Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

How many managers have you had that display these traits?

  1. Managers who look after only themselves

These managers aren't concerned with fulfilling the company mission or aligning team goals to organizational objectives. It's about their individual performance and getting that annual bonus. Managers with this attitude are playing for the name on the back of the jersey and are concerned only about their own accomplishments and how they look to their superiors.

  1.  Narcissistic tendencies

This manager often belittles a team member's work and might even ridicule staff at meetings. When he needs something from you, he may become threatening. At his most toxic, he will make you doubt yourself and your ultimate value to the company.

  1.  Treating people like numbers

In top-down power structures, employees are considered to be objects or expenses rather than assets; there is little concern for their happiness or well-being since the motive for hiring them was purely productivity and profit. In these pressure-cookers, there's little evidence of leaders displaying compassion and empathy in seeing employees as valued human beings. As a result, you'll encounter high levels of stress, turnover, absenteeism, and burnout.

  1. Too much control

The work environment is overbearing and stifling because managers want control over all decisions. Such managers distrust the team, so tasks rarely get delegated to others. There's hardly room for group discussion or input because the management style is autocratic, which limits creativity and the team's desire to learn new things. 

  1.  Taking the spotlight from the team

The team puts together a wonderful product and the client is happy with the results. And then it happens: The manager takes all the credit. No praise for the team, no celebration of everyone's success, no recognition of team members for their contributions. This type of manager will steal the light and thunder away from the team, which is a total employee-engagement ki-ler

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Post ID: @OP+1ngQzMqj

6 replies (most recent on top)

I've had a variety of quality in my 18 years of underling-ness, as i never saw myself as an overseer.
I'm about as individual a contributor as you'd ever want to see. And admire that in others. Old skul, me.

I can't say exactly when the quality in EM management skills started to decline, but it was declining when I started and with a few bumps of competency prior to 2010 has gone to an almost unvirtually Zero/Zed/Nada/Nyetsin today.

That said, and based on my experience with good quality overseers (as recently as 2019), one should not confuse self-confidence coupled with analytical skills with Narcissism.

Real problem is that a true Narcissist is confident in their analytical skills, as well as any other skill that is required by any circumstance. Juggling, groveling, whipping, whatever.

But that's where we're at.

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Post ID: @1rdy+1ngQzMqj

But if you were a manager we would all be amazed when you walked on water right?

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Post ID: @1nrd+1ngQzMqj

All of the above, in spades.

Is this taken directly from the EM management handbook???

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Post ID: @zev+1ngQzMqj

Sounds like the maintenance transformation managers

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Post ID: @djm+1ngQzMqj

Never let someone that’s never accomplished anything tell you how to do something. Problem is these narcissistic id--ts are really good at looking good on paper

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Post ID: @mgh+1ngQzMqj

Sounds like someone read my mangers resume. She’s locked in on these traits

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Post ID: @uwg+1ngQzMqj

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