Fire the CEO, Introducing the AxO's

(boringops.sh)

80 points | by boringops-dan 1 day ago

11 comments

  • drykiss 1 day ago
    More generally about companies and how they’re organized - Why do we have “benevolent dictator” CxOs and trickle-down ownership and decision making powers? But bottom-up responsibility for faults and mistakes? I feel like it’s high time to have more democratic systems at our workspaces as well. More of a co-op model of working than a pyramid. Doesn’t make sense at all, for example, that the core engineers who built the google search algorithm would be paid 5x (or further) less than a CEO of Google. And then if they leave Google, they immediately stop receiving “royalty” or compensation for their own code that is still being used by Google and will continue to earn it even more money while they’re gone.
    • boringops-dan 1 day ago
      The hard truth is that the technical solution really is a piece of the overall puzzle to what makes success, and its easy for technical people to overvalue it. I think we're seeing a bit of it in the current AI question of "If vibecoding is so damn good, where are all the vibe coding SaaS's?" The answer is that the code wasn't the entire answer, its the business and distribution around it as well.
    • psadauskas 1 day ago
      In a feudal government, the laws are created by the wealthy landowners with complete control over how the people should live. The peasants have little say in how things should be run, and few options to leave.

      In a capitalist society, corporations are owned and operated by the wealthy, and they have complete control over the people at their jobs (and often outside it, too). The workers have little say in how things should be run, and cannot leave without fear of losing necessities like healthcare.

      Democracy gives the people a say in how their government should be run. Socialism gives the workers a say in how their company should be run. We've managed to no longer be exploited by our government (but not completely), but we still have to live with being exploited by the wealthy.

      Democracy is to Feudalism as Socialism is to Capitalism.

  • ElevenLathe 1 day ago
    Workers ultimately have a job because they are useful to management, and management have a job because they are useful to ownership. Top management has insane levels of compensation as a strategy by ownership to alight management's interests with their own, by turning them into owners. If there is going to be a management layer at all, for example the proposed "A-suite", then their compensation will balloon for exactly the same reasons.

    CxO salary isn't the market clearing price for the labor these people perform, it's more like power-leveling your friends in an RPG so that they can quest with you. Owners want their managers' interests to be with capital, so they have to give them some.

    • forgotaccount3 1 day ago
      > Top management has insane levels of compensation as a strategy by ownership to alight management's interests with their own, by turning them into owners. If there is going to be a management layer at all, for example the proposed "A-suite", then their compensation will balloon for exactly the same reasons.

      That is not correct.

      Owner's don't align top management's interests with the owner's interests by giving them 'insane levels of compensation', they do it by giving the managements compensation in the form of shares of the company. It's not the volume of the compensation that aligns their interests, it's the type. Otherwise the 'top management' could just invest in the competitor and torpedo their own company making multiples of the original cash compensation as clients leave for the competitor.

      • mitthrowaway2 1 day ago
        If anything, a high base pay would be a dis-incentive to perform well, because increased wealth (a) reduces the marginal utility of additional compensation, and (b) makes the CEO less vulnerable to going down with the ship. The same goes for "golden parachutes".

        IMO, if incentivizing good performance was really the goal, then companies would hire CEOs who are not already wealthy, pay them only enough base salary that they accept the job and can focus on it without worrying about paying bills, and compensate them mainly using illiquid, very long-dated stock options, which become worth a fortune if and only if the company is still around and profitable far into the future. It turns out that this is basically how founders are compensated, and it's a wonder that shareholders allow public-traded companies to be run in any other way.

      • ElevenLathe 1 day ago
        Sure, if you want to spell it out. It is equity compensation, because they want the management to be owners of the same assets that they hold. Once that's settled though, the question is: how much equity? Well, it needs to be a large number. Owning $500 worth of stock doesn't make them a capitalist -- it just makes them a person with $500 worth of stock.
      • pixl97 1 day ago
        >' could just invest in the competitor

        I mean, the shareholders would most likely sue them out of existence for doing something like that.

      • hiddencost 1 day ago
        Read more Marx?
    • 113 1 day ago
      > Workers ultimately have a job because they are useful to managemen

      Workers have a job because their labour produces value

      • RobRivera 1 day ago
        Eh - sometimes people get hired in bulk to show growth and then get assigned valueless work, or work not necessarily as valuable.

        Both statements can be true.

        • root_axis 1 day ago
          > sometimes people get hired in bulk to show growth

          Um no, this doesn't happen. Nobody is paying useless people just to "show growth".

          • RobRivera 1 day ago
            Oh you know this for an irrefutable fact, now?
            • root_axis 1 day ago
              Yes. It's the kind of thing stated by people who have never run a business.
              • RobRivera 10 hours ago
                You seem less deductive in your reasoning than desired for a good faith discussion, and pathological in your baseless accusations.

                For example, I have run my own business before I hired people.

