It's the start of Q3, had to sit through and waste 2 hours of my time with my boss's quarterly planning "staff meeting". There were only four of us, three frontline managers and my boss. My boss's boss has only two reports, I bet the three person "staff meeting" would be even more boring. I then had to deal with similar meetings with my scrum master and the architect who we never ask for but aligned to us...
Fidelity's org chart is just too deep! The higher up in the org chart, the folks are supposedly more self driven, more mission driven, and requires less supervision, why then there are so many middle managers with less than say five reports?
Just follow other companies' suit. Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta are thinning out middle managers, flattening org charts.
- Mark Zuckerberg was an early advocate of the "Great Flattening," describing it as an overhiring fix.
- XBox CEO Phil Spencer: "follow Microsoft’s lead in removing layers of management to increase agility and effectiveness,"
- Andy Jassy said that Amazon’s middle managers want to “put their fingerprint on everything” but haven’t been always making the right recommendations. So he’s flattening the hierarchy and giving more power to individual contributors—while calling employees back to work.
If you don't know how, as suggested by other commenters:
- Budget certain (much smaller) number of middle management position for an area
- Open all or most of them up for the capable to apply or reapply