Power to the Middle : Why Managers Hold the Keys to the Future of Work
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4.3 • 7 Ratings
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
If you're thinking of cutting your midlevel managers in the new world of work, think again.
"Middle manager." The term evokes a bygone industrial era in which managers functioned like cogs in a vast machine and bureaucracy ruled. In recent decades, midlevel managers became a favorite target for the chopping block—underappreciated, often considered a superfluous layer of the organization.
Not only does this outdated perspective need to change, the future demands it. In Power to the Middle, McKinsey thought leaders Bill Schaninger, Bryan Hancock, and Emily Field call for a profound reimagining of what middle managers can and must be able to do. They explain how middle managers are uniquely positioned close to the ground but with a crucial connection to company strategy—enabling them to guide organizations through the current period of rapid and complex change, as well as help to shape the new world of work.
With rich stories and cutting-edge research, Power to the Middle offers a new model for companies to radically alter the way they hire, train, and reward their most valuable asset: managers, the true center of the organization.
Customer Reviews
Better Blog Post Than Book
The first two chapters have some interesting data and essentially are the thrust of the books point. The rest is a painful journey through the most basic leadership and HR concepts imaginable, with made up stories, all with “easy steps” and happy endings. A few specific issues:
-The authors are not clear on audience. The book is a concept aimed at executives, with content for entry level managers.
-The stories are painful and not helpful. “Don’t hire people like you” followed by a story about an overly chatty cashier. Painfully obvious concepts and stories.
-A lot of data and conclusions have far too little time horizon, leveraging the pandemic learnings as “new gospel” for leaders. They reach conclusions that seemed relevant 6 months ago, but now don’t hold true in our current environment.
-The authors can’t help sprinkling in their elite political ideology throughout the book which is unnecessary and feels pandering, particularly from consultants.
So much better content out there. I appreciate the authors putting themselves out there, but this misses the mark for me.