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Typical Management Styles in Pharma Industry (Part 4)– Blog Post by Asrar Qureshi

Dear Colleagues!  This is Pharma Veterans Blog Post #227. Pharma Veterans shares the wealth of knowledge and wisdom of Veterans for the benefit of Pharma Community. Pharma Veterans Blog is published by Asrar Qureshi on WordPress, the top blog site. If you wish to share your stories, ideas and thoughts, please email to asrar@asrarqureshi.com for publishing your contributions here.

Continued from Previous……

The next management style seen in Pharma Managers is ‘The Selfish Big Brother’.

Of all the Big Brothers, the Selfish Big Brother is mostly a dangerous character. We have seen Big Brother Managers evolving from Benevolent to Know-All to Autocratic already. In the same line this is the culmination point.

The Selfish Big Brother

The Selfish Big Brother is a dangerous character; more dangerous than a simply selfish boss. A selfish boss will do anything to get the object of his desire. He will not differentiate between good and bad, wrong and right, halal and haram; he will push forward his agenda. However, he does it rather openly and people around know him quickly for what he is. Others can take necessary precautions to protect themselves.

The SBBs are not recognizable in the first glance due to the BB factor. Their outward behavior may be a mix of other Big Brother forms. It is only after closer examination and consistent behavior observation that you can spot and identify the SBB. Their power to damage is much higher because they attack unsuspecting people.

Some signs are given here.

Problems of Big Brother Syndrome

We have briefly looked at the Big Brother Management Styles in Pharma. Of course, these are not just in Pharma, but in other industries also. These styles are most common among first line and middle managers because they are working with young, inexperienced people who easily fall for these things. Senior Managers cannot use these because their subordinates know these things very well already.

Big Brother Syndrome is common in first line and middle managers because it helps them to mask their unprofessional approach, lack of managerial knowledge and general ineptness. Problem is that the staff does not get the training, coaching and managing that it badly needs at the beginning of their career.

Big Brother Syndrome is hurting the managers, the managed, and the organizations. The solution to this problem is training of managers and coaching them to become professional managers. It is also essential to break this vicious cycle where Big Brothers are being cloned in every new generation of managers.

Concluded.

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