Article:

Is middle management just a “thankless slog”?

Written by CMI Insights Wednesday 14 May 2025
A Financial Times article suggests young people see middle management as an overburdened and underpaid position. We asked the CMI community what they’d do to put this perception right…
Worker showing negative gesture at job place

A recent article in the Financial Times (FT) said that many Gen Z employees have written off the idea of a career in middle management as “a thankless slog”. In a survey by recruiter Robert Walters, almost 70% of respondents (employees aged 27 or younger) dismissed management roles as being too stressful and bringing too little reward. Half didn’t want to be middle managers at all.

The FT reached out to Ann Francke OBE CMgr CCMI, CMI’s chief executive, who highlighted the key role that training can play in making middle management more appealing. Most managers today are “accidental” leaders, Ann said, ill-equipped to mentor, inspire or engage their teams. 

“If younger employees were more engaged, they might aspire to be managers,” she reasoned.

 

What is an “accidental manager” and why does it matter?

CMI’s report Taking responsibility – why UK plc needs better managers found that 82% of managers who enter management positions have not had any formal management and leadership training. This risks harming employees’ motivation, satisfaction and likelihood to leave their job.

Find out more

 

“Blame sponges”

We were keen to hear the CMI community’s suggestions to make younger people warm to middle management. So we put it out as a LinkedIn poll, which received over 1,700 responses.

The results were tight, suggesting there’s no easy solution to middle management’s image issue:

  • 31% agreed that offering a clearer path for growth would help
  • 30% said the key was to improve work-life balance
  • 24% suggested offering mentorship and training
  • 15% agreed that change would come through making the work more strategic and less admin-heavy. 

An interesting debate ensued in the comments. Neil MacDonald CMgr MCMI echoed Ann’s take, attributing the problem to “too many accidental managers in more senior positions with an acute lack of leadership qualities or EQ”. He also pointed out that many businesses display “toxic traits” that leave managers becoming “stick-beaten blame sponges”.

Keep reading: why boundaries matter

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