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Why Companies Keep Promoting Bad Managers

Why Companies Keep Promoting Bad Managers

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Most companies promote people into management roles based on performance, not leadership ability. That decision quietly drives turnover, disengagement, and poor team performance. In this episode, Kara Yarnot explains why only a small percentage of people are naturally wired to lead, how organizations keep missing great leaders, and what needs to change in hiring, development, and career pathing.The conversation breaks down the real reason people leave jobs, how the “Peter Principle” shows up in modern workplaces, and why companies need to rethink both manager selection and individual contributor career growth. It also explores how better assessments, early identification of leadership traits, and alternative career paths can fix broken systems without losing top performers.If you’ve ever left a job because of your manager, wondered why great employees become bad leaders, or struggled with how to grow without managing people, this episode answers those questions clearly and practically. Key Takeaways - People don’t leave companies—they leave managers, yet true leadership ability is relatively rare - Promoting top performers into management often backfires; performance ≠ leadership potential - Strong leaders are identified by traits and competencies, not just visibility or past results - Not everyone should lead—training helps, but companies need parallel paths for individual contributors - Clear expectations, honest branding, and room for feedback/failure are key to building and keeping strong leadersTimestamps 00:00 – Why manager selection is broken 01:30 – Research on why employees leave jobs 03:00 – The Peter Principle explained simply 05:00 – Natural leadership vs trainable skills 08:00 – Are leaders born or developed? 10:00 – Why companies miss future leaders 14:00 – Scaling organizations and leadership gaps 16:00 – Using assessments to identify leadership potential 19:00 – Rethinking hiring and succession planning 22:00 – The problem with promoting top performers 24:00 – Career paths for non-managers 27:00 – Titles, compensation, and retention strategies 31:00 – Building better leadership systems 34:00 – Employer branding and manager quality 36:00 – Generational shifts in work expectations 41:00 – Learning from leadership mistakes 44:00 – Why failure is necessary for growthKeywords bad managers, why employees quit jobs, leadership development, Peter Principle explained, promoting employees to management, leadership vs performance, talent management strategy, employee retention strategies, career paths without management, hiring for leadership potential
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