There’s a big difference between wanting recognition and needing recognition.
Wanting recognition is normal. It’s human. It’s also smart.
If you want the promotion, the raise, the bigger opportunity, or the seat at the table, people need to know what you bring. Your work may be excellent, but excellent work doesn’t always announce itself. You have to speak for it.
That’s not arrogance.
That’s strategy.
But here’s the part we don’t talk about enough.
Sometimes you’re doing great work and no one says anything.
No applause.
No public thank-you.
No “we see you.”
No one pulling you aside to tell you how valuable you are.
And if you’re not careful, silence can start to sound like evidence.
Maybe I’m not that good.
Maybe they don’t think I’m ready.
Maybe I shouldn’t ask for more.
Maybe I should wait until someone notices.
No.
Your value exists even when no one claps.
That doesn’t mean you stay quiet and hope people figure it out. It means you don’t let the absence of recognition make you question what you know you’ve earned.
Because sometimes people don’t clap because they’re busy.
Sometimes they don’t clap because they’re not paying attention.
Sometimes they assume you already know.
And sometimes, let’s be honest, they don’t clap because keeping you unsure works in their favor.
If you’re always waiting for someone else to confirm your value before you ask for more, you’re giving them control of your confidence.
And that’s a dangerous place to be.
In poker, you don’t wait for the table to applaud your hand before you bet. You assess what you’re holding, read the room, and make your move. Sometimes you have to bet before anyone else sees the strength of your cards.
The same is true in business.
You don’t need constant applause to know you have a strong hand.
You need awareness.
You need evidence.
And you need the courage to play it.
What to Do When You’re Not Getting Recognized at Work
Want to know the three things to do when you’re not getting the recognition you deserve.
1. Keep Your Own Receipts
Don’t rely on someone else noticing.
Track your wins as they happen. The project you moved forward. The client you saved. The problem you solved. The revenue you helped generate. The meeting where your idea changed the direction.
Write it down.
Not because you’re obsessed with credit.
Because you’re building evidence.
When it’s time to ask for more, you should be able to clearly say:
“Here’s what I contributed, here’s the impact, and here’s why it matters.”
That’s not bragging in the obnoxious sense.
That’s making your value visible.
2. Don’t Confuse Silence with a No
No one says, “You’re amazing,” so you assume you’re not.
No one offers the promotion, so you assume you’re not ready.
No one invites you into the bigger conversation, so you assume you don’t belong there.
But silence isn’t always feedback.
Sometimes silence is just silence.
And sometimes silence is a test of whether you’ll advocate for yourself or stay conveniently quiet.
You’re allowed to ask.
“I’d like to discuss my next step here.”
“Given the results I’ve delivered, I’d like to talk about compensation.”
“I’d like to be considered for that opportunity.”
Don’t wait for applause before you make your ask.
The applause may come after you make the move.
3. Promote Yourself Without Making it All About You
You don’t want to be the person who needs a standing ovation for every contribution. That gets exhausting fast.
But you also don’t want to disappear behind your work and hope someone magically connects the dots.
The sweet spot is strategic visibility.
Tie your contribution to the larger outcome.
“I’m proud of the role I played in moving this forward.”
“I want to make sure my contribution to this project is clear as we discuss future opportunities.”
“Here are the results I helped create, and here’s the level of responsibility I’m ready for next.”
That’s not needy.
That’s professional.
That’s grounded.
That’s powerful.
The goal isn’t to beg for applause. The goal is to stop acting like the absence of applause means you have nothing to bet on.
Because you do.
So yes, promote yourself.
Yes, name your wins.
Yes, ask for more.
But don’t wait until the room claps to believe you’ve earned the right to do it.
Sometimes the strongest move is the one you make before anyone else sees how good your hand really is.

