The most frustrating people to be with: those who make more work for others, rather than do real work themselves. I've been fortunate to have met only a few of them, over the years. They tend to ask unhelpful questions late in a project, to point out mistakes rather than offer fixes, and to propose broadening a task without considering the impact on the delivery timetable. When they do produce something, it tends to be a high-level "plan" or "strategy" without consideration of the real-world difficulty of implementation. They're not part of the team that actually has to do the job.
Such folks gravitate to dysfunctional organizations — but is that a cause, or an effect?
(cf. BlameStorming (15 May 1999), ...)
TopicOrganizations - Datetag20060520
(correlates: PartOfTheProverb, HollywoodAndWashington, EducationVersusEduction, ...)