The invisible scorecard, part 3: When favoritism wins

By Koffi |

May 12, 2026 |

Favoritism rarely announces itself. It does not always walk into the room and say, “I have already chosen who matters here.” More often, it shows up quietly.

One person gets the high-visibility project.

One person gets invited to the important meeting.

One person gets early information.

One person gets coached before they fail.

One person gets forgiven after they fail.

One person gets described as having “potential,” while everyone else is expected to simply perform.

This is how favoritism works. It does not always look like open unfairness. Sometimes it looks like access.

Access to information. Access to patience. Access to opportunity. Access to the manager’s trust.

In management, this is often called favoritism bias. It happens when a manager gives certain employees more attention, support, flexibility, praise, or opportunity than others, even when the performance record does not justify the difference.

The favorite may not be the most talented person. They may not be the hardest worker. They may simply be the person the manager likes, understands, relates to, or sees as a reflection of themselves.

This is where favoritism often connects to similarity bias. Managers may favor people who communicate like them, think like them, share their background, match their personality, or make them feel comfortable. The person who feels familiar gets trusted faster. The person who feels different has to keep proving themselves.

That is the invisible scorecard.

On the official scorecard, the company may say it values performance, collaboration, innovation, ownership, and results. But on the invisible scorecard, the real question may be: Who does the manager already believe in?

Once a favorite is chosen, everything can begin to bend in their direction.

Their mistakes are treated as learning moments.

Your mistakes are treated as concerns.

Their confidence is called leadership.

Your confidence is called arrogance.

Their questions are thoughtful.

Your questions are resistance.

Their ambition is encouraged.

Your ambition is examined.

This is why favoritism is so damaging. It does not only give someone else an advantage. It changes the meaning of everyone’s behavior.

It also creates a quiet tax on the people outside the favored circle. They have to work harder to be noticed. They have to be more careful when they speak. They have to document more, explain more, and recover faster. They do not just do the job. They also carry the emotional weight of being overlooked.

Over time, favoritism poisons the culture. People stop believing that effort will be rewarded fairly. They stop sharing ideas freely. They stop trusting leadership language about growth and opportunity. The team may still function, but something important has been damaged.

Belief.

People can survive hard work. They can survive pressure. They can survive feedback. But it is much harder to stay motivated when the game feels rigged.

So what can you do when the favorites always get the opportunity?

First, name the pattern privately before you react publicly. Do not build your case on feelings alone. Track what is happening. Who gets the stretch assignments? Who gets public praise? Who gets access to leadership? Who gets second chances? Who gets development conversations? Patterns matter more than isolated moments.

Second, make your interest in growth visible. Sometimes managers assume silence means satisfaction. Say clearly, “I would like to be considered for future high-visibility projects,” or “I’m interested in taking on work that prepares me for the next level.”

That sentence puts your ambition on record.

Third, ask what it would take. Do not simply say, “Why was I not chosen?” Ask, “What skills or outcomes would make me a strong candidate for that kind of opportunity next time?” This forces the conversation toward criteria instead of preference.

Fourth, build relationships beyond one manager. If opportunity is controlled by a biased manager, you need more than one witness to your value. Collaborate well. Share your results. Let other leaders see your work. A single manager’s view should not become the entire company’s view of you.

Finally, be honest with yourself. Some environments can improve. Some cannot. If favoritism is occasional, it may be correctable. If favoritism is the culture, you may need a better room.

You do not need to become bitter. But you do need to become observant.

Favoritism teaches people a dangerous lesson: that being chosen matters more than being excellent.

Do not accept that lesson as truth.

Your work matters, even when it is overlooked.

Your ambition is valid, even when it is not encouraged.

Your value does not disappear because someone else is the favorite.

Law of distance

The law of distance

The law of distance teaches that proximity to power can help you understand decisions, pressures, and opportunities, but too much closeness can cloud your judgment. Around managers and leaders, the wise person avoids becoming either a distant critic or a loyal courtier. The goal is to stand close enough to see clearly and far enough to remain free.

Useful Truth

The law of useful truth

The law of useful truth teaches that honesty alone is not enough when speaking to managers, leaders, or people in power. Truth must be clear, timely, connected to consequence, and attached to a decision. The goal is not to unload frustration or perform courage. The goal is to help reality enter the room in a usable form.

Cognitive overload

Cognitive overload: the new weapon of mass distraction

Cognitive overload is no longer just a side effect of too much information. It has become a way to keep people reactive, distracted, and emotionally spent. When every outrage demands attention, the important issue quietly leaves the room. The answer is not indifference. It is disciplined attention, focused on what still matters after the noise fades away.

After the storm

The law of emotional weather

The law of emotional weather teaches that emotion often enters the room before judgment. Around managers, leaders, and people in power, anger, fear, resentment, and insecurity can distort even a valid message. The goal is not to become emotionless. The goal is to recognize the storm before speaking so truth can arrive clearly and usefully.

Perception

The law of managed perception

Good work does not always speak for itself. In the presence of power, competence must be made visible, clear, and easy to understand. The law of managed perception is not about manipulation. It is about making your value legible so managers, leaders, and decision-makers can recognize what is actually there before judgment is formed.

Law of invisible burden

The law of the invisible burden

Power often looks easier from the outside because most of its weight is hidden. The law of the invisible burden teaches us not to judge leaders only by the visible parts of their role. Before criticizing the king, the manager, or the superior, we should first ask what pressures, tradeoffs, and responsibilities we cannot see.