The Role of Sponsorship in Career Advancement

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Summary

Sponsorship in career advancement means having influential people who actively advocate for your growth, recommend you for opportunities, and support your progress behind the scenes—distinct from mentors who provide advice. Building sponsorship relationships is crucial because it opens doors and accelerates your path to leadership, especially when performance alone isn’t enough to get noticed.

  • Build visibility: Volunteer for high-profile projects and consistently share your achievements so key decision-makers see your impact.
  • Clarify ambitions: Clearly communicate your career goals and desired next steps to potential sponsors so they know how to support you.
  • Diversify relationships: Cultivate sponsorship from leaders across different teams and levels to create a strong support network that lasts through organizational changes.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Gopal A Iyer

    Executive Coach for CXOs & Senior Leaders | ICF-PCC | Leadership, Culture & Career Reinvention | Goldman Sachs · Deloitte · EY · IIM-A | Author | TEDx Speaker

    46,561 followers

    Most professionals make this mistake... They believe their boss is responsible for their growth. ⇢ “If I do great work, my boss will recognize it.” ⇢ “If I stay loyal, my boss will ensure I get promoted.” ⇢ “If I just keep delivering, my boss will advocate for me.” That sounds logical. But that’s not how career growth works. ⇢ Your boss is focused on business and team's performance, not your career. ⇢ They might be a mentor, offering feedback and coaching. ⇢ They might even be an advocate, supporting you when they can. But that doesn’t make them your sponsor. Yesterday, I wrote about how hard work alone doesn’t drive career growth. Rutvij Shah left a comment that nailed it: "Find a sponsor/s who would advocate for you." That’s the difference no one talks about. Mentor vs. Sponsor vs. Boss ⇢ Your boss ensures the team delivers. A sponsor ensures your career moves forward. ⇢ A mentor gives advice. A sponsor creates opportunities. ⇢ A mentor supports your growth. A sponsor puts their reputation on the line for you. Ever seen someone less capable than you move ahead? They had a sponsor, someone fighting for them in rooms they weren’t even in. So, Where Do You Find a Sponsor? Sponsorship isn’t given. It’s earned. Look beyond your boss: Inside Your Company: ⇢ Your boss’s boss – They influence key decisions. ⇢ Senior leaders – They see strategic impact and potential. ⇢ Cross-functional executives – They recognize talent beyond their own teams. Outside Your Company: ⇢ Industry leaders – The right visibility opens doors. ⇢ Clients & business partners – If your work delivers, they’ll advocate for you. ⇢ Former managers & colleagues – They know your strengths and can vouch for you. These people can change your career, but only if they see a reason to. So, How Do You Earn Sponsorship? Sponsorship isn’t about being liked. It’s about being undeniable. ⇢ Deliver results that stand out. Sponsors back proven performers. ⇢ Make their job easier. Solve problems, and they’ll take a chance on you. ⇢ Be visible. Your work doesn’t speak for itself. You do. ⇢ Own your ambition. If they don’t know what you want, they can’t help. ⇢ Make it worth their while. Sponsorship is built on trust and mutual value. But, It isn't easy. For women, sponsorship is tougher: ⇢ Perhaps, sometimes, self-advocacy is seen as “aggressive.” ⇢ Fewer senior women leaders mean fewer sponsors. ⇢ Informal sponsorship networks often exclude them. For consultants, its different: ⇢ No company structure. No promotions. No internal sponsors. ⇢ Clients, industry leaders, and past colleagues become their sponsors. The only mantra is: ⇢ Build relationships. ⇢ Deliver great value. ⇢ Make yourself impossible to ignore. Sponsorship isn’t about working harder. It’s about making sure the right people see your impact. Who has been your sponsor? How did you find them? Or if you haven’t had one yet, where will you start looking? #careers #growth #sponsorships

  • View profile for Sandra D'Souza

    Women’s Leadership Pathways & the Ellect Community is how we help every woman access leadership and board opportunities ⇰ Visit my website to get started

