Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

Senior leaders are feeling the burden of cuts to middle management

Story by Lily Mae Lazarus

In the pursuit of speed and efficiency, many companies have aggressively trimmed layers of middle management. Chief executives like Amazon’s Andy Jassy and Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg have championed flatter organizational structures in an effort to reduce bureaucracy and spark innovation. But what looks lean on paper is proving increasingly costly at the top.

Senior executives are now shouldering more direct reports, managing tasks once owned by middle managers, and losing valuable time for strategic thinking. According to Korn Ferry’s 2025 Workforce Survey, 41% of employees say their organizations have cut management layers, and nearly half of senior executives doubt their ability to manage it all, outpacing even CEOs (40%) in self-doubt.

Middle managers have long served as the vital link between vision and execution. Without them, that connection frays, says senior client partner at Korn Ferry Maria Amato. In fact, 43% of employees surveyed by Korn Ferry say leadership isn’t aligned, and 37% report feeling directionless.

It’s not just clarity that suffers, either. Leadership development, mentorship, and career advancement—typically nurtured by middle managers—often vanish too. That threatens retention, particularly among high performers, who often leave for better career support that strong middle managers provide.

The fix isn’t simply to reintroduce layers. "Before you jump to solutions, whether it's cutting or anything else, you have to diagnose your own organization,” Amato warns. Companies, she says, need to redesign leadership roles with greater intention, ensuring executives can stay focused on strategy while building an infrastructure that supports talent development.

https://fortune.com/2025/04/21/senior-leaders-burden-cuts-middle-management/

by
| 1655 views | | 6 replies (last April 22, 2025) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1jsd49609

6 replies (most recent on top)

Y’all just don’t get it. We can’t have the people doing the work talking to senior management. How would that serve to make the data match the management insight? What would we do if the people who do the work and understand the business were to contradict the senior management narrative.

Face it, if you’re doing work, you’re not in the club.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ej+1jsd49609

My thoughts and prayers go out to all those useless middle managers out there

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @eh+1jsd49609

In my support function we have 4 levels of middle management working on the same thing as the folks at the bottom of the chain. Endless meetings, discussions, upward and downward alignment, reworks 😴 all for a metric that the VP wants improved, but has no P&L impact - maaaannnn get me out of here

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @dc+1jsd49609

Exxon middle managers basically don't have the ability to do anything for their employees except listen and try to make the smallest course corrections.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @d4+1jsd49609

@OP+1jsd49609

This is ExxonMobil except our middle management routinely applies the "Hunger Games" strategy to their own career advancement.

Leadership development, mentorship, and career advancement—typically nurtured by middle managers—often vanish too. That threatens retention, particularly among high performers, who often leave for better career support that strong middle managers provide.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @d1+1jsd49609

Article must be written by fired middle managers. No I don't miss them.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @a4+1jsd49609

Post a reply

: