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Why Most PMs Stay Stuck at the Same Level for 2-3 Years (And What Separates Promoted PMs)
I spent 12 years at IBM and Accenture, then became CEO and scaled a company to an 8-figure exit. Here's what I learned about why some PMs get promoted in 6-12 months while others stay stuck for years.
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Steve Saper
Founder & CEO of PM33. Building the agentic-PM platform and writing about how product management is being remade in the AI era.

Why Most PMs Stay Stuck at the Same Level for 2-3 Years (And What Separates Promoted PMs)
I spent 12 years at IBM and Accenture, then became CEO and scaled a company to an 8-figure exit. I've analyzed 320+ successful PMs and audited 30+ product organizations.
Here's what I found about why some PMs get promoted in 6-12 months while others stay stuck for years.
The Problem Nobody Talks About
You're great at your current job. You work hard. You ship features. You do everything right.
But you don't get promoted.
Why?
Because being good at your current job isn't what gets you promoted. Your boss is looking for 3 specific things. Most PMs have no idea what they are.
The 3 Things Leadership is Actually Looking For
1. Can You Explain WHY?
Junior PM: "We're building feature X."
Promoted PM: "We're building X because it will increase revenue by $2M. Here's the data that supports this decision."
Leadership wants to see you think like a business leader, not just a feature builder. They need to know you understand the business impact of your decisions.
2. Can You Lead Without Power?
Junior PM: "I need approval from 5 people to ship this."
Promoted PM: "I got all 5 teams aligned in one week. Here's how I did it."
Leadership wants to see you get things done without being anyone's boss. This is the hardest skill to develop but the most valuable. You need to be able to influence across teams, manage up, and coordinate work without direct authority.
3. Can You Talk About Money?
Junior PM: "We shipped 10 features this quarter."
Promoted PM: "We grew revenue by 22%. Here's exactly how our features drove that growth."
Leadership wants to see you connect your work to real business results. Not feature counts, not story points - actual revenue, retention, or cost savings.
What This Means For Your Career
If you can't demonstrate these 3 skills, you'll stay at your current level. No matter how hard you work. No matter how many features you ship. No matter how many hours you put in.
Your boss needs to see THESE specific skills to feel confident promoting you.
How to Start Developing These Skills
For "Explaining WHY":
- Before building anything, write down the business case
- Include projected revenue impact, cost savings, or retention improvement
- Get comfortable with financial projections and ROI calculations
For "Leading Without Power":
- Start documenting how you get stakeholders aligned
- Track the techniques you use to influence others
- Build relationships across teams before you need them
For "Talking About Money":
- Connect every shipped feature to a business metric
- Learn to speak the language of revenue, cost, and margin
- In status updates, always include business impact alongside feature status
Coming Next
This is Part 1 of a 5-part series where I'm sharing everything I learned from analyzing 320+ top PMs:
- Part 2: The ONE mistake that costs PMs 12-18 months
- Part 3: The hidden rule top PMs follow (but never talk about)
- Part 4: The ONLY 3 frameworks you need (forget the other 44)
- Part 5: The 5 inflection points you can predict in your PM career
Question for the community: Which of these 3 skills is your biggest gap right now? And what have you tried to develop it?