The Great Management Myth: Your Best People Are Your Worst Managers (And It's Your Fault)
Here's a story I see way too often:
Sarah's your star performer.
Top sales person.
Client whisperer.
Revenue machine.
So you promote her to manager.
Because that's what you do, right?
Now Sarah's miserable.
Her team's struggling.
And you've lost your best salesperson.
Congratulations. You've just fallen for the Great Management Myth.
The Costly Assumption
We've created this bizarre business logic:
Want more money? Manage people
Want career growth? Manage people
Want recognition? Manage people
Here's the problem:
Great individual contributors often make terrible managers.
And great managers often aren't the best technical experts.
They're different skills.
Completely different skills.
The Real Cost
When you promote without purpose:
You lose a great specialist
You gain a struggling manager
Your team suffers
Your results tank
Everyone's unhappy
And the kicker?
That star performer you just promoted?
They're already updating their LinkedIn.
What Actually Works
Create Dual Career Paths:
- Technical Expert Track
- People Management Track
- Both with equal recognition
- Both with comparable compensation
Recognize Expertise Differently:
- Senior Specialist roles
- Technical Advisory positions
- Subject Matter Expert titles
- Client Success Leaders
Pay for Value, Not Title:
- Compensate expertise properly
- Reward technical excellence
- Create specialist bonuses
- Value contribution over position
The Smart Structure
Stop building pyramids.
Start building constellations:
Technical Stars (deep expertise)
Project Leaders (coordination)
People Leaders (team development)
Individual Contributors (specialized skills)
Each path:
Has clear progression
Offers competitive pay
Provides recognition
Allows growth
Your Next Steps
Audit Your Structure:
- Map current progression paths
- Identify trapped specialists
- Spot forced managers
- Find growth blockages
Create Options:
- Design specialist pathways
- Build technical leadership roles
- Develop mentorship positions
- Create advisory roles
Fix Your Pay:
Review compensation models
Value technical expertise
Reward specialized skills
Pay for impact, not title
Because great management isn't a promotion.
It's a profession.
And your best people deserve better than being promoted into failure.
How are you building paths for your stars to shine?