Free thinkers and brain washed magical thinkers will truly hate this idea
Free thinkers and brain washed magical thinkers will truly hate this idea and that it has worked so well for this company.
The Morning Star Company, which handles 40 percent of California's
processed tomato crop, is the largest tomato processing company in the
world. That's impressive, but the most unique thing about Morning Star
is that it has no managers. Instead, Morning Star embraces an approach
they call "self-management." As Paul Green, Jr. of Morning Star's
Self-Management Institute puts it: "Self-management is, at a very very
high level, exactly the way you live when you go home from work. We just
ask you to keep that hat on when you come to work at Morning Star."
In
our everyday lives, we don't have bosses telling us which careers or
hobbies to pursue. If we want to purchase a car or a home, we don't have
to get permission. Sure, we consult with friends and family before
making important decisions, but as long as we're prepared to take
responsibility for our choices, we're free to do what we want.
The
same spirit reigns at Morning Star. Employees decide how their skill
sets can best help Morning Star succeed and then develop their own lists
of roles and responsibilities in collaboration with their colleagues.
If Morning Star employees want to purchase new equipment, they don't ask
managers for permission. Rather, they discuss potential purchases with
colleagues who will be affected by the purchase and, if others with
expertise support the decision, they simply buy what they need. There is
no R&D department at Morning Star. There are, however, strong
incentives for every employee to innovate. Workers who successfully
innovate don't receive new titles. They earn the respect of their
colleagues in addition to financial compensation.
Running a firm
without managers seems like a crazy idea to many, but is it? If the most
prosperous societies are organized around institutions that promote
freedom and responsibility, why shouldn't a similar approach work within
a firm? If market-based societies are best able to take advantage of
local and dispersed knowledge, then doesn't it make sense to give
staffers with the most local knowledge the freedom to make decisions?
More
than 50 years ago, Leonard E. Read wrote "I, Pencil," an essay that
asks how we can expect central planning to succeed when nobody in the
world possess all the knowledge needed to produce even a simple pencil.
For more than 40 years, Morning Star has been demonstrating that you
don't need managers to run a successful company.
(Full disclosure: Morning Star founder Chris Rufer is a supporter of Reason Foundation, the nonprofit that publishes Reason TV.)
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