Spot on. And excutives are the 0.1% of the staff. They climbed up to the top levels of responsibility.
Whether they bullshited their way through is another story. But I do see some artists who climbed their way to the top selling charts, with little artistic talent.
Why people buy the bullshit from imposters, whether them be artists or executives, that is an interesting question.
> Spot on. And excutives are the 0.1% of the staff. They climbed up to the top levels of responsibility.
I think you meant top levels of decision making.
Executives rarely deal with the fall-out of bad decisions. Management and normal workers get axed, executives get a golden parachute and a cushy board job at another company from one of their fellow executives. In other words, they carry zero consequences and thus zero responsibility for their actions.
> Executives rarely deal with the fall-out of bad decisions
This is a fantasy. Executives come-and-go at the same cadence as regular employees as a % of staff. Look at any exec on LinkedIn and you'll see the same 18-36 month stints as everyone else.
Yes, they come and go, by their own decision. For promotions, bigger salaries and other reasons. How many executives were actually fired for underperforming? What is even underperforming for that type of job?
Executives of small companies should not be counted, I really doubt they are paid as much as the rest of the company if the entire company is 200 people. For big companies of over 10,000 people there are not enough companies to have that many top executives.
> as the rest of the company if the entire company is 200 people
It's easy to confuse income with capital and earning potential. There are no shortage of well-off restaurant owners or other small-business owners with < 200 employees - I run into no shortage of them in Los Angeles. Thomas Keller, Gordon Ramsey, and their less-known partners make a lot more than their staff. It may not manifest in 1000x annual pay, but it definitely manifests as 1000x quality of life thanks to the magic of compound interest and financial leverage.
Being a capitalist puts you in an entirely different game - salaried or hourly employees are not capitalist, they're labor. This makes a big difference to banks and other money lenders, further giving leverage for future earnings potential.
Whether they bullshited their way through is another story. But I do see some artists who climbed their way to the top selling charts, with little artistic talent.
Why people buy the bullshit from imposters, whether them be artists or executives, that is an interesting question.