I was specifically referring to these two passages:
When asked who gets ahead, an executive vice-president at Weft Corporation says: The guys who want it [get ahead]. The guys who work. You can spot it in the first six months. They work hard, they come to work earlier, they leave later. They have suggestions at meetings. They come into a business and the business picks right up. They don’t go on coffee breaks down here [in the basement]. You see the parade of people going back and forth down here? There’s no reason for that. I never did that. If you need coffee, you can have it at your desk. Some people put in time and some people work.
For those in middle management who want to succeed, that’s not how things work. Everything you are is on the table. You’d better be all-in.
That hasn’t been my experience. In my experience, those who get ahead are not those who work hardest, but those who are most visible. You can “come in earlier, and leave later”, but it won’t matter if your project is not one that’s a priority for senior management. Moreover, that sort of “working harder” doesn’t seem to correlate with whether your project gets picked up as a priority or not.
So even a 9-5 guy who goes fishing is still likely to play politics, avoid rocking the boat, pass the blame downhill
To a first approximation, that’s true of every job role, whether it’s front line, middle management, senior management, or the C-suite. Nobody wants to look bad. Nobody wants to be blamed for a problem that they don’t perceive was their fault. My disagreement is not with the fact that people play politics at work. Of course people will play politics; it’s human nature to have politics when you have more than two people attempting to make a decision on which there’s meaningful disagreement.
What I disagree with is the notion of middle management as a sort of all-consuming lifestyle that totally snuffs out your ability to be yourself outside of work. Maybe it’s like that at some firms (like finance, or law), but my intuition is that most firms are not like that. Most firms are less American Psycho and more Dilbert.
I think the model here is intended to apply specifically to upper-senior-management (I think you touched on this elsethread. I think it was basically a mistake not to focus on that more specifically)
Yeah, I would agree with that. I was really confused when the OP kept referring to “middle management”.
(Is considering oneself “middle management” like considering oneself “middle-class”—i.e. everyone considers themselves that, even when they’re far above the actual median?)
I think an issue was that, in a 25 tier company, “middle management” (i.e. “tier 13?”) is above what one might colloquially refer to as “middle management.”
A 25-depth reporting chain, where each manager only has 2 reports, is 33 million employees. Do these companies have long segments of managing just one person, who then manages one who manages at most a few? I would like a specific example, please.
25 salary grades or titles is pretty common, and gives room for in-place promotions, where you are paid more without changing the reporting structure. And doesn’t really map to the pain described here.
That’s fair, though I do wonder how representative 25-person-deep reporting chains are. I’ve never worked in a company that had a reporting chain > 8 and my dad works in a company with a reporting chain of 12. 25 seems… incredibly painful.
I don’t know what a more representative company size was, mostly just guessing the causal factors leading to Zvi summarizing it as “middle management.”
I think the model requires 2 things:
being promoted far enough into the system that there’s a basic assumption of competency across all dimensions
being surrounded, in both directions, by at least 2 layers of management (separating you from anyone who’s got more direct contact with reality).
The second bit requires 5 levels (level 1 is in direct contact with object-level-workers, level 5 is in contact with the CEO who at least hopefully cares about the bigger picture. But level 3 is steps removed from either). I think it makes sense for this to cause epistemic warping, whether or not it comes with any pathologies relating to competition.
The first bit… probably depends on your industry and culture. My made-up-ass-pull-guess is that you need more like 4 levels of promotion before there’s a plausible assumption that “everyone is competent” (so, combined with #2, companies with around seven layers).
I was specifically referring to these two passages:
That hasn’t been my experience. In my experience, those who get ahead are not those who work hardest, but those who are most visible. You can “come in earlier, and leave later”, but it won’t matter if your project is not one that’s a priority for senior management. Moreover, that sort of “working harder” doesn’t seem to correlate with whether your project gets picked up as a priority or not.
To a first approximation, that’s true of every job role, whether it’s front line, middle management, senior management, or the C-suite. Nobody wants to look bad. Nobody wants to be blamed for a problem that they don’t perceive was their fault. My disagreement is not with the fact that people play politics at work. Of course people will play politics; it’s human nature to have politics when you have more than two people attempting to make a decision on which there’s meaningful disagreement.
What I disagree with is the notion of middle management as a sort of all-consuming lifestyle that totally snuffs out your ability to be yourself outside of work. Maybe it’s like that at some firms (like finance, or law), but my intuition is that most firms are not like that. Most firms are less American Psycho and more Dilbert.
I think the model here is intended to apply specifically to upper-senior-management (I think you touched on this elsethread. I think it was basically a mistake not to focus on that more specifically)
Yeah, I would agree with that. I was really confused when the OP kept referring to “middle management”.
(Is considering oneself “middle management” like considering oneself “middle-class”—i.e. everyone considers themselves that, even when they’re far above the actual median?)
I think an issue was that, in a 25 tier company, “middle management” (i.e. “tier 13?”) is above what one might colloquially refer to as “middle management.”
A 25-depth reporting chain, where each manager only has 2 reports, is 33 million employees. Do these companies have long segments of managing just one person, who then manages one who manages at most a few? I would like a specific example, please.
25 salary grades or titles is pretty common, and gives room for in-place promotions, where you are paid more without changing the reporting structure. And doesn’t really map to the pain described here.
That’s fair, though I do wonder how representative 25-person-deep reporting chains are. I’ve never worked in a company that had a reporting chain > 8 and my dad works in a company with a reporting chain of 12. 25 seems… incredibly painful.
I don’t know what a more representative company size was, mostly just guessing the causal factors leading to Zvi summarizing it as “middle management.”
I think the model requires 2 things:
being promoted far enough into the system that there’s a basic assumption of competency across all dimensions
being surrounded, in both directions, by at least 2 layers of management (separating you from anyone who’s got more direct contact with reality).
The second bit requires 5 levels (level 1 is in direct contact with object-level-workers, level 5 is in contact with the CEO who at least hopefully cares about the bigger picture. But level 3 is steps removed from either). I think it makes sense for this to cause epistemic warping, whether or not it comes with any pathologies relating to competition.
The first bit… probably depends on your industry and culture. My made-up-ass-pull-guess is that you need more like 4 levels of promotion before there’s a plausible assumption that “everyone is competent” (so, combined with #2, companies with around seven layers).