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by bartread 1862 days ago
I've encountered similar time-wasting behaviour with large companies, although not specifically Unilever.

In most cases I don't even think it's malicious: just that if you work somewhere in the middle of a giant corporation you forget the value of time. I suspect this is perhaps because it may take you years to deliver value for any initiative or project (assuming you can do it at all). Whereas smaller companies might be able to deliver the same value for themselves in days, weeks, or months so there's always this sense of momentum and urgency.

This is related to another theory I have about large corporations which is that if you work for them too long it robs you of initiative and possibly even makes you become stupid. Again, there are doubtless parts of these companies where this is more or less true, and possibly even some where it doesn't work this way at all, but I've had to deal with too many mid-level employees at large corporations now who simply can't get anything done, can't think for themselves, and for whom even the most basic of tasks can drag out for months. (It gets frustrating endlessly having to spoonfeed and restate next steps, and correct misunderstandings and misinformation.)

I realise this is quite a jaded view so I'd be happy to hear counterpoints.

1 comments

I think this is the natural destination of bureaucracies, because the entire point of a bureaucracy is to reduce risk by creating a documented process for anything you could imagine wanting to do, leaving employees with no opportunities to think for themselves or be creative. So they just get to work, watch the clock, mindlessly follow the rules, and then go home. I suspect the lack of imagination required to work such a job draws people who prioritise stability and predictability over creativity.