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by JustExAWS
295 days ago
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The article is mostly about first level managers. I’ve never had any “manager” that really has any power over raises more than 3-4% or any real control over budgets. When I was being hired as a strategic hire for startups - and was being interviewed by the director or CTO - I specifically asked would I be reporting directly to them or another manager. I actually refused one job because I saw that the expectations they had from me and how far I was down in reporting structure was incongruous. |
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Maybe for faangs. At every company I have worked at with a manger title from 2019 to present, this was expected of people with "director" in their title and below.
You are not a manager if you do not get to decide where capital is deployed, without your boss's approval.
For anyone reading this comment, if you think you are a manager, ask yourself this question
"If I decided tomorrow that the company would be better off if I hired someone to do role {X}, can I open a new req for that role without permission?"
If the answer is no, you are a supervisor with less agency than the a Walmart deli leader circa 2010