Thread regarding IBM layoffs

Remote Work Is a Leadership Ki-ler

Anyone who thinks that AK isn't in touch with former CEOs and vice versa, is deluding themselves.
Get ready for the imminent RTO announcement for everyone, managers as well as non-managers.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/we-need-leaders-so-get-back-to-the-office-remote-work-b6756b9e

By: Louis V. Gerstner Jr.
April 25, 2024 1:17 pm ET

It is time to deflate the hot-air balloon known as remote work. We have lurched, in an almost lemming-like way, from a view that work is done five days a week in an office to the fantasy that it is perfectly acceptable to stay home two, three or even five days a week.

I recognize that there are certain types of work that don’t require regular attendance in a communal location. This includes coders, writers, data-entry personnel and many others. The class of employees for whom working in a solitary setting is highly detrimental is people who aspire to lead or manage others in an academic, nonprofit, governmental or business institution. One learns how to manage and lead principally by watching others demonstrate how—or how not—to do so.

As a young associate at a consulting firm, I had a wonderful mentor with whom I worked closely. I was in his office frequently and grew increasingly curious about why he had two inboxes. I eventually asked him about it, and he answered that one contained items he knew were of high priority and would require his personal attention. The other contained items he thought would either disappear on their own or get taken care of by others.

This was a crucial lesson that became an important pillar of my approach to personal management. Time management may be the most underrated capacity of great managers. Controlling your own time well and not permitting others to dictate how you spend it is one of the determinants of successful leadership. Watching others is really the only way to develop a command of this essential practice.

Another skill you can’t learn sitting at home is motivating others to reach for success. Leadership involves getting people to do things they otherwise wouldn’t. This requires articulating and continually reinforcing an external purpose and a visceral sense of teamwork. It isn’t a cold digital process; it is a human and at times personal connection with all the members of your team. It manifests itself in immediate and constructive feedback. None of us are born with these skills, nor are we conditioned or trained to do them well. Watching others who have successfully developed this leadership capacity is, in my mind, the singular way to learn it. There are, of course, many other skills that are learned “on the job” principally by watching others demonstrate them. We also learn a lot by failure—not only our own but that of others.

Think about the crucial skill of managing meetings well or preparing compelling documents. This frequently applies to new CEOs, who suddenly must manage boards of directors. A new executive who never had the chance to watch his predecessor will often find this aspect of the job challenging.

Years ago, I gave a talk to business students. One of them asked me a pointed question: “What is the one thing that keeps us from rising to the level of CEO, a position we all aspire to?” My answer wasn’t what the students expected. Talented, highly motivated people fall off the career track, I said, because they fail to work continually on expanding and improving their managerial skills. It’s a lifelong pursuit.

America desperately needs leadership today. Those who aspire to be part of the solution and tackle some of the great challenges we face should get their butts into the office and learn how to manage and lead others.

Mr. Gerstner, retired chairman and CEO of IBM Corp., is chairman of Gerstner Philanthropies.

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Post ID: @OP+1sdzu8nU

17 replies (most recent on top)

RTO already happened. Those who work within 50 miles of any IBM office are supposed to be in the office 3 days a week. Managers not within 50 miles a couple months ago were given the move or lose your job ultimatum. Next step will be for all employees in Software and Infrastructure to be working from a Strategic Site. Those not within a 50 mile radius of a strategic site will be required to move or be terminated.

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Post ID: @4fwb+1sdzu8nU

Lou: the Original Dinobaby - stuck in the past.

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Post ID: @4luq+1sdzu8nU

Lou is a hot air balloon

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Post ID: @3iyv+1sdzu8nU

Besides it is total outdated bull from times when technology did not enable remote collaboration, they closed the offices, many people have nowhere to go. Moving is not easy. Prices are high wit stagnant IBM compensation, moving impacts family members with their jobs and schools. Sorry Lou, most of us do not have the choices you had and still have.

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Post ID: @2qgk+1sdzu8nU

Most overrated CEO of the past 50 years

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Post ID: @2iis+1sdzu8nU

Someone wrote "Apple innovates nothing, it's all marketing and other cultish BS."

Talk about bullsh-t. Apple realizes that a product that no one can figure out how to use may as well not exist - because no one with a choice will ever spend their money on that sh-t. This means consumers. Apple knows design, which means they know what people want and need.

IBM may have once had a lot of R&D but has doubled on "enterprise" solutions - solutions so fu--ing awful, no one with a choice would ever spend a penny on them. Terrible to use, with at most some shallow visual design.

IBM had a brief flirtation with "design" but limited its influence by letting execs and techies dictate the user experience. Yet another failed experiment that others, Apple in this case, have made them $trillion companies; but all IBM can do is buy more tech and layoff more people.

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Post ID: @1jiy+1sdzu8nU

Executives love the office because they get the st-----g that their egotistical narcissistic personalities crave and they don't get at home. Their families know this and can safely withhold making them powerless eunuchs.

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Post ID: @1wix+1sdzu8nU

You laggards need to get your butts into the office or else!
Signed, AK and Lou

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Post ID: @1cpv+1sdzu8nU

Lou was not a leader. He was a dictator. Nobody liked him. The elephant danced because it had a tyrant with a .30-06 rifle pointed at it with a pile of dead elephants stacked behind him.

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Post ID: @1qou+1sdzu8nU

"Innovation has nothing to do with how many R&D dollars you have. When Apple came up with the Mac, IBM was spending at least 100 times more on R&D." -Steve Jobs, Apple CEO. And still... Apple innovates nothing, it's all marketing and other cultish BS.

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Post ID: @1ikk+1sdzu8nU

Gerstner is still longing for the Master - Serf relationship he relished and enforced with vigor during his years as CEO - Sorry , but Millennials and younger generations are not buying it and will never do so!

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Post ID: @1juz+1sdzu8nU

Young people with limited experience get su-kered by these bizarre and usually nonsensical quotes made by that these lucky jerks who climbed the corporate ladder for reasons unrelated to any kind of intelligence or merit. It's all BS. If you're reasonably intelligent, just ask yourself what makes sense to you, and go with that. There is very little real wisdom, especially from those who climb the corporate ladder, because most of them did that because of a particular personality that favors a** kissing over actual accomplishment. Corollary: if you have somebody filling up your LinkedIn feed with quotes, you can be pretty sure they're doing it because they think it advances their career. Block them or cut them off.

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Post ID: @1hvg+1sdzu8nU

To the originator of this post, what decade are you living in?

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Post ID: @1zrp+1sdzu8nU

Gerstner retired but is still in IBM system as an employee. Just go already. He's probably still showing up in the office daily and pi---d it isn't like the good old days.

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Post ID: @1nrr+1sdzu8nU

Boomer logic.

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Post ID: @xsr+1sdzu8nU

Yeah, his experience is about 30 Years out-of-date. He should shut-up and go back to enjoying his retirement.

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Post ID: @aar+1sdzu8nU

layoffs without the severance, as people resign in droves

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Post ID: @maf+1sdzu8nU

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