1. Compensation Disparity & Bonus Inaccessibility
Although Team Managers receive a base salary of $47,840 plus a nominal $1,000 monthly bonus, achieving that bonus requires sustaining an 80% completion rate of one‑on‑one sessions across a roster of ~70 direct reports. In practice, absent an unusually cohesive team, the bonus is virtually unattainable, rendering management pay less competitive than that of frontline Game Presenters who routinely eclipse managers’ earnings.
2. Perpetual Understaffing & Role Overload
Chronic staffing deficits bedevil every shift. Managers are habitually redeployed to fill gaps on the gaming floor, reconstruct schedules at a moment’s notice, and perform duties typically reserved for Floor Supervisors. This relentless churn engenders burnout and diverts focus from core coaching and team‐development responsibilities.
3. Fragmented Onboarding & Tool Scarcity
Upon promotion, new managers confront a dearth of formal training and delayed provisioning of essential tools. Requests for access frequently languish for 4–8 weeks, contingent on the availability and goodwill of an overburdened Senior Team Manager. Such delays compromise early effectiveness and erode confidence.
4. Absence of Probationary Safeguards & Meritocracy
There is no probationary buffer for newly minted managers. Underperformance is met not with retraining but with termination. Moreover, progression to Senior Team Manager hinges less on tangible achievements and more on proximity to upper‑level decision‑makers, perpetuating an insidious nepotism that demoralises high performers excluded from the inner circle.
5. Inept & Inaccessible HR Support
Human Resources operates with an alarming lack of accountability. HR representatives vacate the premises shortly after standard business hours, leaving night and weekend managers adrift. Queries—whether policy clarifications or benefits issues—routinely bounce back to managers, compounding administrative burdens without recourse.
6. Managerial Liability & Emotional Toll of Terminations
Team Managers, not company executives, are tasked with executing staff terminations, fielding the attendant emotional and legal ramifications without dedicated guidance or psychological support—an untenable expectation that inflates stress and liability.
7. Rampant Turnover & Eroded Morale
Over the past year, nearly every Floor Supervisor and a majority of Team Managers have either resigned in frustration or been dismissed. Such churn undermines institutional knowledge, disrupts team cohesion, and signals an endemic leadership crisis.