We don't promote the most qualified to leadership positions anymore. Our work groups are now headed by "Managers" that were selected by others outside the work group for reasons unrelated to the skills, experience, and vision needed to lead an organization effectively.
You don't get Refineries headed by all women because they were each coincidentally the best needed to run those organizations. They were selected to meet a goal "We need more women in Exec positions, etc." This isnt necessarily a bad goal. Its just a different set of priorities for advancement unrelated to actual, relative, competitive, performance that some of us believe once existed (10+ years ago, like the poster below that described when 'advisors' were created to fill the skill gap missing in the new management class).
This is similar to the cultural change underway in the US today that seeks "equity" to replace "equal opportunity". The latter looks for merit to identify the best leaders, whoever they might be, where the former is designed to achieve a specific outcome. If your promotion helps achieve the outcome the company has designed, congratulations, you won the manager lottery and will think highly of this company. Just don't confuse your promotion as a true reflection of your relative skills, capabilities and performance. You were chosen over much more qualified talent to meet a preordained goal. You have been placed on a throne to rule on the ideas and opportunities developed by others. Don't believe this will work anywhere outside EM without the support of the working class you were appointed over (How did Rex do?).
If you alternatively realize your advancement is no longer tied to your actual skills and contributions (and will never be again) because the company has other goals than choosing the most qualified, experienced, technically competent, leader (all factors within your control to improve) for factors outside your control (gender, ethnicity, YEE, Management development, "CL potential", etc) then you need to reassess how much you care about that and whether you accept this new reality. You can't change it. The people with the power to change it are the ones that have most benefited from the system that is.
This is true today of nearly every manager and new campus hire. We no longer seek the best among us. We simply want them to "meet the qualifications" so that other factors can be used to achieve the desired outcome.
Sad? Maybe. Its a different company from the one I joined and not one I'd join again today.
For those that understand the reference, "Anyway, that's all I've got. Go away now."