Why are Indian managers hard to work with?
Compared to white ones. Obviously not all of us may have the same experience but this is a general stereotype and my own experience. Please enlighten gyani people.
Crab in a bucket, GKC, and Babugiri mentality in a nutshell
1) Crab in a bucket - We just have too many people competing for a small number of posts so most of the people who have climbed up the ladder are ruthless boomers or people who will crush you immediately in order to save themselves.
2) Babugiri mentality - Eastern Civil Servant Mentality. A few of them cracked some exam and got hired for their theoretical knowledge. They lack any skills for a managerial position. Adding Uffsar is a god complex to it, then it becomes very hard to work with such morons.
3) GKC - Gand Ke Consultant - Know Nothing, Show Nothing. Pretty Self Explanatory.
Combine these powers, and you get Indian Manager (avg.)
Dcube
Stealth
a year ago
My first manager was a total bitch.
She made me suicidal. Forced one of the leads to be on call for 10 hr straight each day. I resigned.
Dcube
Stealth
a year ago
Your points properly explained her
See more comments
FamousCoil13
Stealth
a year ago
The labor laws in western countries are very employee friendly when compared to that of India. Not only laws, but the environment you see in education institution and within thier culture is quite different to ours. All this results in a different mentality towards not only work but other aspects in life as well.
Tholaram
Stealth
a year ago
As for labour laws they are pretty much non existent in the US. India has far better ones. Of course Europe has the best ones when it comes to protecting employees.
Dcube
Stealth
a year ago
Laws are there but even then if you see I'm much more reluctant to work with an Indian manager which is based out of the US or europe then their foreign counterpart
Discover More
Curated from across
Moving Abroad on
by Brisktalk
Amazon
Moving to the USA is a farce, you will always be poor therr
Same story of countless friends who went there
Money expert Ramit Sethi often has to help couples realize they're spending too much. This high-income couple, though, he says, might be spe...
https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2024/04/05/ramit-sethi-advice-to-millennial-couple-making-850k-with-money-fears.html