When promotions are handled as part of the compensation review, they quickly start to feel like an expectation – something that’s always on offer to high performing employees during the review period, almost automatically.
For employees, that means self assessments become an exercise in justifying a promotion (and the salary bump that comes with it), rather than honestly reflecting on performance in their current level and what career development might look like for them.
For managers, it means the pressure is on to ensure their team members are included in that promotion run.
“It was always: I need to promote all of my team,” says Saime.
If those promotions are granted purely based on employee performance and progression, then it can easily cause structural issues – because organisational readiness hasn’t been factored into the equation.
“If everyone is promoted regularly the the job levels in the organisation keep going higher and higher all the time,” Saime explains. “Having everyone in a senior role isn’t always what the organisation actually needs, and it comes with big cost implications for payroll too.”
And if managers are told they can’t grant a promotion, they also look for other ways to make up for that – asking for bigger merit increases or additional one-off bonuses.
“We had managers asking if they could give their employee the same level of salary increase as if they’d had a promotion, to compensate for not being able to give them a promotion,” says Saime. “So no promotion, but the cost impact would still be there.”
When promotions have their own process, each conversation gets to do what it's actually for.
The compensation review focuses on performance and market positioning, for all eligible employees.
Promotions become a separate, deliberate decision, rather than something that happens by default at review time.
For Delivery Hero, promotions now explicitly require both individual readiness and role and organisational readiness – meaning that the business actually requires that job role at that increased level of seniority in order to achieve its goals.
"It’s ensured that our merit cycle is a merit cycle,” she says, "and that promotions are in alignment with our business plan and organisation structure."
When that separation is in place, the conversations change. Instead of "why didn't I get a promotion in the review", it becomes a forward-looking discussion about what ‘readiness’ actually looks like – and what needs to happen to get there.