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Home Front: Culture Wars
The Art of Showing Pure Incompetence at an Unwanted Task
2007-04-20
Posted by:BrerRabbit

#6  Wally is my hero!
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2007-04-20 19:05  

#5  You beat me to the Wally reference, GK. It instantly sprang to mind.

The correlation from my military experience was that work gravitated to competency.

Work flows towards the competent person until that person submerges.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-04-20 16:46  

#4  This was a profound lesson from my grandfather's time:

"Never learn how to clean or dress a chicken."
Posted by: Anonymoose   2007-04-20 16:14  

#3  "The inability to grasp selective things can be very helpful in keeping your desk clear of unwanted clutter," says the executive in HR, or what he calls "the dumping ground" of all unwanted office tasks.

The correlation from my military experience was that work gravitated to competency. If you were able to get the job done, you kept getting the jobs. If you were less than competent, your workload diminished. The art to work was to be good enough, but leave a bit of doubt in the bosses mind to avoid getting buried by assignments and to train and empower your subordinates as quickly as possible.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2007-04-20 13:42  

#2  But to refrain from learning something requires years of practice and refinement.
I knew that already because I follow Wally's antics in the 'Dilbert' strip.
Posted by: GK   2007-04-20 12:52  

#1  Huh. I always thought of that as "the art of unemployment". In my biz, we're expected to learn stuff, as in this paraphrased conversation:

Boss: Here's a long C program. Make it do more stuff.
Me: I don't know C.
Boss: Learn.
Me: Hokay.

And this was without benefit of classes. There was one guy in the department who knew C, and I asked him about the tricky bits. Everything else I looked up in books (Google being kind of green at that point).

Once a technician marveled at how we were expected to show up at a location and teach ourselves to use a complicated, expensive piece of equipment -- and did. I could have kissed him. All my colleagues thought this was SOP (and it was, but it was nice to hear someone acknowledge how difficult it was).
Posted by: Angie Schultz   2007-04-20 12:34  

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