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I found it interesting that the author mentioned tactical planning for manager and director, but not strategic planning for the VP. That seems like a useful differentiator to me (with extremely contrived examples)...

C-level - sets highest level strategy (We're going to the moon!)

VP - adds level of detail to strategy (draws a map from earth to the moon, decides we need a rocket ship to get there)

Director - bridges strategy and tactics (creates high level requirements the rocket ship, makes sure there are enough gas stations on the way to the moon)

Manager - ensures tactical success (ensures the team builds a rocket that meets the spec, makes sure the rocket stops for gas on the way)

And of course, for a sufficiently large org, some of this gets offloaded to dedicated Product Managers, Program Managers, etc. But, that's orthogonal to the point of the article, I think.



VP seems like just a title that corporation gives out when they run out of brownie points or something.


I think the impression comes from banks, because you need to be a VP to sign contracts for the company or something like that, so they just make everyone a VP.


C-level - sets highest level strategy (We're going to the moon!)

VP - Tells directors to work faster

Director - Tells managers to work faster

Manager - unblocks team

ICs - do real work


Or another way to put it is

VP- protects their empire from the C level

Director- protects their department from the VP

Manager- protects their team from the director

IC- can get real work done because they are protected from this political crap




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