Ask HN: Are managers necessary?
I'm wondering if some mid-sized companies (20+, larger ones too) works without the manager as a single role? What are your thoughts on this? Could a model with developers and designers doing planning amongst each other work? Or would it be to distracting to add a 'managing' task to the workflow?
9 comments
[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 34.5 ms ] threadOf course, we don't live in that perfect world. In the real world, we need managers at various times, to help make the group more effective. So, with respect to the title of your post, yes, managers are necessary. The secondary question that I believe you touch on, "does manager have to be a dedicated role", is more complicated. In the company I work for, many of our employees move in and out of management roles, in addition to their day-to-day project responsibilities. I've seen other organizations that are successful with a similar approach. I think that where the team consists of highly trained professionals, who have the requisite maturity, it is possible to operate with a part-time manager.
Sometimes it's ok, but I would prefer if we had a dedicated person to doing that all the time.
Managers are definitely useful for paperwork and dealing with commercial / political situations :)
The larger the company the greater the need from what I have experienced. Technically its not required, but I'd rather not be dealing with those aspects. I forgot where I read it, but I've heard the manager role being described as a sh*t umbrella. Its there to keep everyone below him/her clean so they can focus on their work.
It is easy to have people that move in and out of management roles for different projects, but each project will benefit from having a single person with the vision to take the project from a collective of individual workers to a deliverable product within an acceptable time frame, of an acceptable scope, at an acceptable performance level and for an acceptable price.
if developers and designers could work out effective processes while maintaining everyone's happiness/career growth, but at the same time pump out good product then yes, you don't need a manager.
perhaps smaller companies are able to make good decisions quickly and don't need to be bound by so many processes, and i imagine happiness is really unimportant to everyone in these types of environments anyway because everyone's already a masochist, but anytime you have multiple divisions with different priorities then you need someone. decision making processes typically become difficult when there are too many involved.
Let's not confuse the necessary role of a leader with the horrible implementation by so many unqualified and stoopid people.
Of course, if people in the group don't share goals - I think it necessary to have someone keeping everyone 'on track'.