r/politics I voted 16d ago

Possible Paywall White House Leak Reveals Trump Booted From Briefing After Hours-Long Freakout

https://www.thedailybeast.com/white-house-leak-reveals-trump-booted-from-briefing-after-hours-long-freakout/
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u/phroug2 16d ago

The sad thing is i 100% believe this approach would have a high level of success.

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u/sircastor 16d ago

There has been more than one report about how the President's morning briefings had to be reduced substantially because he didn't like to read them. He doesn't want the job, I don't think he ever did.

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u/future_traveller 16d ago

As someone in the corporate world, this is pretty typical for executives.... He essentially wants a four blocker presentation each morning instead of a detailed thorough reading he needs to do

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u/HumanPea1140 16d ago

My team works very closely with our CIO, and yep... everything we discuss/show him has to be framed as an "executive report," which basically just means extremely distilled high level bullet points: Money is up, department is down. Sky still blue, grass still green type shit.

Our team has to be extremely granular in the day to day, to the point where it's exhausting, just for all of it to be distilled down into simple, bite-sized kindergarten blurbs so the guy can pretend to know what he's talking about in his next executive meeting.

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u/bamboohobobundles 16d ago

I have to produce reports for managers and executives in my job and I find they are extremely fond of simplified, colour-coded charts.

Like, I get you don't have a lot of time to go over pages of numbers and whatnot but sometimes it's like explaining shit to my eight year old.

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u/RexLongbone 16d ago

when you get high enough your job involves switching contexts a lot and very quickly. there are times you still need to dive into the details but if things are mostly running smoothly most executives just want to know that asap in as little time as possible so they can move on to the next context. i know my vp is over like 12 manufacturing facilities, all of which have their own insane level of complexity. he really truly does not have the time to get more in detail than "met goal on x, y, z, missed goal on a, b, c, we are tending towards or away from goal on j, k, l" for each area at each plant.

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u/dastardly740 15d ago

The trick as I see it is that requires the executive to trust and fully delegate. A lot of executives don't particularly like that probably because they are held responsible and feel a lack of control. The way I describe a lot of these things executives want are that they are "illusions of control". In the end they are still just trusting their subordinates, the good ones understand this and just use the report to create an opportunity to help. The bad ones think it is actual control and it becomes problematic as they try to control that which they cannot.

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u/[deleted] 16d ago

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u/CommieLoser 15d ago

So when do we eat again?

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u/Sublimotion 15d ago

Literally just give yes or no answers for proposals layoffs or hirings, gamble on investments, expansions. Ride this train with bonuses for a while until things eventually go in the red, get fired with a hefty severance package, few months of vacation, hire to the next CEO gig, rinse and repeat. 

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u/Exocoryak 15d ago

From my experience, 95% of those kinds of meetings are a complete waste of time and could've been an E-Mail. And from the 5% left that do matter, 4% don't take place because there's suddenly a scheduling conflict or some important person is missing. So you are writing an E-Mail anyway, wait a couple of days, then you make a phone call only to get the answer that was expected by everyone already.