Snowy36
2022-09-06 23:32:59
- #1
Very good example. I work in a large corporation (and it’s not the first). I also calculate things for my boss there. The neighboring department does the same (so they calculate things) but has different goals. My boss and the neighboring boss then collude on something. Neither of them really knows what their clerks did there and just parrot what they were told. If you then ask me (the expert 1), the investment is necessary. If you ask the expert from the other department (with the goal of cost savings), it is not necessary. So it is a) important which expert is actually asked b) important that the boss, i.e. Habeck, also actually understands the whole thing himself.Yes. It is always astonishing that people really believe Habeck sits late into the night over books and tables to then make a decision... When my boss needs a technical solution, he asks me and doesn’t sit down to do it himself. That’s why he is the boss and I am the employee.