Thoughts on production, alienation, and ideology

Month: January 2022 (Page 1 of 2)

Corporate Politics 101: The Peter Principle Now

I think quite a few old timers know about the Peter Principle. But for anyone who doesn’t, the basic idea is that people keep getting promoted for doing a good job until they get to a level in the corporate hierarchy where they can’t do a good job. And so, they stagnate at that level. Stated simply, the Peter Principle says that people ‘rise to their level of incompetence.’

Neat trick, right?

Does it still work in the 2020s? Sort of. The major difference now is that people rarely stick around at the same company long enough to fulfill the Peter Principle. At the very least, they spend only a few years at their level of incompetence. Maybe they stick it out for 5-10 years. And then they make a parallel move to a new company!

That shows the need for an updated Peter Principle. When people hit their level of incompetence, they go to a new company and perform the job incompetently over there.

What’s fun about today’s corporate world is that HR plays directly into this. By requiring years of experience in a job to get hired into that job, HR discourages good employees from applying for a promotion into a job they might do well. Instead, they hire experienced, but mediocre, middle managers and project managers.

Go figure.

Image Source

‘Bark at the Moon’ Isn’t a Political Strategy

Every now and then, I blog about political and movement strategy. Those posts hit certain themes. I’ll hit those themes here, too. But I hope to do so in a fresh way. So, I’ll start with a claim: ‘Bark at the moon’ is a terrible political strategy. In fact, it’s not a political strategy at all.

It’s certainly not a strategy when it comes in the form of social media slacktivism. But it’s also a non-strategy in its more sophisticated forms.
Continue reading

The Baseball Lockout Continues

I know we’re pretty far away from the 2022 baseball season. But for those of you who follow baseball in the off-season, you might have noticed there’s a baseball lockout. Owners started the fight almost two months ago by calling a lockout, and the baseball lockout continues.

What’s happening here?

Continue reading

Corporate Politics 101: Office Space Was Right

I think most Americans over the age of 35 watched Office Space at some point. But quite a few of my readers are under 35 and missed it. So, yeah, the film’s 20+ years ago. Maybe some of the references strike us as dated. But the movie sure was right. About more or less everything.

Office Space talked about bullshit jobs well before Graeber got around to it. The characters in the film still exist in many companies. And as for the basic corporate structure – the way companies divide between competent workers and foolish leaders? Yeah, it still works about like that.

And so, I’d highly recommend readers watch Office Space again (or for the first time). It goes well with some of my posts on corporate ideology and on the Great Resignation. It sheds lots of light on the white-collar world.

Image Source

The Curious Case of Davan the Communist

Davan Communist Asimov Foundation

I’m a sci-fi fan, in general, and an Isaac Asimov fan, in particular. I’ve written about him before, both for the good and the bad. Since there’s a TV show out on his Foundation Series, I wanted to re-read some of the Foundation books.

While reading Prelude to Foundation, a brief chapter on a character named Davan captured my interest. I’ll call him Davan the Communist. He collects some themes of organizing on the left.

Continue reading

« Older posts