The Role of The Manager in Employee Career Development

Organizations that have made a strategic investment in employee development, Gallup finds, report 11% greater profitability and are twice as likely to retain their employees. And there’s no better person positioned to help employees invest in their career development than the manager.

Organizations that have made a strategic investment in employee development, Gallup finds, report 11% greater profitability and are twice as likely to retain their employees. And there’s no better person positioned to help employees invest in their career development than the manager.

The manager’s role in career development is not a new subject. For years, we’ve known that a manager plays an outsized impact in the employee experience. And we also know that the same reason why many employees choose to take a job is also the same reason that they choose to leave – for career growth. 

But while these statistics are not new, organizations traditionally have not helped their managers see the value in even talking to their employees about their career growth, or actively investing in it. 

Public-opinion research company The Harris Poll administered a survey using responses from 1,433 full-time employees at 310 workplaces. Nearly all of the companies surveyed said they provide career-development tools. Only one in four employees surveyed, however, felt the employer helped them grow “very well.” Around 77% of employees feel “on their own” to develop their careers at the company.

But we do know that if managers do take an active role in their employee’s career development, that it can benefit both the employee and the company. 

In research from 15Five, 82% of employees who have conversations more than once a month are highly engaged, compared to the 53% who only talk about their careers once a year or less.  That’s an entire 29 point difference in engagement favorability.

But managers often don’t know what to do, or where to start.  The following are different ways that a manager can play a role in helping an employee develop into their career.

#1) The Purpose Enabler

Each individual employee has a choice to decide what kind of role purpose and meaning play in their work life. For those who want purpose, a manager can assist or enable an employee to develop their own unique view on their purpose and to help them find that in their everyday role. One of the benefits of a manager is that they have two vantage points – altitude (the ability to see up and down) and width (the ability to see across) Using those vantage points, a manager can help an employee identify and connect that employee’s individual purpose to discrete tasks, projects, and actions in their job that help the business in a positive way. 

#2) The People Connector

Organizations are just a bunch of people working toward shared goals. But since our work and career success is a team sport not an individual one, relationships matter. Using their own social and career capital, a manager can facilitate introductions to new people and help their direct reports build social capital that can help an employee gain additional opportunities they would not otherwise have, enhance their personal brand, and grow both in the short and long term. This also helps an employee improve their own engagement and connection to their job.

#3: The Role Redesigner

A manager’s job is to get their team to an agreed upon outcome. It’s upon the manager to design and assign “who” does what and certainly guide how it gets done. One way that managers can do this is through re-designing an employee’s role. 

By using principles of role design, a manager can make choices about the tasks, assignments, projects that an employee can do that is more appealing to them, or that leverages the employee’s strengths or interests. By first asking and over time learning what makes an employee light up, and what gives them energy or what leverages their strengths, and using that to inform how you assign work, a manager can ensure the right people are working on the right projects.

#4) The Opportunity Creator

A manager has perspective and experience their employees may not have. They can use this to spot and create opportunities for employees, especially ones they either cannot see or could not get on their own. By providing a stretch project, writing a recommendation for a leadership program or helping them tackle an exciting new project, a manager can use their power to create opportunities for their employees. 

This is also why, helping, mentoring, and coaching employees in their careers is a critical element of equity and inclusion. Being intentional about how you facilitate opportunities, especially for those who traditionally have been left out of them, is a way to ensure that everyone has a shot at career mobility.

#5) The Slingshot

In some cases, a manager may not be able to offer something that is relevant to the employees growth. In these instances, a manager can set an employee up for success by offering a “slingshot,” or assisted acceleration in finding the next best opportunity, internally or externally of the organization. This could mean

Very few people come into the workforce understanding the mindset and habits for proactively and strategically managing their career. Furthermore, the first-line manager is often the critical connection point that an employee has with their organization. Making sure that managers have the right toolkit for how they can help their employees grow in their careers is critical to any organization that is serious about linking career development and internal mobility to improving engagement and retention. 

When manager’s take responsibility for enabling the potential of their employees to help them perform and grow their career, employees are more likely to be engaged, and have the ability to grow and evolve to thrive in today’s world of work.

Nobody goes to work wanting to do a poor job, or wanting to be disengaged. However, many things often get in the way of employees and their ability to do their best work.