The Death of the Corporate Job

(thestillwandering.substack.com)

7 points | by drankl 15 hours ago ago

5 comments

  • softwaredoug 15 hours ago ago

    In Tech there is the constant pivoting of direction that feels like progress but often it’s posturing. Each pivot creates a new half completed system that a leader can declare victory and receive a promotion. The mess is left for the boots on the ground to deal with.

    Behind the scenes informal lines of communication between ICs often actually get the work done.

    • billy99k 14 hours ago ago

      "Each pivot creates a new half completed system that a leader can declare victory and receive a promotion. The mess is left for the boots on the ground to deal with."

      Boy do I know this well. Our last VP had this grand vision. While pushing the rest of the team to our launch date through crazy deadlines, he actually wasn't doing anything he said he was also doing, which was required to make the deadline.

      We launched and handed a complete mess (to fix, which took months), and he quit a week later after receiving his six-figure bonus.

    • kerlue 13 hours ago ago

      “Behind the scenes informal lines of communication between ICs often actually get the work done.” Well said — this has also been my experience on many “new opportunity projects.”

  • billy99k 14 hours ago ago

    "The strangest part: everyone knows. When you get people alone, after work, maybe after they've had time to decompress, they'll admit it. Their job is basically elaborate performance art. They're professional email forwards."

    Perception increases value in many companies. Some people's job is just to add a nice coat of paint to the corporate machine, to make it look more attractive from the outside.

    I've never had or wanted this kind of job. The people that do should consider themselves lucky.

    • softwaredoug 14 hours ago ago

      The difference between successful and failing teams has often been a good product manager. And that often means someone skilled at navigating the politics to ensure the team has runway to accomplish what it needs to. I’m not good at that work, but I’m grateful for those who do it.

      Even when I’ve shipped an obviously good change, it can be bulldozed by political forces.

      I don’t know how you get work done in a reasonably sized group of people without good political navigators.