Organizations: A Glossary of Incompetence

Organizations: A Glossary of Incompetence

It could be argued that the world does
not need a new science, but Laurence J. Peter, a professor of education
at the University of Southern California, has invented one. He calls it
hierarchiology, or the study of hierarchies in modern organizations.
According to a satiric new book called The Peter Principle , which he wrote with the help of Canadian Freelancer Raymond
Hull, the basic premise of hierarchiology is that “with few exceptions
men bungle their affairs.” The proof? Look at any large bureaucracy.The “Peter Principle” states that “in a hierarchy, every employee tends
to rise to his level of incompetence; the cream rises until it sours.”
People who show competence are promoted whether or not they are
qualified to perform competently at the next level. Eventually they go
beyond their limits, become incompetent, and stop getting promoted.
Macbeth, a success as a military commander, rose to become an
incompetent king. Which is to say, “nothing fails like success.”As Peter points out, hierarchies have several well-tested techniques to
deal with men who have clearly been promoted beyond their level of
competence. One method is:The Lateral Arabesque, which is used by many managers in place of firing
a misplaced employee. If an office supervisor fumbles frequently, he is
made “coordinator of interdepartmental communications, supervising the
filing of second copies of interoffice memos.” This is similar to:Percussive Sublimation, the pseudo-promotion commonly known as kicking a
man upstairs. Because it appears to be yet another promotion for merit,
percussive sublimation has the added benefit of justifying the
executive who promoted the man to his level of incompetence in the
first place. Both this principle and the lateral arabesque point up an
inadequacy in C. Northcote Parkinson's well-known law. Work not only
expands to fit the time allotted but, says Author Peter, “it can expand
far beyond that.”Final Placement Syndrome is “what the ordinary sociologist calls
'success.' ” Freud's theory that frustration arises from foibles such
as penis envy, the Oedipus complex or the castration complex is
nonsense, says Peter, who cheerfully regards Freud as a “satirist at
heart.” On the contrary, “frustration occurs as a result of promotion,”
because most people who are promoted genuinely wish to be productive.A frequent symptom is Abnormal Tabulology, which is any unusual
arrangement of the desk, such as Phonophilia or
Papyrophobia .
Other signs of the syndrome include Cachinatory Inertia, “the habit of
telling jokes instead of getting on with business,” as well as
Side-Issue Specialization, a commonplace substitute for competence
characterized by the motto: “Look after the molehills and the mountains
will look after themselves.”

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