RICE UNIVERSITY, Houston, Thursday — American workplaces are being revolutionised by the latest trend in management skills: the new technique of Management by Assholism, as propounded in the new book of the same name by famed management guru Tom Peters.
The movement originates with research by Jing Zhou and Jennifer George at Rice University, who showed that discontented employees spot potential pitfalls and solutions in business sooner if properly encouraged. The secret, they say, is "encouraging the expression of voice."
"Of course," says Peters, "these ivory-tower research scientologists can't be expected to understand the day-to-day realities of man management in the working environment. So professional, experienced managers who really know the science and art of running a business unit need to take their pie-in-the-sky fancies and pick out the useful bits as inspiration to further our work and goals on a practical level."
In Management by Assholism, workers are stimulated to creativity by careful and measured changes to the working environment.
Starting times are changed apparently unpredictably. The thermostat is
adjusted at random to get workers out of their "comfort zones" and
increase their thinking
presence in their work. Instructions are properly adjusted between
giving them and assessing how well they have been followed. Managers
must be vague
about future plans, using a standard set of ambiguous phrasings,
particularly with regards to compensation and benefits, changing things
on a schedule detailed in the charts in the book. Human Resources and Payroll can also be leveraged toward these goals with fantastic efficacy.
It is important not to discriminate in the provision of discontent stimulus. "Equal
opportunity laws are very clear on this: we must provide an equally
stimulating environment for all employees of a given level. It would be
wrong to do otherwise." Upsetting workers' equilibrium must not be done abusively or with favoritism, but strictly according to mandated procedure. Process is important.
Creatively stimulated workers who see a problem are encouraged to provide their suggestions in 100 characters or less on a written and notarised Problem Report Form. "Suggesting
a solution is not encouraged, of course — solving the problems should
be dealt with by their superiors who are charged with such things." A copy of each complaint is also sent to Human Resources to be placed on the employee's permanent personnel file.
"Management by Assholism really fits in with how managers know how to work," said Peters. "It leverages our core competencies as managers in a synergistic fashion. With some thinking outside the box. And quality. And stuff."
Entrepreneurs such as Donald Trump and Sir Alan Sugar expressed their strong support for the movement. "We've used these techniques with fabulous success for years. Sometimes, you've just got to fucking tell them."
Dr Zhou was somewhat disconcerted at the response to her work. "I said that listening to your good but discontented workers was important because they supply the good ideas that move things forward. I specifically said that just making the workplace horrible wouldn't work and wouldn't get things done!"
from http://uncyclopedia.org/
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