                • root_axis 7 hours ago
                  Good faith discussion? Your reply to me was "Oh you know this for an irrefutable fact, now?". What discussion is there to be had from a sarcastic quip that deliberately misses the point?

                  If you want to good faith discussion, address the substance of my comment.

                  • RobRivera 4 hours ago
                    .....

                    Are you an llm trained to troll?

          • fragmede 1 day ago
            Of the 8.1 billion humans alive, 3 billion of them have jobs (approximately). You are speaking for every single last one of them, that they weren't hired for some office political reason and every single last one of them is useful at their job? I haven't spoken to all of them, but I find that hard to believe.
            • root_axis 1 day ago
              The fact that you have to invoke "every single last one" of 8 billion people to demonstrate the possibility of this happening is pretty telling.
    • boringops-dan 1 day ago
      One aspect the AxO would address, is the idea that the CEO is some sort of all-knowing, all-seeing, smartest-guy-in-the-room type that is so special and unique, they deserve it all and more.

      It sorta breaks the CEO job into component parts which theoretically would reduce the executive compensations as the the replacement system is more interchangable.

    • spwa4 1 day ago
      True, but you should be more cynical. When push comes to shove, every famous court case between management and owners has gone the same way: management wins, owners lose (meaning when owners wanted to turn back a management decision, courts refused to do it, or when asked to actually pin that responsibility CxOs always whine about on them, financially)

      Why is management paid so much? Because they can make the argument "give me more, or I'll destroy the company", and actually be believable.

      THAT is why it's so critical for CxOs to be aligned with owners' interests.

  • deepsun 1 day ago
    A big part of my job is responsibility. When AI can go to jail instead of me, I would be happy to let it take my job :)
    • jimbokun 1 day ago
      Isn’t the main point of having a corporation as a legal entity to replace personal liability with corporate liability?
      • deepsun 1 day ago
        Only some liabilities. Mainly debt -- so people would not be afraid to start businesses and borrow money. But if, say, an accountant produces an incorrect report -- they may personally go to jail. Or an HR or information security officer can be accused of negligence.

        Sometimes it even works the other way, a person (usually Officer) can be personally responsible for company actions, even when they didn't commit it themselves. Logic is they should've known or implemented processes in a way to prevent it in the first place. People often don't realize how much responsibility officers carry for the actions of their employees they have little control over.

        Also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piercing_the_corporate_veil

      • pixl97 1 day ago
        Corporations cannot replace some regulated liability, for example some types of professional engineers.
    • boringops-dan 1 day ago
      I love the idea of someone wrting an AI SaaS that does jailtime for you.
    • smithkl42 1 day ago
      I honestly think this is going to be a big part of what remains when AI is doing everything we currently think of as our work. Legally or morally, some things need a human in the loop.
    • redleggedfrog 1 day ago
      LOL! The first thing that came to my head was, "I've never had a CEO that shouldn't be in jail. Well, except for the current one. He seems okay. The others committed fraud and deceit at a level that would surely have them on the wrong side of the law, if not in prison.

      Kind of stems from every CEO except this latest one has been a. Some sort of mental, and b. some sort of sociopath. We can see this with our big name CEOs of course, but even these small-time CEOs have the same problem. They're lacking something human, but that is also part of what drives them, and keeps them, CEOs, I suspect. It's a job that requires you to not have any qualms about taking a group of people on a ride and then screwing them over for your benefit.

      • deepsun 1 day ago
        Yea, seen that too. But also seen good CEOs. Go for a smaller company, smaller companies are much more diverse (in both good and bad ways), and it's not hard to find a team with an awesome top management who does not want to screw anyone over.
  • JohnMakin 1 day ago
    > Everyone agrees: AI is coming for the developers. The $200,000-a-year engineers writing CRUD apps and maintaining CI pipelines. The line workers of the knowledge economy. Trim them. Automate them. Celebrate the efficiency gains. Watch the stock pop

    I very much do not think everyone agrees here, and using the Block layoffs as an example is pretty poor reasoning. It's the same kind of blind, "believe and report exactly what the companies say about these things, regardless of their incentives in saying these things" type of breathless clickbait tech journalism that is becoming extremely exhausting to wade through.

    There's probably a good discussion in here somewhere but the way these flimsy arguments are presented as absolute fact is a really annoying style to read, personally.

    This author wrote basically the complete opposite view barely more than a few months ago which makes it read even more like clickbait slop:

    https://boringops.sh/articles/its_the_humans_stupid/

    • fdupress 1 day ago
      This author disagrees with this take. They are setting a scene here, and explicitly saying that the Block story wasn't about AI at all a few paragraphs later.

      If that "bait" caused you to stop reading despite the fact that you probably agree with the author's sentiment, it's not very good bait.

