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When bronze turtles can't save you: Surviving small business management
The Straits Times
|September 22, 2024
Horror stories about some managers who thought they were gods.
Years ago, I worked in a series of small publishing firms, each more determined than the other to hire good people, along with at least one manager who was a monster. When confronted with reasonable behaviour, normal business practices and common courtesies, these managers, like chimpanzees seeing a rubber snake, react with poo-flinging rage. One man made it a habit to creep into empty conference rooms to steal coffee and cocoa powder from a dispenser, then scurry, mouse-like, back to his office.
As he gathered the team to talk quarterly targets or some such serious issue, our eyes locked on his spoon as it dipped into a styrofoam cup, then came back out loaded with brown dust moving towards a glistening, outstretched tongue that, once cocoa'ed, would snap back into his head. It's hard to focus on one's responsibilities when the person telling you about them eats like a lizard.
In another company, we had a manager who never put aside a budget for new staff computers, despite us working with PCs so old they ran on hopes and dreams. When we hit a sales slump, he saw that there was only one way to save the company: fengshui statues. More money was spent on bronze turtles and water fountains than it would have cost to replace everyone's computer twice over.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 22, 2024-Ausgabe von The Straits Times.
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