“Busy” vs. “Visible”: Why the Hardest Workers Often Get Passed Over

Let me describe two professionals. See if one sounds familiar.

Professional A has a packed calendar. They’re in meetings all day, responding to emails at night, working weekends to keep up. They say yes to every request because they want to be seen as a team player. They’re exhausted but proud of their work ethic.

Professional B is strategic about their time. They prioritize high-impact work, decline requests that don’t align with their goals, and make sure decision-makers know about their contributions. They work hard, but they also work smart.

Which one gets promoted?

If you guessed Professional B, you’re right. And if you identify more with Professional A, this post is for you.

RESOURCE FOR THE WEEK

Should you stay, reposition, or make a strategic exit?

The Transition Decision Scorecard maps the evidence for your three options — and tells you which path your answers point to. 

The Busy Trap

Being busy feels productive. It feels like you’re doing everything right.

But busy and visible are not the same thing.

  • Busy keeps you in motion
  • Visible keeps you in the conversation
  • Busy fills your calendar
  • Visible gets you in the room
  • Busy exhausts you
  • Visible advances you

You can be the busiest person in the building and still be invisible to the people who matter.

The Busy-to-Visible Shift

Here’s how to shift from busy to visible without adding hours to your day:

BUSY: Takes every meeting

VISIBLE: Prioritizes meetings with decision-makers

BUSY: Completes tasks quickly

VISIBLE: Shares completed tasks strategically

BUSY: Responds to every request

RESOURCE FOR THE WEEK

Should you stay, reposition, or make a strategic exit?

The Transition Decision Scorecard maps the evidence for your three options — and tells you which path your answers point to. 

VISIBLE: Responds to requests that build relationships

BUSY: Works harder when overlooked

VISIBLE: Works smarter to be seen

The Weekly Visibility Question

Before you add another thing to your plate, ask yourself:

“Will this make me busy, or will this make me visible?”

If the answer is just “busy,” consider whether it’s the best use of your time.

The goal isn’t to do less. The goal is to make sure the RIGHT people see what you do.

Because you can’t be promoted from a role no one knows you’re excelling in.

RESOURCE FOR THE WEEK

Should you stay, reposition, or make a strategic exit?

The Transition Decision Scorecard maps the evidence for your three options — and tells you which path your answers point to. 

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