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Office politics, or just emotional logistics?

An ambitious 30-something-year-old navigating the space between corporate structure and creative ambition. First in the family to decode office politics, calendar invites, and the unspoken dress codes of professional life. I try to write to make sense of it all. I do not promise any anwers, but honesty. Still figuring it out, but getting sharper with every slide deck and silent commute.
30 jun, 2025

Dear Meeting Room,

Nobody likes to admit they’re playing the game. We tell ourselves we’re above it. That we’re just doing our job. But the truth is, office politics aren’t optional. They’re just there. Spoken or unspoken, subtle or toxic. And once I stopped pretending it wasn’t real, I actually started getting better at my job.

Especially working in sales.

Salespeople don’t exactly have the best reputation in a cross-functional setting. We’re seen as pushy. Selfish. Kind of needy. The ones who always need something urgent. It’s not entirely untrue. Sales is high pressure, and when customers need things, it often feels like everyone else is in the way.

But what I’ve learned, slowly and not without mistakes, is that getting your way is less about pushing hard and more about picking your battles. Not every request needs to be a hill to die on. And sometimes, letting others win small battles builds the goodwill you need to win bigger ones later.

He will win who knows when to fight and when not to fight.

Sun Tzu wasn’t talking about office diplomacy, but he might as well have been.

I remember a case once with our logistics team. A customer wanted something changed in an order. It wasn’t a big thing, and I knew I could probably push it through. But logistics said no. I could have escalated it, made the case, gone all-in. But it didn’t really matter. So I argued a little, gave them the space to explain, and then said, “Okay, fair enough, let’s do it your way.” They were happy. They felt heard. And the next time I came to them with something important, they listened and helped. That’s office politics. Or diplomacy. Or stakeholder management. Whatever you want to call it.

Another example stands out too. I was heading into a meeting, and just before it started, the leader responsible for the topic quietly gave me a heads-up. He said, “I know where you stand on this, but just so you know, this other guy might bring up something different. If you want to avoid getting stuck with the fallout, you should steer the discussion in this direction.” He didn’t have to tell me that. But he did, and it helped me navigate the discussion exactly how I needed to. I avoided taking on responsibility for something I wasn’t positioned to drive, and I could focus on more important work instead. I think he did it because we’ve built a solid, honest relationship. Sometimes people pick their horses. That time, he picked me. And that’s how trust works.

The more I’ve moved through my career, the more I’ve realized how valuable it is to build real relationships with people in other departments. Not fake alliances. Not transactional favor banks. Just actual rapport. A little trust. A sense that we’re on the same team, even if our KPIs don’t always align.

Sometimes that trust gives you early information. A heads-up before something becomes official. A second opinion before the meeting. Sometimes it’s just the benefit of the doubt when something goes wrong.

You can’t operate like an island and expect to get anything done. Especially if you’re in sales, and especially if you want to stay sane.

And yes, I’m an introvert. I don’t love the constant networking or the surface-level chatter. But relationships don’t always start with loud charisma. They start with respect. With listening. With knowing when to let someone else be right. And remembering that collaboration doesn’t always look like agreement. Sometimes it just looks like patience.

I don’t think it’s about being liked. Not exactly. But it is about being known. And maybe trusted. And when you have that, you don’t have to fight every battle. You just need to show up, and show that you know when to push and when to wait.

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