The Five Relationships That Will Actually Advance Your Career
Most early-career professionals operate under the same assumption: impress your manager, earn your promotion. It's a logical theory. It's also incomplete.
Promotions aren't handed down by one person. They're the result of a constellation of voices — colleagues, peers, and influencers across the organization — all forming an impression of you over time. Your manager may champion you, but if no one else is echoing that sentiment, their advocacy has a ceiling.
The professionals who rise quickly aren't just good at their jobs. They're intentional about who experiences their work and how they're perceived across the organization. That starts with building five specific relationships.
1. The Cross-Functional Partner
Early in your career, it's tempting to go deep within your own team and focus upward on senior leaders. Both are worthwhile — but they leave a blind spot: the peers in adjacent functions who depend on your work.
These relationships matter more than most people realize. When senior leaders evaluate someone for a broader role, one of the first questions they ask is: How does this person operate across teams? If your cross-functional partners describe you as siloed or difficult to work with, that perception can quietly stall your progression — no matter how strong your individual results are.
Make it a habit to understand the pressures your cross-functional counterparts are working under. Schedule regular touchpoints. Proactively flag how your work might affect theirs. People advocate for colleagues who make their lives easier, not harder.
2. The Culture Carrier
Every organization has unwritten rules — how decisions actually get made, how disagreement is expressed, what signals that someone is "ready" for more responsibility. These norms aren't in any onboarding document. They're carried by a specific type of person: the culture carrier.
Culture carriers aren't necessarily the most senior people in the room. They're the ones others look to for cues. The longtime chief of staff. The well-respected program lead. The person who's been around long enough to understand why things work the way they do.
Building a relationship with a culture carrier early in your career is one of the highest-leverage moves you can make. They can help you decode the operating language of your organization — the framing, the style, the signaling — so you can show up in a way that's not just competent, but contextually sharp.
3. The Influencer Without a Title
In most organizations, there's a gap between who holds formal authority and who actually shapes outcomes. A program manager who synthesizes updates for the executive team. An analyst whose data frames every strategic decision. These people don't have the final vote, but they control what decision-makers see — and how your work is framed when you're not in the room.
Early-career professionals often focus their energy on getting in front of senior leaders. That's understandable, but it misses a more accessible leverage point. If you can become indispensable to the people who already have a seat at the table, your thinking starts showing up in places you never directly reached.
Find those people. Understand what they need. Make their job easier by delivering structured, decision-ready information before they have to ask for it.
4. The Truth-Teller
Feedback is one of the most valuable — and hardest to access — resources in any organization. Your manager may soften it. Your peers may sidestep it. Your direct reports, if you have any, may withhold it entirely.
This creates a dangerous gap. You can be performing well by every visible metric and still carrying a habit or blind spot that's quietly limiting how others perceive you. The kind of thing that never appears in a performance review but gets discussed in a promotion conversation.
You need one person who will tell you the uncomfortable truth before it costs you. Not a critic — a trusted peer or mentor who cares enough to be direct. Seek them out deliberately. Ask specific questions: What's one thing I do that might be hurting how I'm perceived? Then actually listen to the answer, even when it stings.
5. The Senior Sponsor — Earned Through Visibility, Not Requests
Sponsorship is one of the most misunderstood concepts in career development. Many early-career professionals either wait for it to happen organically or try to manufacture it through formal mentorship requests and coffee chats. Neither approach works particularly well.
Senior sponsorship is built through repeated exposure to your thinking — not just your output. There's a meaningful difference between a leader who knows you deliver strong results and one who has seen how you think through a problem. The latter is the person who will mention your name in a room you're not in and speak to your strategic ability with conviction.
Create those moments deliberately. When you present work, don't just share the conclusion. Bring the options you considered, the tradeoffs you evaluated, and your recommendation. That's what sponsors need to advocate for you with confidence.
Where to Start
Five relationships can feel like a lot to build while you're still getting your footing. It doesn't have to happen all at once.
Pick two this quarter. Replace one routine update with a real conversation. Ask one trusted colleague for candid feedback. Offer one cross-functional assist that wasn't asked of you.
These are small moves, but over time they compound. The professionals who advance quickly aren't the ones who worked the hardest in isolation — they're the ones who made sure the right people understood the full scope of what they were capable of.
