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Carnival Cash: The Cult of Seniority

Alright, screw it. Let’s burn the boats. I said I wasn’t going to get into this until I released the book, but the idealist career advice post I had planned doesn’t make sense without a discussion of corporate seniority.  If you haven’t read this recent post, in which I outline the terms pictured below, you’ll probably want to read it for reference or this one might not make as much sense to you.  In this post, I’m going to defend a thesis that the best career advice I could offer to any knowledge worker, counter-intuitive though it may seem, would be to avoid earning seniority at a company.

In a prequel to this series I seem to be starting, I define the essential conundrum of the corporate pragmatist.  This post is going to focus on corporate idealists and the essential conundrum that they face, and it’s going to address a reader’s question while we’re at it.  That question provides a good lead-in to the context here.  Paraphrased, it was, “while going it alone may be good advice for seasoned, senior developers, shouldn’t junior developers hitch their wagons to a company for a while, giving a lot of extra effort and working their way up while learning the ropes?”  My simple, off-the-cuff response is, “oh, dear God, no!”  But the more nuanced response I’ll expand on here is, “that may be a strategy, but be very, very careful, because here be dragons.”

Dragons

The hierarchy below is great for describing tenured corporate players, but not so much for describing new entrants, fresh on the scene.  From an org chart perspective, they’re down at the bottom with the pragmatists, but they’re not pragmatists.  They have yet to give up on their ambitions and put an “I’d rather be bowling” poster in their cubicle.  They’re idealists in spirit, by and large, since they enter the corporate world in awe of suit-wearing, business-travel-booking, corporate-card-waving middle managers, who they perceive to be larger than life.  The entrants believe in the company man and they believe in the company, but they clearly don’t come in as middle managers.  They have yet to get there.  And finally, they share a touch of commonality with the opportunists in that they have not yet been schooled in and beaten down by the corporate narrative of mediocrity.  But they are not opportunists because they have yet to figure out that they need to cheat to win.  So, newbies are kind of like corporate stem cells, waiting to assume their proper position.

Pragmatist Salary and Idealist Baubles

Let’s look at two possible paths through the company: that of the pragmatist knowledge worker, and that of the idealist one.  There are 2,080 working hours in a year, and 40 working years in a career, for a grand total of 83,200 hours in a career.  Let’s assume that the pragmatist knowledge worker averages $100,000 per year over the course of his career for a total of $4 million in earnings, while his idealist counterpart averages $120,000 for a total of $4.8 million in earnings.  Just to recap here, that means that there is an AVERAGE of $20K in difference per year, which, for two people that start at identical comps is HUGE, given that it will probably be three years before either one of them sees anything more than a COLA.  And, on top of that, pragmatists are much more likely to secure better salaries by job-hopping while idealists stick around for decades, taking whatever obligatory five-year raises the company deigns to dole out.  A pragmatist can match an idealist’s salary 10 years in by just jumping jobs twice.

And all of that extra pay later in the career doesn’t come cheap for the idealist.  It’s a life of midnight emails followed by 6 AM touchpoint meetings.  The idealist misses children’s first steps because he’s on a conference call with the Dubai people that’s really critical for moving the company’s overseas presence to the next level.  He got a fat $1,000 bonus check when that deal was sealed!  Over the course of his career, the idealist pumps in 60 hours per week, whereas his slacker counterpart gets by with a mere 40.  The reward is a corner office, fancier perks, and the right to give orders and expect to be obeyed.  Of course, that’s the least the company can do, since the idealist actually works 124,800 hours to the 83,200 hours for the pragmatist.  The real cost of those middle manager perks comes into true perspective, though, when you consider that the pragmatist earns $48.08 per hour for his career, while the idealist, with the nicer car, better office, and org chart authority earns $38.46 per hour.  So, pragmatists reading this, pity your pointy-hair in his Lexus because he actually makes less than you do.

Yes, adjusted for hours, a rationally checked-out pragmatist actually earns a higher wage than a harried, hard-charging idealist working his way into the thick of middle management.  Sure, a snapshot later in their careers has the idealist making more, and, by the end, probably even making more after all of the unpaid overtime, but after how many years of taking a ridiculous haircut?  He never breaks even.