      • JohnMakin 1 day ago
        I agree with none of this. It's clickbait slop, very obviously, and that did make me skim it faster than I normally would have, but I read it. The burden shouldn't be on me to try to understand the point clickbait slop is making. This "style" is unreadable and exhausting and that was my salient point. Read what I just linked, it makes the complete opposite conclusion just a few months ago.

        How good, non-slop writing usually works is - you lead with your main point, and break it down further throughout the main article. The fact he contradicts his leading hook indicates slop and bad writing, not failure for me to understand whatever the hell the point of this nonsense is (other than to get clicks).

        • shimman 1 day ago
          I agree; it's poor writing that leads to poor arguments. If readers discard your argument, then you weren't making a good argument.
  • imhoguy 1 day ago
    Turn it around - employ "copilot-boss" for your business and stay a grey eminence.

    Perhaps a lot of indie devs hate executive and managerial stuff, then what if AEO could lead the business execution while being fed with some minimal project outcome objectives from the technicaly focused dev.

    • boringops-dan 1 day ago
      I think this actually an untapped direction more of us should explore. Maybe use change your OpenClaw from an Executive Assistant, to your Manager on the topics you are weak at.
  • mrhyyyyde 1 day ago
    Absolutely, I've long-doubted the usefulness of a CEO vs the theory of a self-organizing co-op.
    • Enk1du 1 day ago
      I tried to remember the study that put the usefulness of a CEO at 10% of the success of the company and found this Science Direct paper from 2023 on "The CEO effect and performance variation over time" which discusses many studies. tl;dr average is 15-20% but they have fun chewing over the outliers.

      https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S104898432...

  • getnormality 1 day ago
    AxO prompt engineer: "pay no attention to the man behind the curtain!"
  • josefritzishere 1 day ago
    I'm not seeing a scenario where a CEO decides to replace themself. But if this is trolling, I fully support that.
    • boringops-dan 1 day ago
      I enjoy doing actual tech thought-experiment like this, so not a troll.

      Everyone just accepts that software engineers are going to be pandhandling in the street for free API tokens, but what if the prevalent attitude was to start from the top down?

  • 6510 12 hours ago
    My theory is that you can replace everyone with AI as long as the result (for each) is obviously better. To replace management the main edge seems to be that AI can read everything and talk to everyone all of the time. You don't need meetings if it remembers everything everyone said and is available for debate until the deadline. If someone feels the need to go all out bike-shed they can do it on their own. A different edge the AI has is that it can write everything into policy. Saves a lot of tokens.
  • louwrentius 1 day ago
    I agree, fire the CEO. But I have a slightly different take that doesn't involve AI. What if we indeed get rid of the entire C-suite?

    Even better still: why are companies and orgs hierarchical? Why is there always a - for lack of a better word - dictator in charge? AI CEO is still an AI dictator.

    We are permitted to vote, but democracy in everyday life, that's a bridge too far, chaos, riots in the streets, cats and dogs living together.

    Maybe there are too many 'temporary embarrassed billionaires' here on HN, but you have more in common with the average bum in the street than any of 'that' class.

    It's time that we as a people extend democracy towards the workplace and operate like a cooperation, working on the base of consensus. This is not a new idea, but it won't give you a chance to become a billionaire, and that's exactly the point.

    • cmeacham98 1 day ago
      What you're describing is called a "worker cooperative" and they are somewhat rare but do exist already in real life.
    • boringops-dan 1 day ago
      There's really quite a lack of innovation in corporate structures.

      I (still) believe that we're going to see a rejection of this MBA-short-term-fuck-the-long-term thinking, and next-gen companies will form treat their employees like the adults they are.

      That employee goodwill and motivation will make them outpeform the current system. Thnk of the opposite of work-to-rule or 'quiet quitting': An actual motivated workforce.

      • louwrentius 16 hours ago
        I agree, but I don’t care about performance, just that we do and build things we need and nothing more. We don’t need to stripmine the entire world for profit.
    • jimbokun 1 day ago
      In the US democracy we still have a strong central executive with a lot of decision making power.

      Parliamentary systems do not always have a President per se, but generally have a similar role of an individual who can quickly make decisions in emergencies and crises.

      So in practice I’m not sure democracies are all that different in practice.

      • louwrentius 1 day ago
        I think current democracies could also shed the notion that there must be an elected “dictator”, making decisions in crises should also be made with cooperation, especially then.
    • bshepard 1 day ago
      It would be worth thinking harder before moralizing.
  • itsthecourier 1 day ago
    that's why Mondragon is not Nvidia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mondragon_Corporation

    • anticorporate 1 day ago
      Thank goodness they're not.

      I work for a cooperative in an upper management role. My goal is for us to sustainably produce great products that serve the needs of our community while being a great place to work for our employees. I couldn't possibly care less what our market capitalization is, other than from the perspective of wanting to serve the biggest slice of our community that I can. But if another co-op stepped in and did that instead, I'd be equally happy.