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Democracy at Work Is Bad
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8 points
by bluefone
1525 days ago
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Managers are outsourcing their work to teams, in the name of democracy. They ask the team to come up with goals and direction for the work, which was actually the job of the manager. Effectively this results in someone from the team making decisions on behalf of the manager though he is not a competent authority to do so, leading to poor decisions. Managers believe that this approach has benefits of democracy, empowers the team and makes them more committed to the work etc. However, a business org with roles is different from the political voters without roles. Organization roles have an accountability for the decisions made and they are expected to be experts in their domain. A voter in a democracy is not expected to be accountable for his decisions (there are no wrong votes) nor is expected to be expert in choosing a leader. A democracy is not meant for making decisions at work in an organizational context. |
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Should the team have a demo at the end of a sprint? Should we have a daily standup or even have a stand up at all? Is it the senior or principal engineer’s role to motivate people who aren’t delivering?
The problem was: Amazon expects a lot. It’s not the most human friendly coporate culture in the first place. Now you mix in people who interview well but can’t walk the walk. So manager after manager, you see an SDM earning $400K a year who outsources decision making, especially tough decisions, writing road maps, and he or she wants the “team” to make every decision - even when the team is not performing or doesn’t understand the vision to begin with.
This type of manager would “lead” their team to a disaster, and often times, some poor SDE 1 or SDE 2 would somehow get thrown under the bus.