The Benefits of Office Politics

Mary Foley

is author of "Bodacious! Career: Outrageous Success for Working Women."

Surprised? Me, too. If I had been a little more savvy about how I could make office politics work for me, I might have avoided the glass ceiling and stayed at AOL a little longer. I might have achieved the title of director or even VP. But no. For 10 years, I operated as though my job was to get the work done with passion and to be a team player in helping AOL realize its big vision.

In my noble navet, like a good foot soldier who's not completely concentrating on where she's going, I tripped and fell on my own sword. Was I skewered by someone else's scheming? Was this something to blame someone else for? I don't think so. I was just so focused on the greater mission of the work at hand that I didn't take steps to show my boss I was also capable of strategizing a plan for the future. You don't need to be a nasty conniver to be on the losing side of a political game. Sometimes you just have to be dedicated to your work.

I finally realized that office politics is simply relationships plus power. Now, I'm all for good relationships at work -- most women are. I strove to create deliberate relationships for my career that could help me move forward. Sometimes this is a challenge, but all in all, it doesn't press my good girl buttons.

But, power, that's another story! It's evil, right? Well, it can be. It's not as if we don't have enough stories about power being abusive, harmful or strictly self-serving. But there's another side of power.

id
unit-1659132512259
type
Sponsored post

Let's be real. Every workplace is political, and the higher up the organizational chart you go, the more political the workplace gets. That's because there's more at stake. But the question isn't whether to play. It's how.

Consider that, on a day-to-day basis, office politics can: