Issue
1
HAVING
AN INFRASTRUCTURE WHEN YOU NEED IT MOST: LESSONS IN LEADERSHIP FROM
RUDY GIULIANI AND 9/11
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This
issue of View From The Lighthouse focuses on lessons learned
and important reminders about leadership and having the right infrastructure
at the right time drawn from watching and reading about Rudy Giuliani
and New York City after 9/11.
It
also contains references to other information on this topic.
ISSUE
1—HAVING AN INFRASTRUCTURE WHEN YOU NEED IT MOST: LESSONS
IN LEADERSHIP FROM RUDY GIULIANI AND 9/11
Recent
events and reflections have converged to provide an opportunity
for me comment on three related topics, each of which holds meaning
for me: New York City in the aftermath of 9/11, leadership,
and organization infrastructure. This issue is about former
Mayor Rudy Giuliani, his response to the tragedy and crisis that
befell New York, and my thoughts about some of the things that enabled
his extraordinary leadership under the most unimaginable and unprecedented
conditions.
The
first thing you should know (or recall) is that I am a New Yorker.
Although I lived there very briefly and grew up in the nearby suburbs,
being from New York is a fundamental part of my identity.
This excerpt from a post-9/11 poem says it well:
I
do not live in the five boroughs or on the Island or Upstate
I may live hundreds or thousands of miles away
But I am a New Yorker
Whatever took me out of New York:
Business, family or hating the cold
did not take New York out of me.
It was
also my personal need and process for dealing with the horrors of
the terrorist attacks that caused me to pay extra attention to what
was happening in New York. Over the course of several trips
Back East and lots of reading and thinking, what emerged for me was
this study of sorts about leadership effectiveness, organization capability,
and the capacity to respond.
This
is not about liking or disliking Rudy nor is it about what he accomplished
during the first seven and three quarters years of his administration
except as it positioned him and the City to respond heroically.
The press on him is that if you live or work in the City, you either
loved or hated him, appreciated what he was doing or thought he
had the wrong agenda—though he won over many of his detractors
with his accomplishments, his reaction to having cancer, and his
leadership this past fall. From my pre-September vantage point
3000 miles distant, and as an occasional visitor, the City looked
and felt better—certainly cleaner and also safer and friendlier.
My
most recent visit there coincided with the end of his term and his
being named Time's Person of the Year, and in the NY Metropolitan
Area, stories about Giuliani dominated the media. That's when
I began to "study" Rudy, using my doctoral research on transformational
leadership as the lens.
The
literature is filled with lists and descriptions of those factors
that contribute to effective and inspired leadership. Here
are some of them, illustrated by things that Giuliani said or
did that underscore their enduring power and led to numerous tributes
to his leadership.
Vision:
The essence and articulation of a leader's passion, drive to make
things better, and tenacity is his/her vision. Rudy has always
had clear, compelling, and transforming visions for his work.
We know that this, along with purpose and mission, then defines
the scope of ones goals, strategies, and activities. Prior
to his taking office, New York City, the fourth largest government
in the US, was regarded as ungovernable and destined to continue
its decline. When polled, over half its population said they'd
leave if they could figure out how. In his own words, Giuliani's
vision as mayor was to "turn around the city." Certainly not
a job for the faint of heart.
Purpose
and Values: One's sense of purpose, what one is here to
do in this lifetime, is typically a reflection of one's values.
