A skip-level meeting is a 1:1 conversation between an employee and their manager's manager (the "skip-level"), bypassing the direct reporting line. The meeting surfaces issues, builds relationships, and provides a channel for feedback that wouldn't come up in direct 1:1s. Skip-levels are typically scheduled quarterly or semi-annually as a complement to (not replacement for) regular 1:1s with the direct manager. It's the management tool that catches what hierarchical reporting misses.
The purpose:
Surface manager issues: employees rarely tell their direct manager that the manager is part of the problem. Skip-levels create a safe channel.
Build relationships across levels: connects senior leaders to individual contributors and middle managers.
Identify rising talent: skip-levels often reveal high performers who could be promoted faster.
Cross-team perspective: employees see issues across team boundaries that managers don't.
Cultural temperature: skip-levels give senior leaders direct read on company culture, not filtered through managers.
When to do skip-levels:
Quarterly cadence: standard at companies with 50+ employees.
Trigger-based: after a team change, before a major performance review cycle, when culture issues are suspected.
Annual minimum: even at smaller companies, annual skip-levels catch what regular 1:1s don't.
Voluntary by employee: some companies allow employees to request skip-levels with their manager's manager.
The skip-level conversation:
Opening signals: "this is a safe space; nothing you say will get back to your manager unfiltered."
Topics:
Don't ask: specific complaints about coworkers (creates triangulation problems).
Follow-up: skip-level commits to specific actions when appropriate, doesn't promise to fix everything.
The political reality:
Skip-levels create awkwardness if not handled well. Direct managers can feel undermined; employees can feel exposed if confidentiality is broken. Best practices:
Manager knows in advance: the direct manager is told the skip-level is happening (not blindsided).
Confidentiality respected: skip-level doesn't tell the direct manager specifics from the conversation.
No triangulation: skip-level doesn't take employee complaints and act on them without involving the direct manager appropriately.
Pattern over individual: skip-level looks for patterns across multiple skip-levels rather than acting on single conversations.
What skip-levels reveal that 1:1s don't:
Manager problems: employees rarely tell their direct boss the boss is the problem.
Skip-level potential: rising stars are often visible to skip-levels but not flagged by direct managers.
Cross-team friction: employees see organizational issues their direct manager may not.
Cultural drift: gradual culture changes show up in skip-levels before they reach senior leadership through other channels.
Skip-levels are the management equivalent of an executive physical. You probably don't need one this month, but if you skip them for years, things compound silently. The discipline that works: quarterly skip-levels for founders and execs with 2-3 levels of distance; safe-space framing consistently; respect confidentiality rigorously; look for patterns not individual data points. The pattern that fails: skip the skip-levels; direct managers control all information flow; founder discovers at all-hands that morale is in the basement and three teams have been miserable for a year.
What founders get wrong: Skipping skip-levels because "we're a small team, I see everyone all the time." Hallway conversations are not skip-levels. The structured private time with the skip-level dynamic is what produces the signal. The right discipline: scheduled quarterly skip-levels even at small scale; consistent confidentiality; pattern-based action.
Related: One-on-One Meetings · Performance Review · Employee Handbook · Career Ladder
What is a skip-level meeting?
A 1:1 between an employee and their manager's manager (the "skip-level"), bypassing the direct reporting line to surface issues and build relationships that wouldn't form in direct 1:1s. Quarterly cadence is standard.
How is a skip-level different from a 1:1?
A 1:1 is between an employee and their direct manager. A skip-level is between an employee and their manager's manager (or higher). Skip-levels catch what 1:1s miss (especially issues involving the direct manager).
How often should I do skip-levels?
Quarterly is standard at companies with 50+ employees. Annual minimum at smaller companies. Trigger-based (after team changes, before review cycles) supplements the cadence.
Should the direct manager know about the skip-level?
Yes, in advance. The skip-level isn't a secret; surprising the direct manager creates political problems. The conversation contents stay confidential; the fact of the meeting doesn't.
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