The Visibility System: How Work Gets Seen, Valued, and Rewarded in Organizations
A leadership framework for designing visibility, influence, and impact at work
In most organizations, work doesn’t speak for itself.
Systems do.
What gets seen, understood, and rewarded is not always the highest-impact work—it’s the work that is most visible within the system.
And that visibility is rarely accidental.
It is shaped by what I call the Visibility System—the way organizations capture, interpret, and distribute information about performance, leadership, and contribution.
What Is the Visibility System?
The Visibility System is the combination of formal and informal mechanisms that determine:
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What work is seen
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How that work is interpreted
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Who carries the narrative forward
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What ultimately gets rewarded It includes:
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Reporting structures
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Leadership communication patterns
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Cross-functional relationships
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Informal conversations and perceptions
Together, these elements shape how leaders understand value.
Work is not evaluated in isolation. It is evaluated through the system that makes it visible.
Why Visibility Determines Value in Organizations
Senior leaders rarely have direct access to all work happening across the organization. Instead, they rely on:
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Summaries from leaders
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Feedback from stakeholders
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Repeated narratives over time
This means value is often determined by:
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What is communicated
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How clearly it is understood
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How consistently it is reinforced
When visibility is strong, work is recognized and rewarded.
When visibility is weak, work becomes:
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Misunderstood
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Undervalued
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Or completely overlooked
This is why two individuals with similar impact can have very different career outcomes.
Why Visibility Determines Value in Organizations
To design better outcomes, organizations must understand how visibility actually works.
The Visibility System operates across three key layers:
1 Direct Visibility: What Leaders See Firsthand
This includes:
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Presentations
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Reports
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Executive updates
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Direct interactions with leadership
This is the most controlled layer—but also the most limited.
Leaders only see a fraction of the work through direct channels.
2 Distributed Visibility: What Others Carry Forward
This is the most influential—and most overlooked—layer.
It includes:
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Peer conversations
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Cross-functional feedback
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Stakeholder perceptions
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Informal endorsements
This is where narratives are formed and repeated.
In many cases, this layer has more influence than direct reporting.
3 Systemic Visibility: What the Organization Reinforces
This includes:
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Performance frameworks
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Metrics and measurement systems
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Promotion criteria
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Cultural definitions of success
This layer determines what types of work are consistently recognized—and what gets ignored.
How Visibility Breaks Down in Organizations
When the Visibility System is not intentionally designed, several patterns emerge:
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High-impact work is reduced to partial understanding
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Leadership contributions are framed as participation rather than influence
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Informal narratives outweigh structured data
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Some employees become highly visible, while others remain overlooked
This is not random.
It is the result of a system that lacks alignment.
Where This Shows Up: ERG Strategy and Leadership Development
One of the clearest examples of this breakdown is in ERG strategy and leadership development.
ERG leaders often:
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Operate without formal authority
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Influence across functions
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Contribute to retention, engagement, and belonging
Yet their work is often interpreted as:
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Engagement-focused
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Event-driven
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Supplemental rather than strategic
Instead of being recognized as:
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Leadership development in action
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Cross-functional influence building
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Talent and culture strategy
The issue is not the work.
The issue is how that work moves through the Visibility System.
Without intentional design, ERG contributions remain visible in moments—but invisible in outcomes.
How to Design a Strong Visibility System
Organizations that get this right don’t rely on individuals to “be more visible.”
They design systems that make impact clear.
This includes:
1 Translating Work Into Impact
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Move beyond activity reporting
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Connect work to business and talent outcomes
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Standardize how impact is communicated
2 Expanding Who Sees the Work
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Create opportunities for cross-functional visibility
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Involve stakeholders in outcomes and results
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Ensure multiple voices can speak to the impact
3 Aligning Metrics With Value
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Define what success looks like clearly
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Measure beyond participation and engagement
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Reinforce leadership behaviors through evaluation systems
4 Developing Leaders to Navigate Visibility
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Teach leaders how to communicate impact
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Build influence without authority
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Strengthen executive communication skills
What This Means for Organizations
If visibility is left unstructured:
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Talent decisions are based on incomplete information
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Leadership pipelines become inconsistent
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High-impact contributors are overlooked
But when the Visibility System is designed intentionally:
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Work is clearly understood
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Leadership is accurately recognized
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Organizations make stronger talent decisions
Visibility is not about self-promotion. It is about system design.
The Leadership Reality
If your work is not fully visible within a system, its value will be interpreted by others.
And interpretation is rarely neutral.
The system will always fill in the gaps. The question is whether it does so accurately.
Work With Us: ERG Strategy and Leadership Development
If your organization is:
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Investing in ERGs without clear business impact
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Struggling to connect engagement to leadership development
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Developing leaders who need to influence without authority
I partner with organizations to design ERG strategy and leadership visibility systems that drive measurable outcomes.
Through workshops, advisory, and leadership development, we focus on:
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Aligning ERGs to business strategy
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Strengthening leadership pipelines
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Making impact visible across the organization
→ To Explore ERG Strategy Workshops: Book a discovery conversation or email Hello@EQImindset.com