Rudy refers to these as "ideas" about what matters, especially in
a community. Creating alignment around and commitment to common
values is an important ingredient in making change. For leaders—and
their followers--purpose and values are sources of inspiration,
action, and perseverance: that which sustains all of us when the
going gets rough, which if you're making changes that are significant
and transformative, it will. Some of his ideas about what
matters at the most fundamental, human level--the idea that paying
attention to and improving the quality of life at the level of broken
windows, panhandling, graffiti, and drug dealing impacts crime;
the idea that it's better to be indoors and not out on the street;
and the idea that people should work and that we should do everything
possible to encourage them to take care of themselves as an alternative
to dependency and welfare--are core beliefs that were the foundation
of his agenda, strategy, and administration. (NYT 12/27)
Mission,
Commitment, and Staying the Course: Being clear and focused
about where "there" is, devoting one's life and resources to that
in which one believes, and persevering in the face of disagreements
and adversity are attributes of leaders. Some believe that
Giuliani did this to a fault. Said, Rudy, "I spent my first
seven and three-quarters years as mayor living out my father's advice
that it's better to be respected than loved, but I had forgotten
the last part of what he used to say: 'Eventually, you will love
me.'" (Time 12/31, p. 50)
Presence,
Visibility, and Overcommunicating: The best leaders understand
that in order to inspire and enroll, they must be role models, clear
and relentless communicators, and meaning makers about their vision—that
they must walk-their-talk. In the first 16 hours after
the WTC was hit, he utilized the media to both inform and reassure
people, set up a command center, made hundreds of decisions, visited
hospitals, and returned to Ground Zero four more times. (Time 12/31,
p. 42) With Bush out of sight in Nebraska, he emerged as the
national spokesperson, later saying, "…it seemed to me that
they needed to hear from my heart where I thought we were going."
(Time p. 44) In the days and months that followed, he took
numerous people to Ground Zero, attended over 200 funerals many
of them for friends, escorted a bride, flew to Arizona for the World
Series, and was back in time for the NYC Marathon. After the
memorial service in Yankee Stadium when, exhausted, he thought her
couldn't attend another funeral, he did it anyway. During
the anthrax scare, "he treated the public like grownups, offering
unvarnished information and never having to backtrack." (Time p.
54)
Learning
from Life's Lessons: Leaders learn from their experiences.
The most transformational of them seek and create experiences, are
self-reflexive, and seek to integrate their learnings and use them
in ways that will be self-enhancing rather than self-limiting (Gibbons,
1986). Giuliani says, "…I changed more from the prostate
cancer (than from the experience of 9/11). Having to deal
with that had a bigger impact and gave me…more wisdom about
the importance of life, the lack of control you have over death.
It removed some of the fear of death." (Time 12/31, p. 51)
Big lessons….
Early
Lessons from Significant People: Transformational leaders
frequently received encouragement from significant people in their
early lives, including messages and lessons that shaped their direction
and character. Giuliani's father had an enormous impact on
him. An ex-con who wanted different outcomes for his son,
Rudy frequently tells of an important lesson that he learned from
his father: "… in a crisis or when everybody else gets
all upset you should become calmer, and the best way to figure your
way out of a crisis is force yourself to be actually calmer than
everyone around." (MTP 12/23) This is, I think, describes
his grace under pressure.
Most
Important Lesson from 9/11: "Be honest with people.
Just be who you are. Don't do all the spinning and the poll
watching…all that little contortion of humanity that sometimes
happens in politics... Go with your heart and your conscience and
tell people the truth." (MTP 12/23) A good lesson for all of us...politics
are not just in government.
Some
Thoughts On Infrastructure:
It's
the basic system or framework on which your organization is built
and operates. Every organization has one. When it's
well matched to the mission, vision, values, and strategic direction
of the enterprise, be it a company or a municipality, it enables
lasting success and sustainable returns on investments.
Infrastructure is not an end in itself; rather, a solid infrastructure
is necessary-but-not-sufficient-condition on which all else is built.
It
needs to be robust enough to carry the weight of the day-to-day
requirements as well as the sudden or occasional demands placed
on it. If it's not, then it will gradually deteriorate
along with the enterprise that it's meant to support. Or,
more frighteningly, one strong perturbation that exceeds the design
limits will cause it, literally, to collapse, taking the organization
with it. I call this the Cypress-Structure-In-the-Earthquake-Effect.
By September 12, I was worrying that this might happen in New York.
(Yes, along with everything else, I actually worried about Infrastructure.)
How can anyone create an infrastructure that could withstand the
effects of a catastrophic event unprecedented in the history of
the world, I wondered?
There
are three particular examples from New York that I want to cite.
I picked them because they represent different elements of organization
design that were critical to the ability of Giuliani and the City
to respond to 9/11.
