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by halo
1499 days ago
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I’d argue a major role of a manager is to make decisions and take responsibility for them - it’s not employees don’t “want to”, that’s usually not their job. Everyone unilaterally making their own decisions creates an inconsistent mess. To me, it sounds like what they did is what good employees should do which is consider the problem
and present it in a way that made the decision trivially easy for you. You can still overrule it if it’s not reasonable. If you want to say “use your initiative if X” then fine, but the scope of that should be reasonably clear. It’s always a bit of a balancing act, of course. When it comes to decision making, managers span from people who are too willing to make decisions without a full understanding the situation and detail, often to the detriment of their team and customers who they are distanced from, to those who outright refuse to make decisions. There are lots of bad managers. |
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Nobody is talking about people unilaterally making their own decisions. We are talking about intelligent people discussing among each other and reaching a consensus together without having someone else tell them what to think.
> You can still overrule it if it’s not reasonable.
If anything, this would be someone unilaterally making their own decision!
The manager is not some sort of superhuman that alone knows better than the rest of the employees together. Maybe the manager has more information than the rest of the employees, but then the manager can share that and the other employees can revise their decision in light of the new information.