Description
Organizations are systematically designed to promote their most brilliant employees until they land in a role they are completely incapable of performing. Every corporate employee has experienced the baffling reality of reporting to a manager who seems entirely incapable of doing their job. We assume these disastrous leadership choices are mere accidents or the result of nepotism. But in reality, organizational incompetence isn't a mistake-it is a mathematical certainty programmed into the very fabric of corporate promotion.The Peter Principle exposes the dark paradox of career advancement: employees who excel in their current roles are continuously promoted until they reach a position where they are no longer competent. Once they hit this ceiling of inadequacy, they remain there indefinitely, clogging the hierarchy and actively sabotaging the productivity of the capable workers beneath them.This book deconstructs the flawed logic of traditional HR management. We investigate why brilliant engineers make terrible project leads, why top-tier salespeople fail miserably as branch managers, and why the corporate world insists on rewarding specific skills with entirely unrelated responsibilities.Stop promoting your best talent into failure. By understanding the mechanics of the Peter Principle, business leaders can completely redesign their incentive structures, replacing the dangerous ladder of management with alternative pathways that reward competence without destroying it.
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