Managment and promotion in orgonisations. Do autistic people miss out?

So i've been thinking about an issue that I think is dificult for STEM employees and especially autistic ones in companies. And that is that there offten isn't a path to career progresion that doesn't involve transitioning, even if gradually, from a technical to a people manament role. The issue is a lot of stem personel don't want to do this. And for autistic personel it may not be within their capabilities. That isn't to say autistic people are bad at managing tasks, planing projects, just not nessiceraly good at handeling the people working on those tasks and projects. So my proposal in a nutshell is let the two aspects of managment be seperated. Let the task manager and the line manager be two seperat people. Let the people persons specialise in line mangment and the probblem solvers specialise in task managment. Lots of orgonisations already do matrix managment where one person may answer to multiplu project heads but generally only has one line manager (who is also a project head or who is line managed by one) So why not have line managers who are not project managers, they just look after people. Training, vacations, sicknesses, absences, complaints etc, all that stuff. but not actual bread and butter work which they leave to the project managers. That way people can bepromoted from technical roles into technical roles or even promoted in place as they get more expert so the orgonisation can keep that acumulated skill.

The way I see it as things stand autistic people get stuck in junior roles, leave for other companies or go into roles that don't realy suit them. Also if you get really great people persons as line managers they can mange more people. And freed of the red tape project managers can project manage more people. And do it better.

What do people think?

Parents
  • Most IT companies, at least the ones I've worked in, have matrix management - people report to a project lead for the team they work in who is responsible for the software delivery, meanwhile being line managed by someone different. And while I wasn't diagnosed autistic at the time, I suspect that many of my colleagues were autistic, both managers and developers.

    And some autistic people are highly sensitive due to their sensory processing, so I wouldn't be using that (generally male) stereotype to assume all autistic people are poor people managers.

    In general it is easier if both these roles are conducted by one person as interpersonal issues within teams can be sorted quicker than if they are 2 or more separate managers that need to get involved.

Reply
  • Most IT companies, at least the ones I've worked in, have matrix management - people report to a project lead for the team they work in who is responsible for the software delivery, meanwhile being line managed by someone different. And while I wasn't diagnosed autistic at the time, I suspect that many of my colleagues were autistic, both managers and developers.

    And some autistic people are highly sensitive due to their sensory processing, so I wouldn't be using that (generally male) stereotype to assume all autistic people are poor people managers.

    In general it is easier if both these roles are conducted by one person as interpersonal issues within teams can be sorted quicker than if they are 2 or more separate managers that need to get involved.

Children
  • And some autistic people are highly sensitive due to their sensory processing, so I wouldn't be using that (generally male) stereotype to assume all autistic people are poor people managers.

    While I'm not saying all. I'm going to point out social dificulties is a diagnostic nessesity for autism. Autistic people with out social dificulties are either not autistic or have truly brilient support mechanisms around them to make that happen. That princaple will of course translate to the workplace.

    In general it is easier if both these roles are conducted by one person as interpersonal issues within teams can be sorted quicker than if they are 2 or more separate managers that need to get involved.

    Since most interpersonal issues at work are between people and their managers I doubt that.