[HN Gopher] The Flying Wedge
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The Flying Wedge
Author : imartin2k
Score : 22 points
Date : 2022-11-14 06:22 UTC (1 days ago)
(HTM) web link (lethain.com)
(TXT) w3m dump (lethain.com)
| avmich wrote:
| "Sluga Narodu", a series where current Ukrainian president,
| Volodymyr Zelenskyy, plays the main character, is about a man who
| became a president, and wants to do things right. One of his
| problems is where to find a good team in the country not known
| for established working procedures to find government
| professionals. After some attempts he settles on bringing his
| former colleagues - in fact, high school mates - who might be not
| the best professionally suited, but have other useful
| characteristics.
|
| It's a movie, sure, but the problem of creating a good team
| doesn't look particularly obvious.
| GartzenDeHaes wrote:
| Managers are often hired with the expectation that they will
| bring in a team with them, or that they have an extended network
| to pull people from. A lot of people in tech like to believe in
| meritocracy, but that's not how humans and their organizations
| really work much of the time.
| nigerian1981 wrote:
| Worked at a company where a new manager who also happened to be a
| partner at a recruitment agency joined. Wasn't long before we had
| a whole bunch of contractors joining from this agency.
| buran77 wrote:
| There are many reasons to do this, some more legitimate than
| others. This is the standard practice in many public
| institutions. The process looks like the standard recruitment
| process but the result is predetermined. Waste and inefficiency
| aren't really concerns so I've seen it more times than I can
| count.
|
| Entire departments created for family and friends of the manager.
| Or where they slowly infiltrate and displace the legitimate
| employees until there's a small core (maybe 20-25%) of people
| delivering on the work, and the rest are moochers who just hang
| around, go through motions, and collect a paycheck. And no, I am
| not exaggerating even a little bit.
| rexreed wrote:
| This approach only works when there's a lot of fat and churn in
| hiring where projects get spun up and hiring processes are
| blocks. This doesn't work well in environments of hiring freezes,
| project cancellations, and divisional spin-down. The Flying Wedge
| in artifact of excess and a symptom of organizational hiring and
| project management dysfunction.
| OkayPhysicist wrote:
| A lot of hiring process is less about finding the best candidate,
| and more about finding a "good enough" candidate with as high a
| success rate as possible. Hiring is expensive, so minimizing risk
| is pretty highly valued. People you already know are at least
| perceived as the lowest risk hires there are. So you hire people
| you already know, if you can.
|
| One man's cronyism is another's CYA.
| hitekker wrote:
| Another management article, another comfortable metaphor that
| doesn't say much more than uncomfortable terms like
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nepotism.
|
| The image of "a formation of enemies smashing through your lines"
| is fun but doesn't offer more than a sensation of gradually being
| overwhelmed. It implies more coordination and competency than
| exists, doesn't convey strategies against the maneuver, and also
| doesn't describe the consequences. Like the article said, it only
| applies to big companies and not really to smaller ones.
|
| I think the more fitting metaphor for nepotism is cancer. Friends
| hiring friends who hire friends often cannot manage their
| friends; let alone fire their friends. It's unconscious, easy to
| spread, easy to grow, all natural with bad long-term prospects
| for the host. Like the author implies, it's not a strategy for
| the "long game". Too bad management articles can't speak
| straightly for fear of losing readers who can't handle ethical
| quandaries.
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