Guppie Defined
The word Guppie is an acronym for Grossly Under-Performing
Person. I use it to describe the majority of the people
who
work on what I call the corporate reef (see In Search of
a Metaphor elsewhere). A formal definition is difficult to
construct because of the diversity of the workforce, but
the
following list of Guppie characteristics gives a general
introduction to the species.
- Guppies can be male or female, young or old.
- Given a choice, Guppies prefer to take a nap (see
The Art of
Napping).
- While ambitious members of the corporate community
dress to
win, the Guppie dresses to break even. Corporate dress
codes
are a nuisance for the Guppie, who usually manages to
dress
right on the line of corporate acceptability. Comfort
and
convenience are the driving forces in the Guppie's
wardrobe
selections. To draw a military analogy, if the
corporate
achievers can be thought of as wearing full dress blues,
the
Guppie wears the corporate equivalent of camouflaged
fatigues. Unlike the power-dressers, the Guppie dresses
to
blend in, to disappear in the crowd.
- The Guppie's short-term career goal is to get by
until
quitting time.
- The Guppie's medium-term career goal is to last
until
Friday.
- The Guppie's long-term career goal is to stay
employed until
something comes along. He isn't sure what it is that he
is
waiting for, but he has a vague sense that salvation is
on
the way. It may be a feeling that some forgotten rich
relative will surely remember him in his will, or that
Publisher's Clearing House will call at any moment. The
Guppie plots winning lottery strategies and dreams of
economic freedom. It is this unfounded belief in
imminent
rescue that keeps him sane. He doesn't want to advance
in
the company, and he certainly doesn't want more
responsibility. The Guppie does what he has to do to
get by
until relief arrives.
- The Guppie brings a power lunch in a brown paper
bag, or
dines at the nearest 7-Eleven store.
- The Guppie wakes each morning thinking about what he
will
do after work.
- Guppies are generally smarter than the people for
whom they
work, but they go to considerable trouble to keep it a
secret. To appear too smart could result in one of two
equally undesirable outcomes: Either the boss will be
offended, in which case the Guppie's job will be in
jeopardy, or somebody will be so impressed that the
Guppie
will be promoted to a position of responsibility. These
are
both undesirable possibilities from the Guppie's
viewpoint.
The Guppie is without corporate ambition, and likes the
status quo.
- Guppies are exceptions to the well-known Peter
Principle
that states people rise to their level of incompetence.
The
Guppie lowers his or her level of competence to match
the
job.
- Guppies usually see clearer than the bosses. They
always
know what is wrong in their working group, and they
usually
know how to fix it, but they never volunteer, and nobody
ever asks for their suggestions.
- The Guppie is not a true believer in the benevolence
of the
corporation. This is the single most important defining
characteristic of Guppies. They feel no overwhelming
sense
of gratitude to the corporations for giving them a job.
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Copyright (C) 1998 by Roger L. Deen. All
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