    19,769 followers

    The room decides without you. Only 23% of employees have a sponsor at work. That means 77% are trying to advance on performance alone, hoping someone notices their results and promotes them accordingly. But here's what I see happen: talented women collect mentors, implement feedback, refine their leadership presence. Promotions still go elsewhere. Skills aren't the issue. Access is. A mentor helps you prepare for opportunities. A sponsor creates them and puts your name forward when you're not in the room. Women with sponsors are 167% more likely to land high-profile assignments. The kind with bigger budgets, C-suite visibility, strategic impact. The projects that demonstrate executive readiness. Without someone fighting for you in closed-door discussions? Those assignments go to someone else. Yet formal sponsorship programs for women dropped from 31% in 2017 to just 16% in 2024. Companies are cutting these initiatives exactly when women need them most to break into senior leadership. The numbers: Women make up 51% of individual contributors but only 30% of C-suite roles. The drop happens in the middle, where sponsorship matters most. Real sponsorship looks like this: → Someone with power amplifying your achievements to decision-makers → Recommending you for visible projects → Connecting you to influential leaders → Defending you against biased evaluations It requires them to spend their credibility on you. That's why it feels scarce. When I built Ellect, I kept seeing the same pattern across industries and continents... women receiving advice while men received advocacy. Mentorship was abundant. Doors stayed closed. Ellect exists to change that. We create direct pathways to leadership and board opportunities because advice alone can't close the gap. Doors open from the inside, you need someone to unlock them. So ask yourself: who is fighting for you in rooms where you're not present? If you're a leader with influence, who are you actively sponsoring? Are you recommending women for stretch assignments, using your credibility to open doors? The gender gap in leadership requires people with power to use it differently. https://lnkd.in/gUxH-qkT

  • View profile for Naz Delam

    Director of AI Engineering | Helping High Achieving Engineers and Leaders | Corporate Speaker for Leadership and High Performance Teams

    28,855 followers

    Most engineers have mentors. Very few have sponsors. And that gap is quietly responsible for more stalled careers than any technical skill shortage ever will be. A mentor talks to you. A sponsor talks about you. A mentor helps you grow. A sponsor opens the door. The engineers I coach who move fastest are not always the most technically gifted. They are the ones who had someone saying their name in rooms they were not in yet. Here is how to build that relationship deliberately: Step 1. Identify the right person - Look for someone with proximity to the decisions that affect your career - The right sponsor is not the person you like most - It is the person whose endorsement carries the most weight where it matters Step 2. Earn visibility before you ask for anything - Sponsors back people based on evidence, not potential - Volunteer for projects they are connected to - Let your work introduce you before you do Step 3. Make it easy for them to advocate for you - Tell them explicitly where you want to go - "I am targeting Staff in the next twelve months and focused on X" gives them something to say - Never assume they know your ambitions Step 4. Create genuine value for them too - Sponsorship is not one-way - Find ways to make their work easier or more visible - The engineers who get sponsored make the relationship worth having for both sides Step 5. Stay consistent without waiting for a transaction - Do not only reach out when you need something - Consistency builds trust faster than intensity - The sponsor who knows you over time advocates for you in moments you never knew existed Mentors shape how you think. Sponsors change what becomes possible. Which one are you missing right now? Tell me in the comments.

  • View profile for Bhavna Toor

    Best-Selling Author & Keynote Speaker I Founder & CEO - Shenomics I Award-winning Conscious Leadership Consultant and Positive Psychology Practitioner I Helping Women Lead with Courage & Compassion

