The Regional Manager role comes with unrealistic expectations, where management demands flawless results despite limited resources and unclear direction
Decision-making is heavily centralized, even for small matters such as quotations worth a few hundred or thousand dollars — this slows down operations and demotivates those in regional leadership roles
Political environment where management often bases decisions on selective feedback or personal opinions instead of data and performance
Management’s attention span during presentations is short and often mood-driven — if you don’t capture their interest in the first few minutes, they may quickly assume your work lacks quality or value
Frequent changes in direction make long-term strategy and consistency very difficult
Top management is not always aligned — internal conflicts and differing expectations between senior leaders often leave regional managers caught in between, trying to satisfy both sides on issues beyond their scope
Even when you meet or exceed all KPIs set by management, they may still conclude that you “add no business value,” especially for higher-salaried positions like Regional Manager, and ask you to leave despite meeting expectations
HOD and middle management turnover is high, creating instability and lack of continuity
Overall, it’s hard to see how the company can grow further under such conditions — too many changes, too little empowerment