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Book Review Good People, Bad ManagersHow Work Culture Corrupts Good Intentions by Samuel A. Culbert Reviewed by Fred Nickols © Fred Nickols 2017 The late Geary Rummler famously
asserted, "If you put a good person in a bad system, the system will win
every time." Samuel A.
Culbert's new book, Good People, Bad
Managers, offers abundant evidence to support Rummler's assertion.
The subtitle of Culbert''s book is
How Work Culture Corrupts Good
Intentions and his basic thesis is that the work culture in most
organizations turns otherwise good people into bad managers. Culbert's book has three major parts, with three
chapters in each part. In Part I, titled "What's Going On?", Culbert does just
that; he takes a look at what's going on in the work culture.
In Chapter 1, Culbert makes the case that bad management is not a
rarity, that it is instead the norm.
In Chapter 2, he lays out how it is that managers delude themselves
into thinking that what they're doing is good management practice.
And, in Chapter 3 he takes a critical look at the so-called "people
skills" that managers actually acquire. In Part II, titled "Is Bad Management Here to Stay?",
Culbert examines the underlying causes and reasons for all the bad
management he describes in Part I.
Chapter 4 explains why managers feel so vulnerable.
Chapter 5 looks at the logical consequence of that vulnerability,
namely, how managers self-protect.
Chapter 5 draws attention to those factors in the workplace and the
work culture that prevent good management - "the system" as it were. Part III, titled "What Can be Done?", poses some
notions about things people can do to correct the situation.
Frankly, my sense of what Culbert gets at here is that not much is
likely to happen unless the folks at the very top of the organization take
an honest look at what goes on, conclude that it is unacceptable, and make a
serious and concerted commitment to fix things.
Chapter 7 is titled and deals with "Overcoming Cultural Resistance to
Good Management." Chapter 8 focuses on and is titled "Getting Company
Support.s for Good Management."
And, Chapter 9, titled "Consciousness-Raising to Promote Other-Directedness
in Management," zeroes in on getting everyone to take an unbiased, honest
look at moving away from the self-directedness that marks so many managers
and toward the other-directedness that good management practices would have
them do. In a very real sense, Culbert's book is an
evidence-based indictment of the ways in which good people become bad
managers and the ways in which they delude themselves that they are good
managers. On my part, I think
Culbert's got it right but I am not very hopeful that much if anything will
be done to correct the situation.
One big reason for my skepticism is in Culbert's
opening comment in Chapter 5, "How Managers Self-Protect."
There, Culbert writes, "A manager's daily viability requires
considerable pretense, duplicity, and stealth.
That's right, everyday credibility and survival, not to mention
performing one's job competently, entails more under-the-radar activity than
most managers would like to think! Assuming Culbert is correct, and I think
he is, that's a major roadblock to any kind of change. Another reason is in the opening comments of Chapter 9,
which deals with consciousness-raising about the situation.
Here, Culbert writes, "I see managers ensnared in a work-culture-set
trap. Having internalized what
the culture falsely stipulates, lacking incentives to reason otherwise,
managers are unaware of the problems their culture-stipulated 'good
management behavior' creates."
He adds, "It's not their intent to act badly.
Pretense prevents them from connecting the dots."
Here, Culbert draws attention to the ways in which managers fool
themselves. All that said, Culbert does offer two pieces of advice
for folks who get it and who are determined to do something about the
situation, both have to do with consciousness-raising.
One is to engage in consciousness-raising, to draw attention to the
situation, to develop "enhanced awareness for going forward."
The other is consciousness-raising for company gain.
However, my skepticism remains and ties to Culbert's
opening comments in the Conclusion section of Chapter 9.
There, Culbert writes, "I find a preponderance of company leaders
falsely impressed, content with company results mainly because they measure
up to expectations. I see too
many leaders uninterested in what their companies might additionally
accomplish from underutilized or mismanaged human capacities."
The way I would put it is that they're focused on the bottom-line and
as long as that is okay, they don't care about much else. Given that state of affairs, I don't see a lot of deep,
meaningful change on the horizon.
Nevertheless, it's worth a shot.
If enough people read Culbert's book, take off their work-culture
blinders, and see things the way they really are, then slowly, but surely, a
critical mass will begin to build and, at some point, it will shake things
up. So, in the spirit of
consciousness-raising, I hereby declare Culbert's book a "must read."
Go buy it, read it, and decide for yourself if things are bad enough
to go to work on that critical mass.
If you're up to it, buy a few extra copies and distribute to the
C-level execs in your organization.
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This page last updated on August 2, 2019 |