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raddevus

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Software Dev's Guide to Maniacal Management (Expecting Employee Engagement While Doing Nothing)

Yes, this is a rebuttal to Quiet Quitting.
And, yes, I’m attempting to make up a term that pushes the idea of Quiet Quitting off the employee and back onto Management.

Maniacal Management Defined

I typed “maniacal definition” into DuckDuckGo and got the following returned by wordnik:

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I was amazed how applicable the term is because I was just attempting to create a new term that uses alliteration (like Quiet Quitting) which will help get to the root cause of quiet quitting.

Let’s focus on :

  • extreme mental derangement
  • excessively enthusiastic
  • wildly irresponsible

Extreme Mental Derangement

Twenty-five years ago I was working as a Software Quality Assurance employee for a BigCorp making a mere pittance (A meager monetary allowance, wage, or remuneration – see wordnik again). I was making $30K

A coworker left the company, became a manager of QA at another large company and called me to recruit me.

“We’ll pay you $49,900 in salary to come work with us,” she said.

That’s a 65% pay increase!!

I went to my manager who had his boss in his office and I said,

“I have an offer, but I’d actually like to stay. Will you match the offer?”

BigCorp Manager turned from his boss and said to me,

“No, but I wouldn’t leave just for money. If it were me, I wouldn’t take it.”

That is mental derangement. Of course he would take the money.

BigCorp Manager's boss looked at him and said,

“Are you crazy? Of course he has to take it. He has a family to take care of and he can’t turn that down.”

Even the high-level boss could see that it would be crazy to turn the offer down.

Alas, they wouldn’t counter-offer and I left for the $$$.

My BigCorp boss had not been inspiring and not only led to QQ (Quiet Quitting), but led to AQ (Actual Quitting).

How Much Was That Manager Making?

To really understand how crazy that BigCorp manager was to say such a thing, you have to consider how much that manager was making. He was driving a Lexxus, taking vacations to exotic places, wearing nice clothes and living life large.

Meanwhile, I was scraping by, driving a car that would break down often, trying to pay for basic expenses for family and wearing cheap clothes. Still, he couldn’t see that I needed a higher living wage. That is Maniacal Management defined.

This Same Boss – Did He Value Growth?

At my previous Annual Review I had posed a question to this same boss.

"What is the last book on business, leadership or management that you read?"

BigCorp boss paused.

"Hmmm…I haven’t read anything since college*."

*(At least 15 years in the past for him).

I’ve worked in IT for over 30 years and none of my managers have been any different. I’ve asked them to read specific books, such as the amazing book, Linchpin: Are You Indispensable? by Seth Godin, but none of them ever did.

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Excessively Enthusiastic

They are so excited to get you to do things that they need done. They’ll have long meetings and pizza parties and create charts that are supposed to “energize the team”.

But it all falls flat, because they are just using you like any other resource. They are just using you like a chair. When one of the wheels breaks off they’ll just shove you out the door.

Get Your Own Skills

That’s why you must get your own skills. You must be a Linchpin. You must be indispensable. So good they cannot get rid of you; cannot move projects without you.

Don’t Wait For Them

Don’t wait for someone to give you power, instead take power.
That sounds a little aggressive, but I’m saying:

  • Learn everything about your role and how to best carry out your work
  • Learn everything about the business you’re working in and be a SME (subject matter expert)
  • Engage with your work on every level
  • Always be helpful to every coworker, no matter their level or role

If you do all these things you will be a powerful worker and

Quiet Quitting won’t even be an idea for you.

Keep in mind that you’re doing these things for you. If you do all those things they will translate to every job you move to and transform you into someone who can do work at any level.

The Best Workers

The best workers understand the company (not just the code) so well that they can fill any role (Software Development, Quality Assurance, DevOps, Tech Support, Product Management, Product Owner, etc.)

When you can fill any role then you have a Super Power that makes you invaluable. Look around and discover how much you can learn from the company you are currently at. When you transcend a statement like,

"That’s not in my job description"

and you transform it into

"We are a team and this Software Product we are creating is a team effort that I want to create to make the Users’ life easier”

then you’ll be unstoppable.

Manager Won't Show Up & Inspire You

But, keep in mind, no manager is ever going to inspire you to do that. They don’t have it in their mind right.

Why Do You Want To Succeed?

