Submitted by Sorin61 t3_10n7e83 in technology
9-11GaveMe5G t1_j67ehsn wrote
Every manager I've ever had told me they cared about me as a person. They would never!
figmaxwell t1_j68g7ma wrote
I’m a union laborer and I got into it with my boss over how much he and my employer* “care about me.” I was reeling from long Covid and he kept forcing 12 hour days on me despite my complaints, so I eventually got a doctors note saying I needed to work less. He didn’t like that so he told me I either had to get a new note saying I was 100% or go out on disability. Gave me some BS about how “the company needs to make sure you’re safe.” No, the company needs to make sure that if something happens to me, they can’t be blamed for it. He called me stupid for saying that, right in front of my union steward, so I filed a harassment grievance haha.
surnik22 t1_j693dzw wrote
I’ll never understand why middle managers care so much.
Trying their hardest to help the companies bottom line which doesn’t even help them
figmaxwell t1_j693lzt wrote
Our sups definitely get paid more the more they cut out of the budget, and I’m pretty sure they’re incentivized the more they discipline us too. Also the less they help the company’s bottom line, the more likely they are to get canned.
The_Original_Gronkie t1_j69ljmd wrote
The hardest move is jump from worker to manager, and there is usually a big difference in income and benefits. So once they are there, they want to move up and make even more money, and get even more perks, like company cars and going to conferences and conventions. Their Allegiance switches from the workers to the management, and they need to prove that loyalty. The competition gets fiercer and fiercer the farther up the ladder they go, because there are fewer and fewer spots, so they have to prove the ability to get results, even if they have to force those results. Eventually they start to see the workers as just getting in the way of a better way of life for him and his family.
holydragonnall t1_j69xwz5 wrote
To be blunt, it’s managers all the way to the top. Every dumb thing a middle manager has ever said to you was caused by a dumb thing their manager told them needed to happen. My previous job was a middle management position where I was finally making decent money, but the amount of bullshit I had to shield my guys from was just too much for me, and at the end of the day I’d still have to require them to do some dumb shit that they hated because it was mandated by my OWN bosses. I quit that job because everyone above my level was a completely inhuman piece of shit and I couldn’t morally justify working for them, and also I didn’t want to be the bad guy.
SFWxMadHatter t1_j6b2i8i wrote
This is one of the best things about my supervisor at work. She's kind of flaky but a good person and just does not give a shit about corporate politics. Several people should be fired just by attendance if they had their way but it's all various family issues so as long as production stays on target she keeps them off our back.
lookmeat t1_j6bkdn0 wrote
You're looking at this backwards.
The only employees who make it to middle management are employees who authentically already care...
...about the company's bottom line. It doesn't matter that 90% of people realize it is a bad idea and wouldn't do it, only that 10% gets to go beyond team manager. And when you look at the distribution of employees this makes sense. As to why? Well that's an individual thing. Maybe naivety and really believing trickle down and they'll be protected for helping the company. Maybe greed and ambition and they realize this is what they have to do to move upward. Maybe some level of sociopathy or narcissism where the desire for power alone is enough to get them going.
And they really get nothing. During layoffs most people don't realize, but middle managers are on the chopping block by default. Less slaves means you need less whip masters. There's no loyalty, benefit or protection as a middle management, all their job is to be disposable villains who take them blame so execs can keep collecting their bonuses with employee moral untouched.
So yeah, makes perfect sense. If there's enough evidence that employees could sue the company, all they have to do is act "appalled" at the actions of "a rogue manager" and then "promptly discipline" them by firing them. While they get other mid-mgmt to keep trying to bust the union through other methods until something sticks.
Much_Writing_7575 t1_j6bluqc wrote
I had a temp job at eBay's headquarters for a couple of weeks and it was a fucking shit show.
My manager was an alcoholic and forced all his employees to drink with him after work.
The IT office had stacks and stacks of hardware and shit just all over the place, filling up cubicles, all over the floor and they had an entire room full of laptop assets that they had no idea who they belonged to or where they came from.
Employees would come in and drop off their computers for break fix and someone would take their computer and just throw it in a corner.
We were expected to handle a minimum of 50 tickets per day, with each ticket requiring between 20 minutes and a couple of hours. How the fuck they expected that to happen I have no clue.
The actual employees would literally run from one user to the next trying to meet their ticket quota and they would often work hours after their shift, even into the night.
TigBiddiesMacDaddy t1_j67vsll wrote
Lies, they’re gonna screw us.
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