If the masses weren't so idle and feckless, the heroic entrepreneurs that drive society towards a successful future wouldn't have to work so hard to whip them into shape.
There are two anecdotes I can tell about this from my past experience as an Amazon employee, equally disturbing and amusing. The first is, with regards to tier 3 waged employees and 4-5 management, when it comes to tier 1 employees looking to advance there are two schools of thought.
One is puffing the job(s) up and using the development and promotion of that employee as a success story to get your own promotion in turn. Amazon focuses exclusively on STAR method for employment and advancement, which means success stories are the second-most important key to getting hired or promoted. Developing a subordinate who then gets promoted is one of the most appealing success stories a prospect can bring to an interview, so an inordinate amount of time and attention gets devoted towards identifying subordinates to develop.
It doesn't matter how well the (former) subordinate does once they're in the job, it just matters they get it. So "development" means hand picking someone most likely to
interview well, refining their interview technique, and making sure they get opportunities to create success stories in turn while denying them to likely competitors. In other words, the Peter principle isn't just a funny phenomenon for Amazon, it's policy. So, predictably, the
most important key to getting hired or promoted is schmoozing...pretty typical for American workplaces, sure, but entirely contrary to Amazon's image as a "data-driven company".
The second school of thought is what the good managers and supervisors adhere to: telling people who want to advance, in hopes of getting
better jobs, they
really don't want to because each successive job is shittier than the last. The only real perk other than higher compensation is having people beneath you to throw under the bus when you can't meet increasingly unrealistic work standards.
The second anecdote is when I learned all of the above firsthand, when I was identified and selected by my department's leadership as someone to fast track for promotion. The PA, AM, and OM in question were damned good at their jobs, stuck to Amazon leadership principles, maintained a data-driven approach to the job, and worked to get to know and develop subordinates' strengths and weaknesses. So, I actually got brought in for KPI and Kaizen meetings, was approached for feedback and had my feedback taken seriously, was encouraged to be proactive and bring action items to management, and was given a slew of success story opportunities that most peers eager to promote would kill to have.
When he was developing me, I wanted to focus on preparing for the job I was eventually going to apply for: learning the responsibilities of the job, the processes, the tools used for those processes, and best practices for that job. So that when I applied and interviewed, I could cater my interview responses specifically to the expectations of the job and identify myself on a data- and merit-driven basis as the ideal candidate for the position.
This manager, the one who actually held all that stuff in highest regard, told me to my face none of it actually mattered.
Not even as a "you need to get the job first" preamble, but as a general "how well you do your job doesn't even matter because anyone who gets anywhere at Amazon learns how to cook the books and identify scapegoats; it's all down to whether you stay on your manager's good side, and what actually matters is learning how to say the right things at the right times".
What got me in the door wasn't even anything related to job performance to begin with. My ops manager and I had shared interests, and we spent a lot of time shooting the shit about them. All of the sudden, all this shit I wanted to do -- not even to promote, but because I was genuinely interested in how Amazon operated -- but had been previously kept from doing by supervisors and managers in other departments, opened up and I basically got to do whatever the hell I wanted for six months as long as I could bring a case and the data that what I was doing met business need and/or was best practice.
Then, that OM left, the AM was put on PIP by the new OM, that AM quit, and the new OM's hand-picked replacement didn't like me. Suddenly, that year's worth of development and the dozen or so success stories I generated during that time which saved my site millions of dollars, ceased to matter entirely because I was persona non grata.
EDIT: What's quite disturbing about any and all of the above, is Amazon as a corporation knows goddamn good and well their own business model and internal policies are their biggest impediment, and that Amazon's state of operations as such is not sustainable. That OM I mentioned showed me their own analytics and data set that proves it, so far beyond the realm of reasonable doubt the only logical conclusion that can or should be drawn from it, is every last Amazon employee from levels 8 to 12 (i.e. Jeff Bezos) needs to be summarily terminated with cause by the board and replaced with people who actually know what the fuck they're doing.
The problem with that being, who's the chairman of Amazon's board of directors?