It wasn’t the market. It wasn’t the client. And it’s not you (or at least, not just you). The real bottleneck has a name, a surname, and often enjoys a fixed parking spot while the rest of you rotate. It’s your boss.
As I explained in this article, there’s a certain type of figure who doesn’t lead—they impose. Instead of inspiring, they issue orders. They don’t truly listen; they wait for their turn to speak (when they wait at all). Decisions are made without criteria, meetings revolve around ego, and strategic direction is nowhere to be found. But the most damaging part is the constant erosion of motivation. Because working under a bad boss doesn’t just stall projects—it wears people down.
So the question becomes inevitable: what do we do when the person meant to enable our work is the one making it harder?
1. Diagnose: Define your limits
First, name what you’re experiencing. Is it a style mismatch or a structural incompetence? Is there room for improvement, or are you facing someone who neither wants nor is able to change?
Defining what you’re willing to tolerate protects your self-esteem and helps avoid the trap of self-deception. No, they won’t “grow out of it.”
2. Step out of their shadow
If your boss is making you invisible, work on building lateral and upward visibility. Share your accomplishments in spaces where your contribution is seen without filters. This isn’t internal politics—it’s professional survival.
And if your boss feels threatened by it, you’ve likely just confirmed the problem isn’t you. You’ll sense it in their hesitation—or their unwillingness to let you finish a sentence.
3. Always document
When you notice manipulation, favoritism, or unethical behavior, document it. Not to wage war, but to protect yourself in case escalation becomes necessary. Because if there’s one thing bad bosses are good at, it’s rewriting history when things go wrong.
4. Build real allies
Identify who, inside or outside the organization, can offer perspective, support, or even an exit route. But be careful: don’t confuse coffee-break venting with a real professional network. You need one that opens doors, not just ears—a productive, purposeful kind of networking.
5. Prepare your exit (yes, even if it hurts)
Let’s not idealize what “could be” if they just changed. If the context isn’t improving, the decision will eventually become clear: leaving isn’t giving up—it’s continuing your growth journey in a healthier direction.
And no, you don’t always have to “stick it out because the market is tough.” Sometimes, the harder choice is staying—and losing precious years of growth in a toxic environment. Nothing is forever, and planning your exit is necessary. It’s almost always better to leave than to be pushed out.
Is it worth staying where you can’t contribute?
Sometimes, yes—if there’s a bigger project, a temporary learning opportunity, or a deliberate strategy. But if every day you find yourself dimming your voice to avoid conflict, then maybe something far more important is being dimmed.
There are companies with leaders who lead. Who give space, correct without humiliation, and recognize without fear. They might be harder to find—but they do exist.



