The Peter Principle
5 minute read

The Peter Principle explains why so many managers are terrible at their jobs. Someone is great at sales, so they get promoted to sales manager - where they fail because management requires completely different skills than selling. A brilliant engineer becomes engineering director and struggles because leading people isn’t the same as writing code. People rise through ranks based on current performance until they land in a role they can’t handle. That’s where they stay, stuck and incompetent.
TL;DR
People are promoted based on current job performance until they reach a role where they’re incompetent. Organizations fill positions with people who can’t do the job. For you: be honest about your strengths. Promotion isn’t always the right move.
What Is the Peter Principle?
The Peter Principle states: “In a hierarchy, every employee tends to rise to their level of incompetence.”
Here’s how it works:
- You’re good at your job, so you get promoted.
- You’re good at the new job, so you get promoted again.
- You keep getting promoted as long as you succeed.
- Eventually, you’re promoted to a role where you’re not competent.
- Since you’re struggling, you stop getting promoted.
- You’re now stuck in a position where you’re incompetent.
This creates organizations where every position is filled by someone who can’t fully do the job. The people who were great at their original roles are now mediocre or failing in roles they weren’t built for.
Where It Came From
Dr. Laurence J. Peter and Raymond Hull introduced the concept in their 1969 book The Peter Principle: Why Things Always Go Wrong. Peter observed this pattern while working in education, where excellent teachers were promoted to administrative roles and struggled.
Though presented humorously, the principle identifies a real problem: organizations reward performance with promotion, but higher positions require different skills. Being good at X doesn’t mean you’ll be good at managing people who do X.
Why It Matters
The Peter Principle affects both organizations and individuals:
- Promotion isn’t always better. Sometimes staying in a role you’re great at beats struggling in a higher role.
- Skills don’t always transfer. What makes you successful at one level may be irrelevant at the next.
- Beware ego-driven decisions. Taking a promotion because it feels like success can make you miserable.
- Competence matters. Don’t promote yourself into incompetence by chasing titles.
Scripture warns about ambition without competence: “Let not many of you become teachers, my brethren, knowing that we shall receive a stricter judgment” - James 3:1 (NKJV). Not everyone should pursue every position.
Real-Life Examples
Your coworker is the top salesperson - charismatic, competitive, closes deals like a machine. The company promotes them to sales manager. Disaster. They can’t coach others, they micromanage, they’re impatient with slower learners, and they resent being stuck in meetings instead of selling. They were world-class at sales but mediocre at management. Different skills. Now they’re stuck in a role they hate and the team suffers. Classic Peter Principle.
An engineer writes beautiful code, solves hard problems, and ships features fast. The company promotes them to director of engineering. Now they spend all day in meetings, navigating office politics, managing budgets, and dealing with HR issues. They barely code anymore. They’re miserable and not particularly good at the new job. They were promoted past their competence - not because they’re incompetent generally, but because directing requires completely different skills than coding.
A high school teacher is phenomenal in the classroom - students love them, test scores improve, parents rave. The district promotes them to principal. Now they handle discipline, budgets, angry parents, administrative compliance, and district politics. They’re overwhelmed and miss teaching. They were promoted to their level of incompetence.
Your friend has been a senior analyst for 5 years with no promotion. They’ve been offered manager roles but declined. Why? They’re great at analysis, enjoy the work, and know they’d hate managing people. They recognized the Peter Principle and avoided it. Society sees this as lack of ambition. Smart people see it as self-awareness.
How to Avoid the Peter Principle
Know your strengths.
- What skills do you actually excel at?
- Does the next level require those skills or different ones?
Don’t equate promotion with success.
- Being great at your current level is success.
- Struggling at a higher level is not.
Ask: “Will I enjoy this new role?”
- Promotion often means less time doing what you’re good at.
- More meetings, more politics, more management.
Develop new skills before promoting.
- If you want a leadership role, learn leadership skills first.
- Don’t assume you’ll figure it out on the job.
Be willing to say no.
- Turning down a promotion isn’t weakness.
- It’s self-awareness.
Success Isn’t Always Upward
Our culture equates career success with climbing the ladder. But the Peter Principle reveals the flaw: climbing too high lands you in a job you hate and can’t do well. That’s not success - that’s a trap.
True success is doing work you’re good at and enjoy. Sometimes that means staying at your current level. Sometimes it means moving laterally instead of up. Sometimes it means refusing the promotion everyone expects you to take.
Don’t let ego or social pressure push you into incompetence. Know your strengths, play to them, and build a career around what you’re actually good at - even if that means saying no to the next rung on the ladder.