| |
|
Corporate
Structure
The view most
people have of corporate America lacks perspective. I know this
because I am both a consumer of the news and deeply embedded in
corporate America. High enough to see what’s going on, low
enough to be under the radar. Listening to the media, you get
this picture of some malevolent beasts sitting high up in
corporate towers plotting against the lowly consumer. Of
course, if you would just turn off the TV and think a minute,
you would understand that the whole point of a corporation is to
help the lowly consumer hoping that they will rise above their
current station in life so they can buy more stuff. Nobody in
any corporation wants to kill you. Relax. What they want to do
is sell you gadgets. If you are poor they want to sell you a
cheap gadget, if you are rich they want to sell you an expensive
gadget…and in order to sell the most profitable gadgets, you
need to prosper. Corporate America loves you.
Corporations
are a lot like governments. While they aren’t efficient enough
to purposely harm anyone; they are big enough to trip and fall
on you, though seldom intentionally. In a normal
corporate organization, there are kings, there are princes, and
then there are peons. The kings make vague references, the
princes make strategic decisions about those references and the
peons make sure that no work occurs that makes their prince look
bad. Then there are stockholders, a mix of peons, institutions,
kings and princes. A corporate Vice President of a Fortune 500
company whom I know, is fond of saying “when the elephants
dance, the pigmies die.” You see, the princes are always
jousting with one another in the hopes that they will one day
become king. Princes are judged and rewarded on how little
money they spend. Being a prince in a corporation is a very
stressful position and is like dancing in a spotlight in the
middle of a crystal store. You must keep dancing and you must
break less than the prince dancing along side you. (I am
sticking to masculine pronouns and titles king and prince
instead of queen and princess as those words have meanings not
in play here.)
There is also
an ego factor. Kings and princes do not get to be kings and
princes without a whole lot of butt kissing and once you reach a
certain level it is your butt being kissed. Those of us with
souls who don’t kiss any butt or desire our own butt kissed are
called managers and directors and that is all we will ever be
called. So as a manager or director, one has to be careful
around the kings and princes. They are always on the lookout
for someone who isn’t properly in awe of their mere presence.
If you are incredibly competent, efficient, and you always make
your prince look good, he will often overlook some level of
non-butt kissing or deference to his exalted position. However,
you must be constantly aware of how their ego swings in this
regard. In addition to being egotistical in the extreme, they
are volatile and unpredictable. It is a short trip from golden
boy to “who used to sit over there?”
The corporate
levels are: intern, assistant peon, peon, senior peon,
supervisor, assistant manager, manager, senior manager,
director, senior director, prince, senior prince, executive
prince, and king. This hierarchy, taken to an extreme can be a
sign of an unhealthy business model. The company with the
fewest layers between king and peon is much more likely to be
consistently profitable. Everybody knows this. Those companies
that have thick layers pretend it is not true. At the very top,
just past king, is CEO. The CEO sets the tone for everything
that happens. Usually such a person is rich beyond belief and
doesn’t really have any skin in the fight. To them it is just a
game. They don’t come to work thinking that if they lost their
job they will lose their home or starve to death. They are in
zero danger of losing anything other than ego. It is a little
disheartening. Fortunately for us peons, the average CEO is
really into the game and sees their reputation as every bit as
important as us peons having something to eat.

|
|
|