    101,317 followers

    Have someone fighting for you behind closed doors? Congrats - you are 3X more likely to get promoted! For mid-career professionals - especially women and underrepresented leaders - sponsorship (ie. having someone advocating for you behind closed doors) isn't just a nice-to-have. It's a career accelerator. While mentors offer advice, sponsors offer opportunity. And research shows that sponsorship can make or break career trajectories. The numbers tell the story: ➡️ Women with sponsors are 27% more likely to ask for a raise, and ➡️ 22% more likely to seek "stretch assignments" that build their reputations as leaders. ➡️ 68% of Women with Sponsors report faster career advancement (Harvard Business Review). ➡️ Professionals with sponsors are 2.3x more likely to be satisfied with their career progression But here’s the truth most people don’t tell you: You don’t just get sponsors. You have to cultivate them - consciously. Here are 5 evidence-backed strategies to cultivate meaningful sponsorship: 💡 1. Make Your Impact Measurable Research shows sponsors invest in those who demonstrate quantifiable value. • Track your wins • Document your impact • Translate achievements into business outcomes 💡 2. Build Strategic Visibility According to Catalyst research, visibility is the precursor to sponsorship: • Volunteer for high-stakes presentations • Share insights in senior forums • Create "casual collisions" with decision-makers 💡 3. Develop a Clear Career Narrative Center for Talent Innovation found that sponsors choose protégés who: • Articulate their aspirations clearly • Connect their goals to organizational success • Show consistent growth trajectory 💡 4. Create Reciprocal Value The most successful sponsorship relationships are two-way streets: • Bring market intelligence • Offer unique perspectives • Support their strategic initiatives 💡 5. Make the Ask Explicit Harvard Business Review research shows that assumed sponsorship rarely materializes: • Name your aspirations • Request specific opportunities • Follow up with impact updates 🔑 Key Insight: Strong sponsors don't just open doors- they stake their reputation on your success. But here's what most miss: The best sponsorship relationships aren't found. They're built. Intentionally. Consistently. With evidence of your potential. Tell me: What have you seen works in building a relationship with a potential sponsor? ♻️ Please share to help others. 🔔 Follow me, Bhavna Toor, for more on conscious leadership and gender equity

  • View profile for Cassandra Frangos, Ed.D.

    Executive Development & C-suite Succession Advisor | Author of Crack the C-Suite Code

    8,191 followers

    As former Head of Global Executive Talent at Cisco, I frequently gave the same advice to our rising talent: Build a broad network of sponsors across the organization. The reason for this was simple: When leadership changes, your key supporters are at risk of leaving, and you can suddenly find yourself without the backing you once relied on. Aspiring leaders, you will benefit from ensuring your sponsorship is not concentrated in just a few individuals. You should accumulate a diverse range of advocates up, down, and sideways within the organization. This way, if one sponsor exits, you still have others to carry your career forward. The strength of your reputation within the company and the breadth of your followership will sustain you through transitions. The more people who are invested in your growth and success, the better positioned you will be to weather leadership changes or organizational shifts. Leaders should always think about their support system: cultivating relationships at all levels, across functions to ensure they have a wide range of sponsors invested in their growth. This network, more than any single individual, will be the true foundation of career longevity.

  • View profile for William Heath

    Chief Scientific Officer at Persephoni Bio | Experienced Biopharmaceutical R&D Leader | Champion for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging | Ally | Advocate | Nucleate | SMDP | Opinions are my own

    34,680 followers

    What does good sponsorship look like? In a previous post, I wrote that sponsors use their influence to create opportunities for you, elevate your visibility to senior leadership and influence organizational decisions to your benefit. But exactly does that look like and what differentiates effective versus perhaps less effective (or perhaps counterproductive) sponsorship? Effective sponsors are ‘super mentors’ who collaboratively shape your journey in a deliberate manner. Their insights into future possibilities allow them to guide you in a more efficient manner and prepare you for roles that are several positions into the future. They help you achieve a good balance between optionality and focus turning one path into several. Those same sponsors use their access with other leaders to make you visible. They can speak at length about your strengths, areas for development and how certain roles could help your growth but also the business. Rather than it just being about you, it becomes about what could benefit the team as well. Ideally, they incentivize other leaders to want to know you and perhaps also become mentor/sponsors. They influence their team/organization to give you developmental assignments and consider you for future roles. I liken this approach to opening a door to another room – what the individual does next is on them. However, they do not get you that job or advocate on your behalf when it doesn’t make sense for you or the team. Admittedly it is a bit of a tricky balance for sponsors and those being sponsored. They want what is best for you and for you to succeed. But it must be done in the right way. The worst thing that could happen is if you, your sponsor or worse yet the organization believes you achieved ‘success’ through advocacy alone. You deserve the right to be considered on your own merits. If you did not ‘earn’ that promotion or that new role, you are likely to be less well prepared and likely branded as achieving success through favoritism. Over time, you will be seen as that person who rose through the ranks due to factors outside of your abilities. Less effective sponsorship comes when the sponsor loses objectivity about their protégé, perhaps ignoring feedback from teammates or other leaders. Their advocacy becomes an exercise in organizational power, usually stiffening resistance from other leaders. Even worse if they insert themselves into the decision-making process or become the final decision maker. The process and the candidate become suspect as a result, and no one wins. Similarly, ineffective (or excessive) sponsorship comes when your candidacy is pushed in the face of superior candidates. Your sponsor will lose credibility and you lose their help and are likely to suffer from somewhat of a negative perception by other leaders. Ideally, great sponsors create opportunities for you to be considered but then step back to let others weigh in and decide. Your qualities should speak for themselves.

