Pattern Most Directors Miss

If you've been told to "keep doing what you're doing," this is your way out.


Growth doesn't come from waiting. It comes from designing opportunities that prove your readiness.


Every high performer I've coached who made the leap to VP did this in some form:

They didn't wait for someone to notice them.

They expanded their value and made it impossible to ignore.


When you grow your scope intentionally, you:

  • Become visible to senior leaders who make promotion decisions

  • Build credibility for strategic thinking and ownership

  • Create data-backed proof you're ready for the next level

  • Give potential executive sponsors something concrete to advocate for when promotion conversations happen


This is how you move from doing the work to leading the work.


What To Do This Week If Your Scope Is Too Small


If your role feels too small or your growth has stalled, start here:

Pick one area in your team where your expertise could add more value.

Run the six-step playbook, document your wins, and show your impact. (You may read how here.)


You don’t need the VP title to start operating like one. But until you do, no one will assume you’re ready for it.

Growing your scope is one of the fastest ways to prove you’re ready for VP — but it’s only one part of the promotion equation.

In my free masterclass, I break down exactly how Directors in tech become the obvious choice for VP — including positioning, executive visibility, and how promotion decisions really get made behind closed doors.



I believe in you, and I’m rooting for you Maya❤️

 
 

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