Permabanned
- Joined
- 25 Aug 2013
- Posts
- 295
Preface: I'd recommend OcUK staff or those with monitored networks don't comment negatively - out of protection of their jobs 
Disclaimer: Managers may be offended or feel the need to justify themselves - please keep it civil on both sides!
Having worked in Secondary education, Academia and Law Enforcement, there are plenty of older people out there with far more wisdom and experience to reflect on changes within the workplace, however despite this, I am firm in my belief that a huge glut of Management across the country have certainly played a big part the downfall for many services, departments and businesses.
Let me elaborate:
1. Job protection
These are austere times in which people who were previously in highly secure jobs are at risk. If you analyse the severance lists and compulsory redundancy lists of your own workplace (or your family's), you may notice several trends.
These trends appear to be:
Despite the manager not having a valid contribution to the 'front line operations', their jobs are far more secure, and will often axe those beneath them before themselves. A family member is an Assistant Director of a rather large NHS institution. He has axed all his team due to job cuts (approximately £65k of personnel), yet he is now without anyone or any services to manage, yet he remains (on £75kpa).
2. Metrics
Instead of knowing that you do a good job, or having recommendations, letters/emails/phonecalls/discussions of appreciation, management fallback onto 'metrics'.
If you want new equipment, you need to prove that you had a need for it. Typically in several workplaces, you needed to show results over a minimum of 6 months, after which time you may have been struggling along tearing your proverbial hair out with inferior equipment.
Appreciative words/letters are meaningless and all the management care about is % statistics. If you had 100% glowing KPI (Key Performance Indicator) in one area, yet 90% in another, that is a fail.
If you excel in your area, you will rarely receive praise, and instead you will receive negativity from management, telling you how to improve or where they think you went wrong, or that you should apply yourself in a new area.
If there was any element of negativity, even the smallest niggle will be blown up out of all proportion and the impetus is to make you feel inferior.
3. Disconnected from the team
Under military and enforcement hierarchy, the teams/squads are lead by a team leader or a Sergeant. This is someone who is on the proverbial firing line with you, leading from the front - almost one of the 'lads' but enough respect to influence the team and get them to obey.
Nowadays, in other work places, the influx of 'management' appears to attract somewhat brutal 'hatchet men'. These are disconnected people who make large decisions on areas that they don't know very much about, and rarely, even know the names of their team.
4. Accountability
This should be one familiar to us all. You do well, secure a good deal, deliver an excellent report, solve a crime or other attainment, and your manager gets praised and recognition for it. You get nothing more than a begrudging 'well done' from the manager. At the end of the month/year, that manager gets a bonus. You get nothing.
Flipside, a team member is floundering badly due to mismanagement, and instead of the manager being accountable for dealing with the situation poorly/not-at-all, the team as a whole gets chastised and blamed. When team stand up for their innocence, it forces them to out their colleague and blame them, openly causing animosity - the management have manipulated the situation and used peer pressure to create a situation where they have to do nothing, and virtually create a pseudo-constructive dismissal situation.
What are your thoughts on the increase in management across the workforce - is it positive, negative or neutral?

Disclaimer: Managers may be offended or feel the need to justify themselves - please keep it civil on both sides!
Having worked in Secondary education, Academia and Law Enforcement, there are plenty of older people out there with far more wisdom and experience to reflect on changes within the workplace, however despite this, I am firm in my belief that a huge glut of Management across the country have certainly played a big part the downfall for many services, departments and businesses.
Let me elaborate:
1. Job protection
These are austere times in which people who were previously in highly secure jobs are at risk. If you analyse the severance lists and compulsory redundancy lists of your own workplace (or your family's), you may notice several trends.
These trends appear to be:
- The lowest paid are usually the first out.
- Managers will remain, even if they have no team. They will get protected salary and transferred to another team.
- Management get priority over skilled workforce for lower jobs, even if they do not have the skillset.
- Voluntary redundancy packages (I.e. Severance) are offered to everyone, yet management appear to get priority, leaving the lower workforce facing compulsory redundancy with no severance package.
Despite the manager not having a valid contribution to the 'front line operations', their jobs are far more secure, and will often axe those beneath them before themselves. A family member is an Assistant Director of a rather large NHS institution. He has axed all his team due to job cuts (approximately £65k of personnel), yet he is now without anyone or any services to manage, yet he remains (on £75kpa).
2. Metrics
Instead of knowing that you do a good job, or having recommendations, letters/emails/phonecalls/discussions of appreciation, management fallback onto 'metrics'.
If you want new equipment, you need to prove that you had a need for it. Typically in several workplaces, you needed to show results over a minimum of 6 months, after which time you may have been struggling along tearing your proverbial hair out with inferior equipment.
Appreciative words/letters are meaningless and all the management care about is % statistics. If you had 100% glowing KPI (Key Performance Indicator) in one area, yet 90% in another, that is a fail.
If you excel in your area, you will rarely receive praise, and instead you will receive negativity from management, telling you how to improve or where they think you went wrong, or that you should apply yourself in a new area.
If there was any element of negativity, even the smallest niggle will be blown up out of all proportion and the impetus is to make you feel inferior.
3. Disconnected from the team
Under military and enforcement hierarchy, the teams/squads are lead by a team leader or a Sergeant. This is someone who is on the proverbial firing line with you, leading from the front - almost one of the 'lads' but enough respect to influence the team and get them to obey.
Nowadays, in other work places, the influx of 'management' appears to attract somewhat brutal 'hatchet men'. These are disconnected people who make large decisions on areas that they don't know very much about, and rarely, even know the names of their team.
4. Accountability
This should be one familiar to us all. You do well, secure a good deal, deliver an excellent report, solve a crime or other attainment, and your manager gets praised and recognition for it. You get nothing more than a begrudging 'well done' from the manager. At the end of the month/year, that manager gets a bonus. You get nothing.
Flipside, a team member is floundering badly due to mismanagement, and instead of the manager being accountable for dealing with the situation poorly/not-at-all, the team as a whole gets chastised and blamed. When team stand up for their innocence, it forces them to out their colleague and blame them, openly causing animosity - the management have manipulated the situation and used peer pressure to create a situation where they have to do nothing, and virtually create a pseudo-constructive dismissal situation.
What are your thoughts on the increase in management across the workforce - is it positive, negative or neutral?