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The world’s best and worst job titles

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Chief unicorn division

How the world has changed.

We all realise the world is changing fast when you look back
ten, twenty or fifty years.  Ten years
ago, there was on iPhone or Facebook. 
Twenty years ago, the end of the Soviet Union, the removal of the Berlin
Wall and the aftermath of apartheid were still reverberating around the
world.  And fifty years ago, the Beatles
were enjoying their first success, John F Kennedy was dealing with the Bay of
Pigs and the Cuba crisis and the Great Train Robbery takes place in Britain.

So what?

Well, I often use these time breaks to reflect on how the relationship
has changed between the bank and their customers.  Fifty years ago, it was a very personal branch-based
relationship; twenty years ago, we had pushed the customer away and made them
use call centres and ATMs; ten years ago, the customer was self-serving at home
on the internet; and today, they  are
doing everything on their mobile.

Obviously this helps us to think about how things might
change ten, twenty, fifty years ahead.

Ten years from now, everything will be connected from
ear-rings to handbags, cars to cranes, walls to ceilings and more; twenty years
away, embedded technologies will ensure that everything, everywhere can be
tracked and traced; and fifty years from now, Iron Man will rule the world.

Something like that anyway.

Why am I blathering on like this?

Because I just spotted a BBC Series on the workplace and how it has changed.  It’s a ten part series on
the History of Office Life hosted by Financial Times columnist
Lucy Kellaway.

The series has covered a variety of angles on office life:

and last night’s episode posed the question Are there too many managers?

What a great question?

Lucy poses the question because there are FIVE MILLION
managers in Britain apparently.

FIVE MILLION?

MANAGERS?

Of what?

I can understand that we have some managers in the office of
people, but with the total workforce in Britain numbering thirty million people,
that means that one in six workers in Britain is a manager.

Now I reckon that some of this is bending the term to suit
the job.

For example, Manager of Beverage Dissemination is a creative
way to describe a bartender; Canine Relocation Manager is what we now call a dog
catcher; and Waste Manager is a toilet cleaner.

Maybe this is a result of the term Manager being over-used and over-inflated.

I know that when I was growing up in business, it was not
long that I went from Graduate Recruit to
Marketing Manager to Senior Sales Manager.

All of this before the age of 30.

Then I landed the title Director,
which I thought was great until I realised there were thousands of other directors
in the company.  Luckily, working for
American firms, I then gained the elevation to Vice President and, soon after, Senior
Vice President.

Wow!  Amazing!

But it all means bugger all as it turns out, these are just vacuous
titles thrown onto business cards to give people a self-inflated view of their world.

That’s why I always appreciate people who don’t use titles
or letters after their name, but just go by their confidence in themselves.

Nevertheless, as a result of al of this office bingo word
job title lottery, we now see everyone getting more and more creative in their
job titles.

Chief Inspiration
Officer
, Evangelist, Ambassador and
Director of First Impressions are
some of the titles that have crossed my desk.

At least these are slightly more creative.  Mind you, it can go a little overboard: Wizard of Light Bulb Moments (Marketing
Director).

If you want advice on how to get a creative job title, just
take a look at John Sullivan’s blog about creating exciting job titles.  
John advises that you just need to use certain words, such as:

  • Rockstar/badass
    (e.g. software rockstar)
  • Virtuoso
    (e.g. loans virtuoso)
  • Connoisseur
    (e.g. interest rates connoisseur)
  • Champion
    (e.g. service champion)
  • Guru/Kahuna
    (e.g. social media guru)
  • Star
    (e.g. design star)
  • Warrior/Jedi/Ninja
    (e.g. retail Jedi)
  • Terminator
    (e.g. problem terminator)
  • Artist
    (e.g. mortgage design artist)
  • Creator/Magician
    (e.g. creator of happiness)

Love it.

So welcome to Chris Skinner’s new job: Bank Wizard Czar
of Finance.

Maybe not.

Nevertheless, the discussion of the most hated job titles is
also a regular debate online.  For
example, in the Examiner.com’s worst job titles their largely teenage audience (or so it seems to me) voted:

  • Erection Engineer (Manufacturing plant position) 
  • Knob Head (Transportation position) 
  • Shaft Serviceman (Mining position) 
  • S&M Administrator (Sales & Marketing Administrator) 
  • Shaft & Tunnel Manager (Tunnelling Engineer) 

amongst the top ten.

Mind you, the most popular weird job titles appear to be those
that are weird, wacky or just relate to human bodies.

Weird:

Chief unicorn division

Wacky


Alan Moore

Applications welcome


Porn historian

Source: the WorldWideInterweb 

I guess I’ll leave it there, although if you really want to
continue with this rich vein of corporate humour, then just got to the Job Title Generator, and
see what new job title you can come up with for yourself!

Postnote: at least these are better than some of the worst
jobs in history.   According to the TV series
and book by Tony Robinson, there actually were jobs in history such as swilling out the crotch of a
knight's soiled armour after battle or being Groomer of the Stool (official wiper of the King’s bum!).

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Chris Skinner Author Avatar

Chris M Skinner

Chris Skinner is best known as an independent commentator on the financial markets through his blog, TheFinanser.com, as author of the bestselling book Digital Bank, and Chair of the European networking forum the Financial Services Club. He has been voted one of the most influential people in banking by The Financial Brand (as well as one of the best blogs), a FinTech Titan (Next Bank), one of the Fintech Leaders you need to follow (City AM, Deluxe and Jax Finance), as well as one of the Top 40 most influential people in financial technology by the Wall Street Journal's Financial News. To learn more click here...

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