Better Without Bosses?
Jun. 23rd, 2009 11:46 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Maybe some situations would be better without managers, but not necessarily Better Without Bosses. Most of us are better off if we look to "hire" a boss to do things that, frankly, most people are bad at, and don't want to do. A boss exists to reliably transform your work into your money, and take part of it for the service. This is better than doing a lot of work and getting little or nothing in return.
From the outside, these tasks look like magic, as if only certain mages can perform the incomprehensible rituals to channel the eldritch forces outside the ken of mortals. If you can do all that for yourself successfully, and not die of boredom, then you're better without bosses. If what you really want to do with your time is to do work and not worry about getting paid for it, "hire" a boss to provide you with that brokering service.
A boss task: | Be your own boss but don't possess boss skills: |
Figure out what people would pay for. | Hope against hope that there is a market for your skills by themselves, not incorporated into some larger product. |
Figure out who can do that work well and would actually get it done. | Hire a freelancer who never actually completes the job; or squabble over whether the result is worth paying for. |
Tell the world your work exists and persuade them to choose it. | Have no clients. |
Find out who has both the need and the money. | Get clients who could only pay you a fraction of your rate. |
Make the client pay what they owe. | Spend time nagging for your invoices to be fulfilled, time that would be better spent using your skills to earn more money. |
From the outside, these tasks look like magic, as if only certain mages can perform the incomprehensible rituals to channel the eldritch forces outside the ken of mortals. If you can do all that for yourself successfully, and not die of boredom, then you're better without bosses. If what you really want to do with your time is to do work and not worry about getting paid for it, "hire" a boss to provide you with that brokering service.
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Date: 2009-06-23 05:03 pm (UTC)1. They're related skills (only some of them are)
2. They're a skill set that has anything to do with being a "boss" (again, only some of them are)
3. They're likely to reside in the same person (varies widely)
4. Your idea of what a boss is for is the whole picture (it's situational)
Having said that, I agree with your general conclusion that people who don't have these skills probably need to link up with someone who does if they want to earn money. But if you're going to do that, you need to know what you're looking for.
Marketing, Product Management
Figure out what people would pay for.
Marketing
Find out who has both the need and the money.
Tell the world your work exists and persuade them to choose it.
This one's tough: recruiters, other entrepreneurs, really good HR people (which are rare), sometimes "Bosses"
Figure out who can do that work well and would actually get it done.
Accounts Payable people, sometimes you can hire accountants who do this for you
Make the client pay what they owe.
Actual "bosses" also do other things, such as coordinating the efforts of multiple people on a project (this can also be called "project management"), managing budgets and timelines, etc.
Sometimes you'll see a number of these in the same person, but not always.
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Date: 2009-06-23 05:22 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2009-06-23 06:02 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2009-06-23 06:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-24 12:50 am (UTC)I tend to see the Boss/Worker relationship in less black and white terms as you seem to, though, Matt. There are times when I feel like my clients and customers are sort of my bosses (they pay me, for one thing, and make requests, which i sometimes fulfill in order to keep them as clients) and that people who I might hire to do work for me would be both client and boss to me (particularly clients that I might hire in an advisory type of position).
I can relate to not wanting to do all the traditional "boss" duties (like managing people) and also not wanting to do the boring things that people get hired to do. But in the end, I had to learn to do them all with a certain amount if skill because I lacked the funds to change from the one person show and hire out. In the end, I suffer through these various tasks and business issues, because the main thing I do have is the drive and dream to make my art and business my only source of income, and that is sort of what gets me through all the crap.
I would love to talk business stuff like this in real time, with Jer and tlatoni and some of our other business minded friends. I think I would learn a lot from it.
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Date: 2009-06-24 02:08 am (UTC)Also, so far as I can tell, you didn't start out by trying to figure out whether a sustainable number of people want to buy ceramic beads. You started with ceramic beads as a given, didn't you?
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Date: 2009-06-24 02:18 am (UTC)I am saying that *I* had to do these things for myself, but that it is probably not really the ideal situation. I am at the point of starting to want to seek out people who will be able to help me now. Does that make more sense?
I do think that while a Boss does not necessarily need to do everything themselves, they should at least know how to do the tasks in question, and know when and how to let go of those tasks and outsource when it would be more efficient. That's where I am at now.
Hmm, did I start as ceramic beads as a given. I suppose I did, in a way. I knew that I wanted to be an artist, and so much more of my time has spent on the business stuff (marketing, accounting, blah blah blah) trying to figure out HOW to do it, and finding the people to sustain it, than actually making art.
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Date: 2009-06-24 03:13 am (UTC)