The World’s Most Useless Document

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The org chart

When you join a new business the people in H.R. will give you something like this:

As good corporate citizens we all seize this as one of the most important pieces of paper we will be given. It tells us how the concern works. It is critical information, it tells us how the business is organised.

The unwritten message

The organisation chart doesn’t tell us much about the way the work is organised.  But it does tell us a lot about power. It tells the people at the top of the organisation they are important, and those at the bottom that they are insignificant.

If somebody is above you…

Then (assuming you like being paid) you must please them at all costs.

Never suggest that anything is less than wonderful. Especially at appraisal time.

If somebody is below you…

They must please you at all costs:

Always demand good news. You will need it to pass up the ladder.

The one thing an org chart will never tell you

Organisation charts never mention the person who is really important.

That person is the customer.

I make this point for self-serving reasons. I have run my own business. I learnt very quickly that the customer was the person who had the money that I wanted. Cash (and the person who has it) is king.

Does your customer feel like the most important person in the business?

Think about the last time you were in a big box store:

Did you feel like the most important person in the store?

Nope? Well that is because the big noise at the top of the organisation chart believes that he is and all the people below him are busy lying through their teeth telling him he is right.

So the next time you draw an organisation chart

Try publishing something like this…

What would that do for the most important person in the business?

Author: Jonty Pearce

Published On: 28th Nov 2017 - Last modified: 13th Nov 2018
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