joekm
Structural
- Mar 18, 2004
- 105
I recently came across a fairly astute observation about this paradigm where management is offered as a "reward" to engineers who have longevity and have performed well. The observation being that management is a skill set in and of itself and meerly being a good engineer - or even a great engineer - does not make you a good manager. This observation is extremely apropos to where I am currently working. Additionally, outside of flash animation on company policies, they don't train here...period. If you want to learn anything, you have to scrounge for it. So, by extension, I doubt managment receives any real training either.
Don't get me wrong, I think pulling managers from the engineering staff is a good idea - provided you pick people based upon managerial aptitude and are willing to really train them. Unfortunately, that does not appear to be happeing here.
So, I have two questions:
How can you effectively get things done in an ineffective managerial environment?
How can I learn the skill sets required to be a good manager?
--
Great Spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds
-- Albert Einstein
Don't get me wrong, I think pulling managers from the engineering staff is a good idea - provided you pick people based upon managerial aptitude and are willing to really train them. Unfortunately, that does not appear to be happeing here.
So, I have two questions:
How can you effectively get things done in an ineffective managerial environment?
How can I learn the skill sets required to be a good manager?
--
Great Spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds
-- Albert Einstein