<Tr> <Th> Occupation </Th> <Td> Vice President, Initech </Td> </Tr> <P> William "Bill" Lumbergh is a fictional character, who appeared initially in the Milton animated shorts, and later was portrayed by Gary Cole in the 1999 film Office Space . A caricature of corporate management, Lumbergh is a division Vice President of the software company Initech, and serves as the main antagonist of the film . He drives a blue Porsche 911 SC with a vanity license plate "MY PRSHE". He wears a two - tone shirt and suspenders with a buckle belt - a fashion faux pas - as well as a college class ring . He is also almost never seen without a coffee mug in hand . </P> <P> Lumbergh is a micromanager who is focused on pointless paperwork, notably TPS reports . He has been described as "the antithesis of the motivational management leadership ideal". He greets subordinates with an unenthusiastic "what's happening?", and when asking an employee to do an unpleasant task, starts the sentence with, "I'm gonna need you to", or "if you could go ahead", as well as ending these requests with "that'd be great" and "mmmkay?" A Wharton Journal article said that the character "brilliantly exposed the emptiness of linguistic conventions at work ." Social historian Joe Moran writes that Lumbergh's "non-confrontational" communication style "masks the reality of management coercion". </P> <P> In the film, Lumbergh works with manager Dom Portwood (another micromanager, though less extreme than Lumbergh), and consultants Bob Slydell and Bob Porter, to find ways to downsize the company . This Socratic dialogue interaction elicits a frank critique of Lumbergh's shortcomings from Bob Porter and Bob Slydell . Lumbergh is tacitly presented as a task - driven micromanager as opposed to an opportunity - driven motivator . The last visual and audio cue ends with Bob Slydell turning into inquisitor of how Lumbergh spends his time, as Bob and Bob had done with the other employees, and Lumbergh simply comments "...yeah ..." as the scene cuts away . The implication is that Lumbergh drives pointless busywork that does little for employee motivation and productivity . </P>

If you could just do that that would be great