FOUND: Employee give away thousands malicious compliance - You Need To See This
If you want to watch an organization mess up, you should pray for a whole bunch of bureaucratic mismanagement and an iron-clad adherence to protocol. When one internet user saw these two things brewing at her workplace, she did her best to apply the brakes to an expensive transaction.
However, the employee couldn’t do it alone—she needed her bosses’ help. In a viral post in the ‘Malicious Compliance’ online group, the worker vented about how her superiors wouldn’t budge no matter what. So, all that she could do was strap in and watch as the trainwreck unfolded.
Sometimes, no matter how good your intentions are, the result of your work depends on your superiors
Image credits: shotprime (not the actual photo)
So when this employee realized that hers were setting her up for failure, she maliciously complied
Image credits: cottonbro studio (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Pixabay (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Pixabay (not the actual photo)
Image credits: MOMMANAY2020
Bad managers like TL and TD are everywhere
Judging from the story, it’s no surprise that the organization is struggling. In studying declining companies, senior lecturer at the MIT Sloan School of Management Donald Sull found that their issues stem from decision makers’ inability to take appropriate action.
“There can be many reasons for the problem—ranging from managerial stubbornness to sheer incompetence—but one of the most common is a condition that I call active inertia,” Sull writes.
“Inertia is usually associated with inaction—picture a billiard ball at rest on a table—but physicists also use the term to describe a moving object’s tendency to persist in its current trajectory. Active inertia is an organization’s tendency to follow established patterns of behavior … Stuck in the modes of thinking and working that brought success in the past, [they] simply accelerate all their tried-and-true activities.”
After reading posts like this one, it might seem that good bosses are rare. And that’s true. Gallup has found that one of the most important decisions companies make is simply who they name a manager, yet they usually get it wrong. In fact, companies fail to choose the candidate with the right talent for the job 82% of the time.
Which is a pretty huge deal when you take into account that managers account for at least 70% of variance in employee engagement scores. Many of whom are probably actively embracing malicious compliance, in one form or another.
People have had plenty of strong reactions to the whole ordeal, and some also shared their own similar stories
Who is right and wrong depends on hierarchy, not facts. So always always *ALWAYS* cover yourself, even if it's just an email BCC'd to yourself. Have something to point at to say "this is on you".
Who is right and wrong depends on hierarchy, not facts. So always always *ALWAYS* cover yourself, even if it's just an email BCC'd to yourself. Have something to point at to say "this is on you".







































32
1