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  • The Peter Principle argues that people who have success and big hierarchical organizations are promoted and promoted and

  • Promoted until they reach their own level of incompetence.

  • After this, they get never promoted again and are often stuck there for life. To understand this better

  • Let's look at a real-life example:

  • David and Diana two graduates first met at a sales training to become representatives for P Pharma.

  • They were so proud to have gotten a job in which they could actually help people.

  • The company had just invented Oxy Devil, a promising new painkiller,

  • Which the company advertised as being non-addictive. Little did they know that they had joined one of the most dangerous

  • organizations in modern America.

  • Both do a good job of convincing doctors to prescribe Oxy Devil, whenever one of their patients has pain.

  • Over the years they all become friends and often celebrate their achievements together.

  • Both deliver great sales numbers and eventually get promoted to managers.

  • The transition happens without much training and while Diana was a great rep, she is a terrible manager.

  • Colleagues begin disrespecting her and Diana becomes very unhappy at work. As a result

  • She decides to put less effort into the job and doesn't realize that something odd is going on.

  • Some members of Diana's team start selling Oxy Devil by the millions to small unknown clinics

  • David is a natural. He knows what to do with his weakest reps and how to celebrate those who perform well.

  • He becomes a rising star in the organization and after a few years gets promoted to the position of Sales Director.

  • Now when Diana sees David in the cafeteria she avoids him. She's afraid to expose her inabilities.

  • She is overly focused on herself and doesn't realize how stressed he looks. David's new position as a director is highly complex.

  • He lacks the analytical skills to make sense of the numbers.

  • He does not understand why the sales of oxy devil have increased so dramatically.

  • He feels insecure in order to compensate for that feeling.

  • He starts working extra long hours. The night before his first board meeting he doesn't sleep at all.

  • He's too afraid others will realize that he's a complete failure at his job.

  • The meeting starts with a science team,

  • They present new research that reveals that Oxy Devil is in fact very addictive and that hundreds of thousands of people could be affected.

  • The room gets completely quiet.

  • Then the lawyer speaks up and confirms that there is nothing to worry about as the product had been approved by the FDA.

  • She adds that sales should now soar until the patent expires. The marketing director is relieved.

  • He can carry on running the same TV commercials. David wants to say something but doesn't dare speak up

  • There is only one person who understands that some of the people in the room have reached the so-called Peters Plateau or

  • their final level of incompetence.

  • This is Richard Succar CEO and member of the billionaire P Pharma family.

  • So how does Peter's principle work?

  • People advance in their careers because they have high skills in a specific task.

  • Once promoted these skills are often irrelevant to the new job.

  • The new skills required are above their ability level or they may not have received the required training.

  • Note that their new manager might also be a victim of the Peter Principle and doesn't realize that training would be a good idea. And,

  • there are incentives at play. People often work hard to reach a certain position or salary once they achieve that some get lazy.

  • Once people lose their passion

  • they stop learning. They may fail to keep up with new

  • developments which may eventually lead to poor quality of work. In order to protect their comfort zone

  • they challenge any new idea or person that can make their lives

  • uncomfortable.

  • Employees that are incompetent are often unhappy.

  • They left a job at which they were fantastic and well respected by their colleagues, now they watch how their colleagues get promoted or

  • remain equally stuck. This has a negative impact on the company. Frightened to lose their jobs

  • incompetent managers celebrate obscurity and implement complicated procedures.

  • These procedures only make sense to the manager and leave colleagues feeling confused and uninformed

  • Some may work very hard to make up for the lack of skills, for this reason their supervisors

  • don't dare let them go. The results are often complex and incompetent corporations that move too slow to innovate.

  • The Peter Principle was first introduced by authors Lawrence Peter and Raymond Hull in

  • 1969 since its introduction it has been an often discussed topic in the area of leadership in 2018.

  • Professors Alan Benson,

  • Danielle Lee and Kelly Xu analyzed sales workers' performance and promotion practices at over 200 American businesses.

  • Consistent with the principle the researchers found that high-performing sales reps were more likely to be promoted up the corporate ladder

  • regardless of their managerial potential which led to massive costs to the businesses.

  • While our story of David and Diana was fiction. Let's learn how the real story unfolded...

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The Peter Principle argues that people who have success and big hierarchical organizations are promoted and promoted and

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