So why does anyone do this, unless that office with the windows is also stocked floor-to-ceiling with gold bars?  It’s because they get caught into the lifestyle — into the idealist cult of seniority.  They marry their identity and perceived worth with the organization’s identity and operate accordingly.  They wind up caught up in the hype and insulated from external valuations of the things for which they and their cohorts compete.  It’s like Lord of the Flies in there.

Have you ever gone to a festival or carnival where they sell you like nine tickets for $15, and everything costs four or eight tickets?  You literally can’t use all of the tickets you buy unless you spend $60 on 36 tickets.  What’s the benefit of using these tickets instead of actual currency?  Absolutely, positively none.  It’s a complete racket put on by the carnies to sucker you while you’re in a festive mood.  They introduce and value a currency that’s worthless anywhere but at the carnival.  There’s nothing impressive about having loads of leftover carnival cash.

Let’s switch gears for just a second, now, and do a thought exercise.  What if I offered you a job for $100,000 per year?  But wait, I’m not done.  What if I offered you that same job, but I told you that instead of a cubicle, you’d get an office?  And what if I told you that I’d add “senior” or “principal” to your title?  What if I told you that you’d be on the meeting invite for a lot of meetings involving the CTO and all of the most sought-after people in Outlook?  What if I told you that you could sit in on interviews, participate in perf reviews for junior employees, and strut around LIKE A BOSS?  What if I even threw in a gold watch or a company ring after five years of service?  Pretty sweet, right?  Exactly, which is why I’m now offering you only $66,000 per year for it.  Sure, it may be a 33% pay reduction from the original offer, but did I mention that you get to sit in a room while you’re at work?  A room with a real, no-fooling door that you can totally close?  That alone has to be worth like 40 grand, right?

You’d tell me that I was absolutely, completely insane if I interviewed you and wrote you an offer like this.  You’d go onto Glassdoor and post such a scathing review that it would make their servers explode.  You would be insulted to the absolute inner core.  And yet, if I offered you the job and then made you this same offer, slowly, over the course of a decade, you’d thank me, call me sir, and ask for another.  And that, my friend, is because you’ve been inducted over the course of that time into the cult of seniority and anointed as a card-carrying idealist.

GervaisRenamed

Valuing the Worthless

I’ll restate once again my departure from the Gervais Principle series in that I do not think of idealists as idiots.  I think of them as, well, idealists.  They’re so caught up in delayed gratification and earnest competitiveness that they completely lose perspective.  Their ongoing mantra is that putting in 60 hour weeks now will pay off down the line when they’re acing out their fellow idealists for coveted promotions.  Then they blink, and they’ve been doing it for 10 years with nothing to show for it but carnival cash, but still, that next promotion is right around the corner.  Just a little more of this and then they can kick back with the sweet life.

Of course, if there were nothing to reward this competitive instinct, chasing promotions wouldn’t be enough.  There have to be interim prizes.  And so, one year in comes an “employee of the month” award with a parking space.  Two years in comes a chance to listen (but not to speak yet) in on the monthly leadership council meeting.  Three years in and your title picks up a senior to be followed three years after that with principal.  After seven years, when the interim head of operations leaves, it finally happens — your first office.  Net worth of all of those perks: $0.  The feeling of having more status than your coworkers: priceless (but really, also $0).

“That’s ridiculous, Erik,” you think.  “You just don’t understand.”  And you’re right, I wouldn’t.  I couldn’t.  I’m not in the trenches with you on a day-to-day basis, understanding the interacting social dynamics, and observing the signaling cred that your efforts have purchased for you within the circle of people with whom you spend a solid third of your life.  I can’t appreciate what you feel when you walk past all of the cubicle dwellers on the way to your office, with both you and them knowing that you’ve earned a place above them.  I don’t live that insular reality with you and with them, so I can’t know.  I can only appraise its net worth as an external party and sadly conclude that you’re paying a hefty premium for something that has worth only in your theater, and only social worth at that.  And I can sadly recognize that you’ve stocked up on carnival cash that loses value as soon as you leave, even if you’re proud that you have more of it than anyone else at the carnival.

