Thread regarding IBM layoffs

On Management - HBR - Harvard Business Review

First, Let’s Fire All the Managers, Harvard Business Review

Management is the least efficient activity in your organization.

Think of the countless hours that team leaders, department heads, and vice presidents devote to supervising the work of others. Most managers are hardworking; the problem doesn’t lie with them. The inefficiency stems from a top-heavy management model that is both cumbersome and costly.

A hierarchy of managers exacts a hefty tax on any organization. This levy comes in several forms. First, managers add overhead, and as an organization grows, the costs of management rise in both absolute and relative terms. A small organization may have one manager and 10 employees; one with 100,000 employees and the same 1:10 span of control will have 11,111 managers. That’s because an additional 1,111 managers will be needed to manage the managers. In addition, there will be hundreds of employees in management-related functions, such as finance, human resources, and planning. Their job is to keep the organization from collapsing under the weight of its own complexity. Assuming that each manager earns three times the average salary of a first-level employee, direct management costs would account for 33% of the payroll. Any way you cut it, management is expensive.

Second, the typical management hierarchy increases the risk of large, calamitous decisions. As decisions get bigger, the ranks of those able to challenge the decision maker get smaller. Hubris, myopia, and naïveté can lead to bad judgment at any level, but the danger is greatest when the decision maker’s power is, for all purposes, uncontestable. Give someone monarchlike authority, and sooner or later there will be a royal screwup. A related problem is that the most powerful managers are the ones furthest from frontline realities. All too often, decisions made on an Olympian peak prove to be unworkable on the ground.

Third, a multitiered management structure means more approval layers and slower responses. In their eagerness to exercise authority, managers often impede, rather than expedite, decision making. Bias is another sort of tax. In a hierarchy the power to k–l or modify a new idea is often vested in a single person, whose parochial interests may skew decisions.

Finally, there’s the cost of tyranny. The problem isn’t the occasional control freak; it’s the hierarchical structure that systematically disempowers lower-level employees. For example, as a consumer you have the freedom to spend $20,000 or more on a new car, but as an employee you probably don’t have the authority to requisition a $500 office chair. Narrow an individual’s scope of authority, and you shrink the incentive to dream, imagine, and contribute.

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Post ID: @OP+14P1OTFk

4 replies (most recent on top)

My experience with people with MBAs is that the quality of the manager is inversely proportional to how long it takes you to discover that they have an MBA. I've worked with people that I thought were smart, insightful, and cared professionally about their team... and three years into knowing them, discovered they had an MBA.

Conversely, the people who let you know in the first week (or even have it in their email .sig) are invariably as dumb as a sack of rocks, incapable of any creative thought, and can't deal with anything that wasn't a case study in college.

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Post ID: @9ecu+14P1OTFk

Nothing wrong with MBA degrees. The folks that are getting them tend to be douches - and, they'd still be douches regardless of the degree. The'd still backsab and climb up, seek power and end up in mgmt. Have you notice that MBAs from less prestigous schools are less annoying, are less agressive and tend not to backstab... So, really, it's not the degree that's the problem - the folks that 'have it in them' are attacted to certain types of schools. Many of them are smart and ariculate but cannot manage jackshit.

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Post ID: @1pxw+14P1OTFk

@fnf+ - but the MBAs are the true leaders and chosen ones! You don't even have to ask them because they're all more than eager to tell you they are! (I was at Amazon for a while and I do have to admit the idealogy of "MBA Superiority" is worse there.)

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Post ID: @1mus+14P1OTFk

The 1st thing to do is fire all the MBAs. Harvard ones first.

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Post ID: @fnf+14P1OTFk

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