Death of the Middle Manager

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Death of the Middle Manager

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n the most memorable scene of the classic 1936 silent film “Modern Times,” Charlie Chaplin’s alter ego, the Little Tramp, depicts the quintessential 20th century struggle in a most literal way. As a factory worker trying to keep pace with runaway technology, he frenetically weaves in and out among giant gears, effectively swallowed by machinery, becoming little more than a cog. All the while, he is controlled by a menacing boss, a cipher who appears as a looming face on a screen. That, as Chaplin saw it, was the damaging result of modern industrialization: dehumanized workers reduced to pawns, robbed of initiative and creativity in the service of greater efficiency. In a recent article in Harvard Business Review, the London Business School professor Lynda Gratton offered a similar viewpoint. The Industrial Revolution, she

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posited, mechanized work in a way that destroyed the value of craftsmanship and mastery. Today’s technology revolution, however, is restoring those values, she claimed, and by doing so is eliminating the need for an entire class of middle managers who, like Chaplin’s looming boss, are little more than pedantic hall monitors. “Now technology itself has become the great general manager,” Gratton wrote. “It can monitor performance closely, provide instant feedback, even create reports and presentations. Moreover, skilled teams are increasingly self-managed. That leaves people with general management skills in a very vulnerable position. Plus, thanks to the Internet and search engines, everyone now knows or can know something about everything. There is little competi-

tive advantage in being a jack-of-alltrades when your main competitor might be Wikipedia.” Adding to the endangerment of the middle-manager species, Gratton contends, is a cultural shift among younger workers in attitudes toward general management. Her research, as well as that of others, shows that so-called Generation Y employees are often dismissive of general managers, whom they see as there simply to keep track of what they do, but who add no insight, creativity or innovation of their own. Younger workers believe that what general managers do, if necessary at all, can be done easily and better by self-managing teams and automated processes. What Generation Y does respect, Gratton adds, is a mentor who demonstrates mastery of his or her craft and can impart it to others.

Yuko JamesShimizu Krause

Has technology made middle managers obsolete?

The Korn/Ferry Institute


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Death of the Middle Manager by Korn Ferry - Issuu