This is what the corporate structure does to idealists.  As I mentioned before, it robs them of perspective.  It introduces a bubble culture and funnels their natural competitiveness into zero sum games for worthless prizes while opportunists quietly brush past, looking for actual items of value.  So what is the danger to the entry level knowledge worker in hitching to a company and putting in a ton of overtime to earn experience?  It’s not that she’ll put in extra effort without compensation, which is a rational, initial choice.  It’s that she’ll get distracted by the lights, noises, and fun rides at Pleasure Island and begin to hoard carnival cash without realizing.  It’s that she’ll blink and 10 years will have expired, and her market worth will have soared far above her pay while she’s collected offices, token titles, meeting invites, and other baubles that have no value outside of the carnival.  And, worse still, she’ll have minimal leverage with which to go looking for competitive offers, since she’s traded a whole ton of value on the market in for carnival cash.  Being the resident expert on Acme Inc.’s weird, internal SAP installation may net a lot of water cooler cred at Acme Inc., but Beta LLC hiring managers are going to raise a skeptical eyebrow and say, “and that helps me…how?”

And perhaps the most depressing part of all of this is that the ruling opportunists understand how self-limiting and non-strategic this career path is.  When looking for their next CFO, they’re not looking for people that get comically over-competitive and dump $200 into the fast-pitch game in a futile effort to win a $4 inflatable bat.  That’s not at all strategic, and you can keep that person around, even through frustration, by offering progressively bigger inflatable bats.  To bring it back to message, if I’m a CEO, I’m not going to take a middle manager that works at a 33% discount in exchange for essentially nothing and promote him into a leadership position to negotiate key deals for me.  All he’d know how to do is discount merchandise and services below cost until the opportunist across from him finally took pity on him.

So, back to the advice portion.  Should a newbie hitch his wagon to a company and log lots of overtime to build experience?  Only, only, only if it’s done with constant vigilance.  Keep your eyes open at all times for strategic advancement opportunities both inside and outside of that company and leap when they come.  Avoid the carnival cash — always make sure that you’re putting in overtime on things that increase rather than limit your value on the open market.  If you’re putting in 60 hours per week becoming an expert on the nuances of the latest, greatest javascript libraries, go nuts.  If you’re putting in 60 hour weeks learning MUMPS run away, fast, and never look back, lest you suffer the fate that Alex describes, wherein “outside of [your] current employer, the skills [you] now [possess are] not only worthless, they [make you] a pariah.”  They can pay you with all of the corner offices and plaques in the world, and it will never, ever be worth it.  At all costs, avoid being a corporate idealist and avoid gaining seniority and status as compensation — not only are idealists the lowest paid, in real wages, but they’re also generally stuck where they are, unable to move up, down, or laterally and at the mercy of the company that’s been paying them carnival cash for 20 years.

So now you’ve seen the conundrum and motivations of the idealist in addition to the conundrum of the pragmatist.  With that description and a piece of career advice in the books, I’ll next move on to how most LinkedIn career advice articles should be entitled, “7 Weird Tricks to Posture Your Way Cluelessly Into Middle Management and Stay There Forever.”  I’ll also offer a look at the inclusive allure of the cult of seniority and how people get creative when it comes to sacrificing themselves to indifferent masters.  So, stay tuned for more on the idealists and, perhaps, at some point, a bit about the opportunist conundrum (though no promises on that last one, outside of the book).

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Andy Bailey
Andy Bailey
8 years ago

Awesome, at last someone blows the roof off! Thank you, Erik!
I don’t want senior/principal, an office and the power. I want to be paid and recognized consummate to my performance and real worth to the company I work for doing a job that I enjoy. If they don’t match my expectations or ignore my desire to negotiate then I will move on.

