Im new to owning a company and really struggling with being the boss boss. One of the big things im struggling with is identifying where i am micromanaging. Im not saying you are micromanaging and Im not saying he was doing a good job, but I do find that because of my situation at my full time job where i was the only guy so everything was designed around things being done with only two hands that its hard to let go of any detail on any process. At that job ive been stepping back and allowing them to build their own processes, not at all the way i would do it, in the end the outcome is success some of the times (the bosses kid is replacing me, so access to better tools and materials is helping that along). In my boss man role I am catching myself micromanaging, telling a guy how to hold a shovel when hes already dug a five foot hole faster than me.
The point is, make sure he is definitely fucking up, and not assuming hes fucking up just because of a different process than you would use. Talking more than working, make sure he was not just talking more than you and working less than you, hes not the owner and doesnt have to, his skin in the game resets every payday. I really doubt your the asshole here, but you are an aging nerd, and we nerds tend to become fickle with years. He is calling OSHA, but that shouldnt be a concern, you just hit the osha guy with a pipe and put him in the dumpster, landfills are full of OSHA inspectors. But really, im coming to find out OSHA compliance isnt the beast it is presented as, just dont let him see your triple stacked boxes falling over The “I guess I am going to have to ignore my own exceptionalism to be able work here” was enough to fire him. Thats a poison apple statement, even if its accurate, that guy would have poisoned your workforce dynamic if he would say something like that to the boss, he definitely would design mutiny amongst labor. FYI, he cant call OSHA if hes in the landfill with the OSHA guys. On Sat, Apr 8, 2023 at 2:48 PM Chuck McCown via AF <af@af.afmug.com> wrote: > I hired a guy to be a production manager over our grout mixing machine > product. > He came with a pedigree of doing this at other places. I didn’t check him > out, just trusted the resume. > > He did have interesting ideas but soon it became evident: > He liked to sit and talk –alot. > He did not want to start helping cleaning up the bill of materials > (primary job responsibility). (did absolutely nothing along those lines) > > He wanted us to farm things out to his buddies (like have fastenal kit the > nuts and bolts, have this other company make your sheet metal for you). > > OK, was trying to absorb ideas and suggestions. After all he was over > building all the production equipment at the local Purple Mattress factory > (or so he said). > > I expected him to help task employees in his department, but soon when > asked where they were and what were they doing, he had no idea. > I gave them a task to modify a mounting fixture by cutting it and > inserting 10” of steel tubing. Rather than have them do what I asked, he > took new steel and made one from scratch. > So he wasted the steel, his time and he used too thin of material. Took > two hours. > > I told him you could make the modification in 10 minutes, he argued that > point. > So I took a stand, cut it, extended it, using a stopwatch. 3 minutes 43 > seconds.... > > When I complained about it, he said that my fixtures were too weak and > they were going to kill someone. I demoed one with about 10X load not > failing. > Then he started complaining about other things, deflecting that he did not > do what I asked and did something else wasteful and substandard. > Interspersed with my request was not clear and he didn’t understand what I > wanted... > > He said my repair to a air compressor was unsafe. > He said he got arc flash in his eye from a distance of about 60 feet, etc > etc. Had to buy stuff to build safe welding stalls, etc etc. > > So I made a casual comment to my son (who is taking over) yesterday: “you > know, when a guy like this leaves a company whether fired or not, they > sometimes call OSHA just to cause problems” > Then I actually listened to my own words and agreed with myself. > > Late in the day this problem employee said to me: “I guess I am going to > have to ignore my own exceptionalism to be able work here”. > > That bugged me the longer I thought about it. I fired him via email about > an hour after he left... Made it one full week and a couple days the prior > week. > He can bless someone else with his exceptionalism. > > AITA? > > > -- > AF mailing list > AF@af.afmug.com > http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com >
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