- cross-posted to:
- starwarsmemes@lemmy.world
- memes@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- starwarsmemes@lemmy.world
- memes@lemmy.world
Life Pro Tip: throw a pizza party for your landlord. Should work out right?
Life Pro Tip: throw a pizza party for your landlord. Should work out right?
I moved from IC to full time management this year and I’m struggling with this. I don’t control the money, the most I can do is give a glowing review and argue for my team members to get raises but the budget is not in my hands. I do have a small “team building” budget that I can spend on food and drinks so I take them out for a nice meal as often as I can. What else am I supposed to do?
Make sure you don’t overwork them?
Straight to jail
Yeah, people think management has all the power. Most of the time, they’re just following the direction they’re given by higher ups.
Also, they’re just trying to keep morale up with a pizza party. My boss personally buys the pizzas. She can’t control the wages or the hours. But at least she feels the need to reward people in a way that she’s able to. And hey, the pizza always gets eaten.
Yep, it makes sense when you consider the real nature of management and why it actually exists.
A rich man starts a company. He hires 12 people under him. He’s working a bit harder than he’d hoped, he’s constantly fielding questions and such but all is well. He needs to hire two more people. This is too many for him to manage directly, so he appoints two people to manage the other twelve as two teams of 6. All is well again.
They expand up to 30 people and suddenly they find the two managers are too stretched again! So another manager has to be introduced. When the company is over about 150 people, we even need multiple layers of management to keep this whole thing afloat as suddenly there are too many managers reporting to the founder or to the managers.
Yet at no point does the person who owns the company agree to give up any real control. If someone sets a budget he doesn’t like, he gives that control of the budget to someone else. Everyone in that hierarchy is acting on behalf of the owners under this arrangement.
The managers are just sat there with the mandate to make employees do more work under ever-increasing resource constraints, in the name of profit maximisation.
The management hierarchy functions as little more than a way of getting the owner’s instructions down to the employees by people who can interpret them as such, and to feed issues back to whatever level has the ability to deal with them (or declare them not an issue, as is often the case).
Management is employees who are paid to pretend that they have power.
Those lil outings can be appreciated as long as your team knows and can trust what you just told us. It’s understandable if you’re not in control of that and can only do so much. Sounds like you’re not at the tippy top. Standing up for your team is the best thing you can do for them. Don’t stop.
+1 for this.
Just be transparent and honest with your Team.
Explain to them how the actual budget is out of your direct control. However, also explain what knobs you and your IC can influence (for example being more visible with your Team/IC’s accomplishments at an organizational level).
Also many companies have a “flight risk” box, when calculating raises. Explain to your IC’s that you can hit this checkbox (if the IC wants), but it’s pretty much a onetime use button.
Don’t be afraid to rock the organizational boat. They won’t hold it against you, as you’re just doing your job. Your goal, first and foremost, is to get the most you can out of your Team and money is a good motivator.
If you need other “cheap” motivators:
edit: added more about Fantastic Friday and fix grammar.