Erik Dietrich
8 years ago
Reply to  Andy Bailey

Glad you liked! What you’re describing here about yourself is the epitome of what I think of as the opportunist mindset. Each employment agreement, contract, etc, is simply a partnership arrangement and, if it ceases to be beneficial, dispassionately negotiate another one. This is particularly valuable when talking to labor salesmen (i.e. recruiters).

“They have a pool table!”
“Don’t care, what’s the pay?”
“X”
“Not enough money.”
“But, they have a pool table, and everyone there will be your dudebro and they’ll even add rockstar to your title!”
“Don’t care, not enough money. Call me back if the offer changes.”

Noam
Noam
8 years ago
Reply to  Erik Dietrich

You nailed it. I worked in a ‘we have a pool table and ping pong’ place. all the college grads loved it. they could not see that they don’t get a decent salary.

Noam
Noam
8 years ago

Love it.
I worked with someone. He was (probably still is) a senior after 3 years. he knows all the configuration and how to deploy a build using 8 scripts and 5 sql queries. he is the expert. he is the senior. he got the perks. now if he is going to look for a new job, he is just a junior developer.

Erik Dietrich
8 years ago
Reply to  Noam

That tends to create a feedback loop as well. Seniority in that role makes him feel satisfied and generally right about things (fixed mindset rather than growth mindset). If he goes out and interviews and it doesn’t go well, that creates uncomfortable cognitive dissonance that he’ll want to avoid, which will lead to less interviewing, which will lead to staying put, which will lead to more feelings of being right/satisfied/in charge, etc.

dw
dw
8 years ago

Each job, be it startup founder without a title, retail cashier a continuum of effort, enjoyment vs. misery, rewards and self-shame vs. self-respect. Some folks put up with abuse for less rewards while others don’t, and some folks start their own businesses thinking they will escape bosses, only to discover board members, the media and customers.

Erik Dietrich
8 years ago
Reply to  dw

As something of an introvert, but also as a liker of humans, the fact that depending on others is by and large inescapable is often a source of consternation. There’s certainly always a master to be served — my goal is just to do so on terms as favorable as possible, enjoying my work as much as I can.

Hugh Lang
8 years ago

Great article. I feel sorry for the idealists who fall into this trap. Idealists probably see their employer as a benevolent entity and that the overtime work is purely voluntary. Even when idealists are faced with disappointments like mediocre performance reviews, it’s easy for them to blame themselves. Also, the seniority trap eventually makes them a target for layoffs. I recall there is a term used in HR called “long level”, which they use to identify employees who have stayed at the same level for a long time. These are the folks that probably make a higher salary because of… Read more »

Erik Dietrich
8 years ago
Reply to  Hugh Lang

Thanks! Chad’s post and the Stockholm Syndrome angle is interesting. I’ve never really thought of the relationship with an employer that way, exactly, but it’s a reasonable enough parallel. I left a CIO position a while back to go off on my own, which seemed pretty risky at the time, but I’m happy with it for a variety of reasons, but perhaps the most interesting of which is that I’ve diversified the ways that I get income. I work probably more now than ever before, but the work serves a number of different masters and, if any one of them… Read more »

Hugh Lang
8 years ago
Reply to  Erik Dietrich

Thanks for that insight. I am also an independent with a range of roles and titles across several jobs and projects. Sometimes I’m a hired gun and sometimes a startup developer.

I like to think of myself as an angel developer, where I invest my time on things that have modest time commitment and some upside potential. And I get to choose which projects I join based on the quality of the team and the product.

MichaelOChurch
MichaelOChurch
8 years ago

I agree with most of this post. That said, a private office is, to me, a meaningful improvement. I suffer from occasional panic attacks and would prefer not to be seen when one hits. Being visible from behind also causes me to get physically ill. It makes it hard to work, and I generally find working more enjoyable than slacking. Open-plan offices and cubicles are unproductive and exist for a few reasons, all unrelated to any value that they provide. In low-margin industries they make sense, but they’re an absolute money-loser for high-margin work like programming. The second and more… Read more »

