PG overstated the case IMO. Having good bosses helps many people, and being independent helps a (I believe a smaller number of) other people.<p>One of the problem with managers today is the MBA and the management ideology that it has spread. The average MBA makes a lousy manager, in my observation.
This is certainly interesting. I think the more tailored view is that there are many people who have the necessary risk threshold, creativity, and ambition to undergo the challenge of working at or running a start-up. However, for everyone else, including brilliant people seeking greater financial security working at a large company can have many benefits.<p>Also, large companies like Google can give their employees freedom of action (20% of their time in fact), as well as the resources to actually see their ideas put in action.
This is even worse than the "pseudo science based on anecdotes". This is pseudo science based on the shoddiest "statistics" (if it's worth calling it that) possible - pseudo science based on pseudo scientific data.<p>"Here's a very small sample of data. Let's draw totally arbitrary conclusions from the data and then extrapolate wildly about extremely complex systems and patterns of behaviour. Tada! I can haz argument!"<p>How much lower can we go?
A problem with the central analogy: he's not really talking about bosses in particular. He's talking about environments. Poachers are a problem for current-day Africa, hence active management is needed. They weren't a problem before, however, and they were not needed. A good boss makes a healthy environment for innovators. Other healthy environments exist.
"Unfortunately, Paul's analogy is as far away removed from being accurate, as my mother is from being Yahoo's next CEO."<p>I wonder if his mother is insulted.<p>You know you don't _have_ to make an comparison - you can just say "Paul's analogy is inaccurate". I don't know anything about your mother (except that you think she's incapable of running yahoo), so putting that in does not help anything.
<p><pre><code> good managers have only motivated people working with them.
Bad managers have both motivated and unmotivated people.
It turns out that good managers really make a difference!
</code></pre>
Well, either that or bad managers can really demotivate otherwise normal people, while good bosses just stay out of the way. Ta-da! I drew opposite conclusion form his data.
How are these two ideas even in conflict? The first thing Jeremy and I did when we started our company was to hire Dave as our boss. Easily our best decision.