Thanks - I thought that it was fairly over the top, and I will certainly try to make sure that the book is marketed as a humor book. Honestly I have never been a manager, and I have no aspirations to be one.
If anyone is interested, here is Chapter 1 (such as it is)
Chapter 1Why management is important to you I heard you were getting a new laptop... I’m gonna throw it off the roof.
Mike Pedersen
This chapter is mainly for people that are not already managers. If you are already a manager, you can still read this chapter to remind you why you are better than the rest of the human race.
By the time that you are done reading this chapter, you will know why it is that you need to be a manager. I have studied this topic for many years to come to these conclusions, and you can just ride on my coattails. This is unfair, but as a manager you need to be used to gaining all sorts of benefits based on the work of other people.
Lots of MoneyThe point is that you can’t be too greedy.
Donald Trump
The important thing to remember about management is that managers are important people, and therefore they make large salaries. You want to make a large salary so that you have lots of extra money.
If you are going to be a manager, you probably want to buy a big, fancy car, and a big fancy house. People that are managers always have valuable and expensive things hanging around to show how important they are. You can’t get these things without spending lots of money, or stealing them. In most countries that is illegal, and it is also easy to get caught doing it. Don’t do illegal things unless you are pretty sure that you won’t get caught. Being thrown in jail is not very manager-like.
You may have asked while reading the previous paragraph “What is the difference between valuable and expensive?” The difference is this: expensive things are things that cost lots of money. Valuable things are expensive things that are actually useful. You need both valuable expensive things as well as non-valuable expensive things in order to be a real manager.
One road to managerhood is to get lots of credit cards and buy all of the valuable and expensive things before you are already a manager. This is a great idea, because once people see that you are already living the manager lifestyle, they are sure to defer to you and offer you promotions and make you a manager. Living a lifestyle that you can’t afford is a good way to show that you are manager material.
It is even more manager-like to have and use of lots of money that isn’t even yours. There are many different people who have done this. Study the lives of Frank Abagnale, Charles Ponzi and Loseph Weil for some good ideas about how to do this. Once you have lots and lots of money, people will probably seek you out to give you more money and promotions.
Extra money is helpful in many situations, such as when you are walking down the road, and a car swerves to hit you, and you dive out of the way into a dumpster. You can pile up a bunch of one dollar bills to form an inclined plane and use it as a makeshift ramp to get out of the dumpster. Once you are out, you can recoup the cost by suing the person that almost hit you.
PowerHe has the power to render us happy or unhappy; to make our service light or burdensome.
Ebenezer Scrooge
Another benefit of being a manager is that managers have power. Lots of people only look at the money that management can bring, but power has its own class of benefits that money alone is not able to convey. As a manager, you have power over your resources.
For those who don’t understand the word resources, I will define it now. Resources are the people that you are in charge of. Other words that mean the same thing are peons, peasants, grunts, slaves, underlings, subordinates, inferiors, minions, lackeys, flunkies, vassals, subjects, hirelings, servants, henchmen, and drones.
If you are in a bad mood, you can make their life miserable. If you are in a good mood, you can give them half a day off. Pretty much you can do whatever you want. If you are in a really bad mood, you can fire people for no real reason. If you are already a manager, you should try doing this some time for fun.
It’s no big deal if they take it seriously and actually leave, since resources are replaceable. It is not like any given resource is any better than any other one. People have an illusion that one resource could be better capable of handling particular problems than other resources, or that resources are not actually all the same deep down. This illusion is false.
Resources are Resources, and they are fundamentally different than managers. The thing that separates them is that managers are critical to the functioning of the business, and resources are just like little leeches that hang on and live off of the dregs that managers discard.
Money and PowerMoney is power, and power gives you choice.
Sam Rockwell
This is the real point of this chapter. The combined might of money and power is the real thing that you gain from being a manager. You need to be a manager because you will have both money and power.
The combined might of money and power can get you through any problem that you might encounter. It is well known that money and power can solve all problems that exist, and it has even has been proven by astrology and phrenology that money and power can solve all problems that could exist. Scientists are feverishly working on the infamous P=NP problem, which is the question of weather power and money can solve all problems that couldn’t possibly exist.
I think that the answer is yes. Power and money can even solve all problems that couldn’t possibly exist. You need to realize this for yourself. In order to help your subconscious brain recognize this fact, I have prepared a visualization technique for you to use.
Under no circumstance should you attempt this visualization technique while you are operating power machinery, motor vehicles, or one or multiple zambonis. When you are ready to start this technique, lay face down on a comfortable Hästens bed, with the air temperature exactly 74 degrees Fareinheit and 84% humidity. Ambient noise should be no more than 150 decibels. If you do not yet own a Hästens bed, you can also prepare for this by balancing in a one handed crow pose on top of the headrest of an office chair.
Imagine the following scenario: You are sitting at a big expansive desk. You are lighting an expensive cuban cigar with a 100 dollar bill. Your secretary talks to you over the intercom and says that one of your resources - Johnson - wants to talk to you. You say “Send him in”, and in a moment he is in front of you. He walks over to your desk, and starts to ask you some question.
You have a hard time focusing on what he says (it’s not really important anyway), but when he is done, you say “No, Johnson, I think that you need to think it over again and tell me why you were wrong.” Johnson frowns a little bit, and you reach over and flip the switch that drops him into the pit of alligators and snakes. Laughing, you light up another cigar.
You need to commit this mental image to heart. This needs to be the thing that drives you to get out of your Hästens bed in the morning, and makes you into the person that you need to be in order to be the right type of manager.
One way to make it more real to you is to imagine it with all of your senses. How would the switch feel on your finger? What color is Johnson’s tie? What sound would the floor make as it dropped away? What do alligators smell like anyway? Thoughts like these will help to make this more real to you.