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by gen220
975 days ago
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I like to call this zero sum management, and the parent to your post is a good example of positive sum management. As long as the business is making money, the prospect of it continuing to make money in the near and medium term future is not in jeopardy, and the actors involved are rational, capable and trustworthy, you should always favor the worker over the work. IME, zero sum management is an emergent symptom of a poorly performing business (maybe if we make everybody work 150% harder we’ll hit our targets this quarter), insecure executives (who don’t understand the work they manage), or poor hiring/firing practices (the only way to let somebody go is by overloading them and rewarding it with a poor performance review, or you’re hiring people who aren’t capable or don’t care). If you’re a manager forced to make zero sum decisions and don’t feel empowered to change the root of that problem, you should probably consider leaving — good environments grow people instead of expending people. |
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This breaks down when you have one player in the arena acting like a snake that tries to devour everyone else(eg. Elon Musk). He has the gift of attracting an endless horde of people to burn through and then tosses them aside once they are no longer useful to him(so many examples in his recent bio). The result is that they move faster than the competition and the others eventually get eaten alive. Normally word would get out that its not safe to work for such a character but SpaceX and Tesla are among the most desired employers that engineering graduates seek to work for. Tesla received 3.6 million job applications in 2022.