Erik Dietrich
8 years ago
Reply to  MichaelOChurch

There’s going to be a point later where I’ll lay out the seating arrangement that I think preferable for teams of knowledge workers, but the tl;dr version is that I like the idea of “everyone has an office around a central collaboration area.” If you feel like collaborating and being in the loud war room environment you see with open office plans, then great, go there. If you want to concentrate and be alone, you should be able to do that without headphones and ducking while you work. In this scenario, “office as status consolation prize for comp” becomes meaningless/impossible,… Read more »

MrTonyD
MrTonyD
8 years ago
Reply to  Erik Dietrich

I’m not a big fan of open offices – I think that they negatively impact quality of life. But right now, quality of life is considered unimportant relative to financial returns. So you will have to address Sandy Pentland’s research if you want to disagree with current trends (He is well known by the innovative players.) Just to get an idea about the type of thing he studies you might check out:

https://hbr.org/2014/10/workspaces-that-move-people

Erik Dietrich
8 years ago
Reply to  MrTonyD

I’ll have to give it a look in more detail, but I read/sometimes-skimmed through the link. One thing that strikes me is to wonder how much gain is offset for a given organization by (1) diminishing returns on scale and (2) minimizing the talent pool geographically. In other words, it seems to be saying, “assuming that developers working for large organizations and being co-located is non-negotiable, our research suggests that bottom line and group productivity are maximized when individual productivity is dampened in favor of ‘collisions’ in the space to spur cross-pollination.” But how would the bottom line be affected… Read more »

MrTonyD
MrTonyD
8 years ago
Reply to  Erik Dietrich

What you are saying may be true. The problem is that Sandy Pentland’s research (just alluded to in the link), showed better performance by software companies with open offices. So, while I agree that there are other considerations, it will be very hard to convince the typical CEO or CTO who watches a YouTube about the research. They have a set of data they find convincing. The “collisions” are essentially just a theory to explain the observations of better performance.

Kerry Patrick
Kerry Patrick
8 years ago

Great article. What you’ve described perfectly is what I used to think of as the Luke Skywalker vs. Han Solo career path. You either embrace the idealism and firmly entrench yourself as a “badly needed leader”, or you pragmatically work for what you can get out of it and go home at the end of the day (I’m speaking archetypically, so please don’t reply that Han eventually joined Rebellion, LLC as a mid-level general). I never really thought about where those two career paths ended, although I’m glad I chose the latter and investing in my skills rather than investing… Read more »

Erik Dietrich
8 years ago
Reply to  Kerry Patrick

I think the Han Solo/Luke Skywalker metaphor is perfect; I really like that. And, since it’s not like we’re battling the Sith for the soul of the galaxy, it makes sense to do generally try to be a decent human, but one that looks out for yourself and your interests.

Andrzej Rehmann
Andrzej Rehmann
8 years ago

Thanks for putting this kind of stuff out. It makes me think a lot.

Erik Dietrich
8 years ago

Glad to hear it, and thanks for the feedback and for reading it. I appreciate it.

Wilhelm
Wilhelm
8 years ago

You are definitely onto something with your article. I agree people who stay somewhere a long time generally are there because they want to make a difference for the company. I think some people also like to be a big fish in a small pond and be in control. As a big fish, you are accorded respect and a certain level of deference as the senior guy. When you are constantly the new guy coming into a company, your opportunities to learn and make a jump in pay are generally bigger, but your chances to tell anyone what to do… Read more »

Erik Dietrich
8 years ago
Reply to  Wilhelm

Off the cuff, I’d say that the people you describe (“comfort stayers”) are more pragmatists than idealists. Staying for creature comforts and familiarity is emblematic of the pragmatist condition: “I know this isn’t the best thing for my career, but career isn’t everything.”

dave falkner
dave falkner
7 years ago

Dwight Schrute: “I have been salesman of the month for 13 out of the last 12 months. You heard me right. I did so well last February that corporate gave me two plaques in lieu of a pay raise.”

http://i.imgur.com/hoLkU.jpg

Erik Dietrich
7 years ago
Reply to  dave falkner

My wife and I have actually just been re-watching The Office recently on Netflix, and I remember seeing that particular episode. You’re right — that epitomizes the sentiment.

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