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by jauntywundrkind 1065 days ago
It might be helpful to ask, in what ways is someone superior? Are you the superior master of code skills & technical decision making? Are you the superior master at unit testing?

If you are indeed superior across every dimension, you either have a bad team & should go work somewhere else, or you are clipping your teammates wings & obstructing their development.

Do you have a position of superiority in the org chart? In many companies, yes. But also: you are overhead. You are a resource there to keep the engineers doing the thing. They are the ones doing the actual task the company actually wants done, not you: you may be higher up the org chart, but you are actually playing a superior, not lead role.

1 comments

Superior, as a noun, quite literally is "Having higher rank"

If you're in management, you have the decision making power - and are the superior.

Ya, when the manager is comfortable dictating and the staff is comfortable being dictated (use whatever term you like), you have a far simpler and efficient work environment. If you can relax and just trust your boss, then you can also trust that you have it easier, especially if they're good at their job. They might be having to deal with someone that just treats them like overhead, who was most likely not hired by them.

Good managers are also good with their boss, and likely a big part of how they were promoted to manager in the first place.

You can outrank people to whom your technical skills are inferior (or nonexistent). It depends entirely on the organization and its culture (is there some MBA glass ceiling? is there twin-track?) Most places aren't meritocracies, including the ones that claim to be. Conversely, technical skills may not matter above some ceiling. Again, depends entirely on the culture the organization chooses.
Yes, superior rank and superior skill are completely separate. There is zero need to confuse the two.

In a meritocracy, you may expect the superior rank to be given to those with superior skill, but the skill isn't what gives them the power once they have the rank, and it's the skill to get the rank that gets the rank, not the skill of your job.