Here's an
_imaginary_ but common scenario in the corp tech hemisphere:
VP: Gives the IC a dubious signal about a promo in the next cycle, mentioning tenure, budget constraints, or something incredibly vague.
IC: Lets go of the promo and seeks to switch teams at the same level in search of more interesting work and possibly to avoid a similar situation in the next cycle.
VP: Feels betrayed, claiming they were working hard on the promo case and that it might have happened in the next cycle.
IC: Gets accepted into a different team and wants to transition to the new role as smoothly as possible without burning bridges.
VP: Demands a three-month grace period.
IC: It wouldn't be fair to the new team and would probably result in losing the opportunity.
How should the IC navigate a situation like this?
For switching, tell the VP you'll ask the new team what's possible. Go to your new VP and tell them that old VP wants this, but make it implicitly clear that you don't want this. Go back to your old VP and tell them that you don't think the long transfer period is going to work with the new team (but you tried!), but that you will still be around to help the team answer any questions.
Once you switch, deprioritize the old team. Deprioritize them slowly enough that you keep a good relationship with old VP, but let it be pretty clear that you're not gonna be doing any coding and only the bare minimum of consulting.
You should only debate promo likelihood while you're still on the team. Once you've decided to leave, drop it from discussion.