  • View profile for Tyronne Stoudemire

    Global Visionary |Global Head of Strategic Partnerships at Hyatt Corporation | Author of Diversity Done Right | Guiding Leaders to Transform Workplace Culture and Drive Inclusive Excellence

    26,793 followers

    Over-mentored and under-sponsored" is a career phenomenon that notably affects women and minorities. This situation occurs when individuals receive ample advice through mentorship but lack influential champions who can provide sponsorship to secure promotions and high-profile projects. Key Differences and Consequences: - Mentorship (Advice): Focuses on personal growth and skill development. It is "talking to you." - Sponsorship (Action): Focuses on career advancement and visibility. It is "talking about you" in private rooms. Impact: Without sponsorship, strong performers may experience career stagnation, limited upward mobility, and talent drain. Signs of being over-mentored include being invited to learning opportunities rather than decision-making tables or being asked to "sit in" rather than lead. To move from mentorship to sponsorship: - State Ambition: Clearly articulate career goals to potential champions. - Earn Visibility: Ensure your work is seen by decision-makers. - Make Specific Asks: Request advocacy, such as asking, "Will you put my name forward for this role?" - Build Relationships: Cultivate connections with those one or two levels above you, focusing on shared goals.

  • View profile for Chimwemwe John Paul Manyozo, PhD, Chart.PR

    Chartered PR Practitioner |Champion for Youth at World Bank Group| PhD in Psychology

    29,206 followers

    Nobody tells you that when you reach a certain level in your career, the things that carried you through the early years are no longer the same things that lift you to the very top. You may have built your reputation on skill, grit, and qualifications — but at senior levels, what often matters most is having someone powerful back you: a senior leader who will advocate for you, vouch for you, and make room for you in the right conversations. Research supports this. While mentorship (guidance, advice, coaching) remains very valuable, there is increasing evidence that sponsorship (active advocacy by a more senior person) plays a uniquely powerful role in advancing people into high-level roles. For example, a qualitative study of academic medicine found that sponsors are often “career-established and well-connected talent scouts” who use their influence to open up specific high-stakes opportunities. Sponsorship is not risk-free: sponsors put their own reputation on the line when they back someone. That’s one reason why trust, mutual respect, and clear commitment are often crucial in these relationships. There is also a systemic dimension: some groups (especially women and people from under-represented backgrounds) are less likely to receive sponsorship, even when they have mentors. Organizations that want to improve promotion equity are increasingly recognising that structured sponsorship programs — not just mentoring — are needed. So yes — while your competence, hard work, and credentials remain critical, having a senior person who will advocate for you is often a decisive factor in breaking into very senior leadership roles.

  • We talk a lot about mentorship and don’t get me wrong, it’s important. But too many of us are over-mentored and under-sponsored. Mentors give advice. Sponsors create access. Sponsorship looks like: 🗣️ Saying your name in the rooms you’re not in 🧾 Recommending you for the role & backing it up with your receipts 🚫 Shutting down narratives that don’t align with your values or impact 🤝🏽 Advocating as if your career depends on it because it does We don’t just need guidance. We need people who are willing to vouch for us, uplift us, and protect our reputations when we’re not in the room. Because no matter how brilliant, driven, or prepared you are, access still often depends on who’s willing to bet on you when you’re not around to defend yourself. So yes, get a mentor. But also ask: 📌 Who's putting your name in the room when opportunities come up? 📌 Who’s shutting down the whisper networks? 📌 Who’s protecting your legacy behind closed doors? That’s the kind of table I want to sit at and the kind of advocate I strive to be.

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