You have to know why you want to succeed. You want to succeed because life is better when you are occupied with something that challenges you.

You want to succeed because you can build a better life for yourself and your family.

The Difficult Stuff

But you have to face the difficult things to succeed. You have to embrace the things that you don’t want to do.

The Challenge

The real challenge here is to :

Stop thinking some manager or mentor will come along and inspire you to do work that you care about.

Managers Don’t Really Do Much

Understand that for the most part, most managers just baby-sit.

Managers themselves don’t understand that they can go “beyond their role” and do more. They don’t take power and understand that they themselves could transform into Leaders.
They don’t work on their own careers for the most part so why would we expect them to help us in ours?

The Five Levels of Leadership

The fantastic book by John C. Maxwell, The Five Levels of Leadership provides the following test for Level 1 Leadership.

The highlights in red are the ones that only one of my (many) managers has gotten right. 99% of managers fail miserably on these Level 1 items. Read them slowly and see what you think.

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This is bottom of the ladder, where a person has just been given the title of “Manager”.

5 Levels of Leadership

However, over the 30 Years of IT career, I’ve evaluated each of my managers and there has only been one who has ever passed this test to become a Level 2 leader.

Test Your Manager

Take a moment and think in perspective of your manager and consider each of the statements in the list. I’m guessing that the ones I’ve highlighted in red are ones that they are missing. Managers, unfortunately, are rarely leaders. They are just a title, a positional authority.

That is a very strong clue to why there is Quiet Quitting.

Let’s Wrap This Up With a Poll

  • Do you have an Annual Review at work? – Most likely you do, but it is generally uninspired and just a yearly activity
  • Do you have a list of yearly goals which are generated from the Annual Review? – Very often there are goals, but are they connected to anything? Very often they are not.

goals for measurement quote

How can we grow if we don’t have goals and some way to determine if we’ve hit those goals?
We Consider That The Work of Management

We consider the setting of goals to be the work of management but it really isn’t.

Take Ownership

When management creates goals for us, we are uninspired by them because we don’t own them.
Do More, Learn More, Grow

We must own our goals. We must create goals that we are attached to, which will empower us to do more, learn more, grow more.
Freedom

The ability to take on any challenge is the greatest freedom of all. In order to take on any challenge we need a tools.
Ability To Take On Any Role

We need strong tools that allow us to take on any role within our company an be successful.

Learn To Inspire Yourself

So, what we learn is that the Mentor or Amazing Manager is not going to just show up one day.

You must learn to inspire yourself.
Learn to take the business apart and put it back together.
Learn everything about every role within the company you are working.

  • Investigate how to make everything work better.

Be your own mentor and you’ll never fall for Quiet Quitting, because then quitting would only be quitting yourself.

This is the way.

Start Now

Now, go read Linchpin and The Five Levels of Leadership and grow.

Think About Roles

Next, consider each role in your company (or in the Software Development life cycle) and think about the challenges of that role and how you can help your coworkers in those roles.
Success Accelerates

With just these small simple changes in your work you’ll find that your success accelerates at a great speed and you’ll never quiet quit.

Because Quiet Quitting is really quitting on yourself.

Top comments (2)

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inovak profile image
Ivan Novak

Great post! Lynchpin is such a good read. Nice recommendation.

You must be a Linchpin. You must be indispensable. So good they cannot get rid of you; cannot move projects without you.

In my experience this needs a bit of finesse. The indispensability must go hand in hand with your own growth. If you become the bottleneck, it's counter productive and leads to stagnation of yourself and the business.

We must own our goals. We must create goals that we are attached to, which will empower us to do more, learn more, grow more.

100%. I love this.

It's our job as leaders to empower folks and support their learning on their path. If their path is the next rung on the ladder at BigCorp, that's fine! If their path is somewhere else doing something entirely different (like underwater basketweaving), that's fine too!

We should have an honest conversation with them, outline the gaps, and ask them how they want to address the gaps so we can help keep them accountable.

Our folks should grow as people during their time with us. They gain from the growth. The org gains from the growth. We should look for the synergies!

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ant_f_dev profile image
Anthony Fung

Wow - I've never been compared to a chair before 😂

I think the problem at some places might be that the ladder doesn't have too many positions; the only way someone gets a pay rise is to give them a manager title irrespective of whether they have intentions of being a leader.

Completely agree about being self-inspired though.