In the bustling tech hub of Bengaluru, three colleagues—Vinay, Meena, and Karthik—worked at a mid-sized startup called InnoSpark. The company was known for its innovation in AI-driven education platforms, and the trio were part of the product development team.
Vinay was charming and articulate, often the face of presentations. Meena was meticulous, a quiet powerhouse of ideas and execution. Karthik, the coder, was the backbone—his algorithms made the platform truly intelligent.
But there was a problem. Vinay had a habit. Whenever a project succeeded, he would subtly position himself as the key contributor. In meetings, he’d say things like, “I suggested that feature tweak,” or “I guided the team through that sprint,” even if the idea came from Meena or the code from Karthik. His charisma made it easy for others to believe him.
At first, Meena and Karthik let it slide. They thought, It’s just office politics. Let the work speak for itself. But over time, Vinay’s name started appearing alone in internal newsletters, client presentations, and even in the CEO’s praise.
Then came the big opportunity: a government-backed SkillTech initiative was scouting for partners. InnoSpark was shortlisted, and Vinay was chosen to lead the pitch.
But this time, Meena and Karthik decided to act.
They compiled a detailed report of their contributions, backed by version histories, emails, and design documents. Quietly, they shared it with the CEO, not to sabotage Vinay, but to ensure transparency.
The day of the pitch arrived. Vinay, confident as ever, began his presentation. But midway, a panelist asked a technical question—one that only Karthik could answer. Vinay fumbled. Another asked about user experience design—Meena’s domain. Again, Vinay stumbled.
The CEO, watching silently, stepped in. “Let’s bring in the team behind this,” he said. Meena and Karthik joined the stage, and the tone of the meeting shifted. The panel was impressed—not just by the product, but by the real minds behind it.
Vinay was later reassigned to a client-facing role. Meena became the new product lead, and Karthik was promoted to head of engineering.
Months later, InnoSpark was acquired by a global edtech giant. The new leadership reviewed past projects and team dynamics. Surprisingly, Vinay was offered a senior leadership role in the parent company—not for his technical skills, but for his ability to sell ideas and build relationships.
Meanwhile, Meena and Karthik, though brilliant, struggled to navigate the new corporate culture. Their work was solid, but they lacked Vinay’s flair for visibility and influence.
One evening, Meena received a message from Vinay:
“You were right to call me out. I deserved it. But remember—visibility matters as much as ability. Let’s not repeat each other’s mistakes.”
Meena stared at the screen, thoughtful. Maybe the real danger wasn’t just stealing credit—but failing to claim it when it was truly yours.
Final Moral:
Stealing credit is unethical and unsustainable and may bring short-term glory but erodes trust and exposes incompetence when challenge arise. On the other hand, staying invisible despite doing great work can be equally dangerous. Integrity must be paired with strategic visibility.

