Illusions of every sort are, of course, the stuff of life, but dreams of mobility become particularly important in hierarchical situations dominated by the moral imperative to get ahead. Managers simply recognize here the links between personal illusions and institutional needs and choose not to upset an ambiguous but useful coincidence. Perhaps even more to the point, however, managers avoid telling their immediate subordinates about harsh organizational realities not only because they have to deal with these people face-to-face on a daily basis but also because such a confrontation might jeopardize images that they have nurtured in others and indeed in themselves. Another high-ranking executive in Weft Corporation explains:
Why does it happen? Because people are afraid of confrontations. People want to be thought of as kind, sensitive, and compassionate. Being compassionate has a good significance in our society. The easy way out is not to do anything, don’t tell the guy. That happens a lot.
The ambiguity of not knowing where one stands thus not only reflects the ambiguity of the judgments that determine one’s organizational fate, but also the tangled motivations, self-perceptions, and projection of images of those who make the judgments.
- Multiyear clients on whom we were making no money.
- Personnel who had been slated for firing years ago but who hung around on fractional work contracts.
- Invoices which were years outstanding and uncollectable.
- Hundreds of clients with whom we only did very intermittent work. No focus.
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