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Card 15
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Why do some people seem to "get" office politics while others don't?

💭 How to Think About This

"I just want to do good work and be recognized for it." But workplaces have unwritten rules. Some people navigate them naturally; others miss signals everyone else seems to see. What's actually happening, and how do you learn these invisible rules?

🔒 Start writing to unlock hints

Politics isn't optional—it's inherent:
• Limited resources (budget, promotions, projects)
• Different interests and priorities
• Informal power structures
• Relationships matter for decisions
• Not everything can be merit-based
"Politics" just means navigating social systems.

Common unwritten rules:
• Who actually makes decisions (vs. who officially does)
• How ideas should be proposed (hint: not in big meetings)
• Who needs to be consulted before changes
• What can be said vs. what must be done
• How conflict is handled (openly? privately?)
Every organization has a hidden culture.

Learning to read organizational dynamics:
• OBSERVE: Who defers to whom? Who has real influence?
• ASK: "How do things really work here?"
• LISTEN: What's praised? What's punished?
• WATCH: Where do informal conversations happen?
• TEST: Small experiments to understand norms

Good politics ≠ manipulation:
• Build genuine relationships
• Understand others' interests
• Find win-win solutions
• Be trustworthy and consistent
• Make others look good
Politics can be ethical: it's influence through relationships and understanding, not deception.

Workplace politics is just understanding how social systems work—observing, building relationships, and navigating interests!

Key insight: Pretending politics doesn't exist doesn't make it go away—it just means you're playing blindly. Understanding organizational dynamics isn't manipulation; it's social intelligence. The goal is ethical influence, not manipulation.

🤔 Which thinking lens(es) did you use?

Select all the lenses you used:

👨‍👩‍👧 For Parents & Teachers

🌱 A Small Everyday Story

Great idea. Presented in all-hands meeting.
Shot down. Confused. "It was a good idea!"
Colleague explained: "You surprised the VP publicly. He felt ambushed."
Reframed: "Hey, I have an idea. Could I run it by you first?"
Same idea. Different approach. Approved.
The idea didn't change. The politics did.

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Key concepts: Organizational politics, informal power structures, stakeholder management, social capital, political skill.