How Do I Manage Up Without Feeling Like I’m Kissing Up? (The Difference Between Alignment and Approval-Seeking)

Written by Orvin Kimbrough | March 31, 2026

Let me tell you a truth most people won’t admit out loud:

managing up feels uncomfortable for a lot of leaders not because they don’t know how to do it, but because they don’t want to look political, needy, or manipulative.

But managing up isn’t manipulation.
Managing up isn’t flattery.
Managing up isn’t kissing up.

Managing up is alignment.
And alignment is stewardship.

When I became part of executive teams and later when I led them I learned quickly that leaders who don’t manage up well create friction for themselves and confusion for their organizations.
And often, the problem isn’t competence or effort it’s misalignment.

Here’s the mindset shift most leaders need to make:

1. You’re not managing a person; you’re managing clarity.

Every leader no matter how gifted has blind spots, bandwidth limits, and information gaps.
Managing up isn’t about making your boss comfortable. It’s about making the mission clear.
You’re stewarding alignment, not stroking ego.
When clarity rises, conflict drops.

2. Executives don’t want updates they want understanding.

This was one of the earliest lessons I learned:
Don’t just report information; interpret it.
Don’t just share the “what”; explain the “so what.”
Clarify impact.
Clarify risk.
Clarify decisions that need to be made.
Managing up well turns you from a task completer into a value-added thinker.

3. Managing up is really about managing expectations.

Most conflict between leaders and their bosses isn’t personal it’s misalignment.
And misalignment grows in silence.
When expectations are clear, trust increases.
When expectations are unclear, resentment grows quietly in the corners of the work.

4. Your relationship with your leader is part of your leadership responsibility.

People treat managing up as optional. It’s not.
If your leader is unclear, your team will be unclear.
If your leader is misaligned, your work will drift.
Leadership isn’t just downstream it’s upstream, too.
You can’t lead your team well if you aren’t aligned with the person leading you.

Here’s the Reframe:

Managing up isn’t about how your leader perceives you it’s about how effectively you advance the work.

Here’s the Reclaim:

You’re not trying to impress. You’re trying to align.

Here’s the Rename:

You’re not kissing up you’re clarifying up.