His
Staff Team: Giuliani systematically and relentlessly built
his team, and all of them were people who understood his style and
were willing and able to work with him—not always an easy
thing—but an essential one. (Ask former Police Chief
Bratton who was replaced because he was so successful that he was
seen as a rival.) Nevertheless, Rudy's quick to praise and
credit them: "I had a very good team, and we knew how to work
like a team." (NYT 1/16/02) He had clear governance processes
in place, including a daily, don't-miss-it 8AM staff meeting.
On 9/11, when his emergency command center at the WTC was evacuated,
his staff moved together to locate a new site. He insisted
that the Fire and Police Commissioners, who wanted to stay at the
scene, come too. (Time, p. 77) This probably saved their lives
when so many others in the NYPD and FDNY leadership were killed.
It
is this same team that is now the core of Rudy's recently announced
new consulting business, Giuliani Partners. (E&Y, 1/15)
Anticipation
and Preparedness: Giuliani recognized that New York was
a target for terrorists and created critical infrastructural solutions.
First was the Office of Emergency Management. In addition
to insuring critical capabilities, it also reduced the known conflict
and competition between the police and fire departments. He
increased security around City Hall and instituted emergency response
drills for city workers that, no doubt, saved more lives and reduced
the likelihood of chaos during the disaster. He also anticipated
the possibility of anthrax attacks and had met with both the CDC
and the FBI prior to the first attack. (Time, p. 54)
Technological
Systems Solutions: Compstat is the NYPD's crime analysis
system. The data show patterns and trends about types, locations,
and frequencies of crimes. This has enabled much more strategic
and focused deployment of resources. The crime rate has been
cut by half and murders by 70%. The FBI has rated New York
the safest large city in the country for five years in a row.
Shortly after 9/11, there was a (one week) spike in violent crime
that was attributed to the diversion of personnel to the WTC.
Compstat pinpointed the location of the problem, and detectives
were returned to specific assignments. The result—a
reduction in crime to a rate lower than the same period the previous
year. (NYT 12/27)
The
lesson: It takes time and focused attention to build a
resilient, effective and responsive infrastructure. Giuliani
has said frequently that he thought it was better that it happened
after he'd been mayor for seven and three-quarters years, because
he'd been through a lot, he had the right team in place, and they
were prepared to respond. (MTP, 12/23) Consider the alternatives….
Sadly,
there are some post-9/11 conditions for which the necessary infrastructures
don't exist. The process for deciding how to distributing
the monies collected for victims and their families is one. (BW
1/21) Another involves small businesses in the area surrounding
the WTC. Many were destroyed. Others were looted.
Still others have experienced precipitous declines in traffic or
business. They are unable to find the financial assistance
they need to reopen or rebuild. In a massive Catch-22, they're
being denied loans because they don't have income (duh!).
The State, the City, the SBA, and other federal agencies have been
unable to respond. (SJMN, 1/21) And finally, the contracting
firms that are working at Ground Zero 24/7, the same ones that have
removed over 1 million tons of rubble under the most physically
and emotionally demanding conditions in less time and at a lower
cost than anyone predicted was possible, have been working without
a contract and have been unable to get liability insurance. (NYT
1/13, 1/21) And they're doing it anyway…because they
are New Yorkers.
RESOURCES:
Rudy
Giuliani: Emperor of the City, Andrew Kirtzman, HarperCollins,
2000.
This is the book to which the movie rights have recently been sold.
Sayings
of Generalissimo Giuliani, Kevin McAuliffe (ed.), Welcome Rain
Publishers, 2000.
amazon.com calls this "a collection of the most memorable, (unintentionally)
hilarious and downright alarming statements to have come out of
Giuliani's mouth…".
Time,
Person of the Year Issue, December 31, 2001.www.time.com/time/poy2001/
One
Nation: America Remembers September 11, 2001, Life Magazine
Staff (eds.), Little Brown and Company, 2001.
Considered to be the best book that's been published about 9/11;
includes text and photos.
Leadership,
James MacGregor Burns, Harper Torchbooks, 1978.
This is the original and now classic conceptualization and exposition
on transformational leadership.
Leadership
and Performance Beyond Expectations, Bernard M. Bass, Free Press,
1985.
Bernie Bass was the first to research the differentiation of leadership
orientations, bringing it into the context of contemporary organizations.
The question that this book addresses is, "Why do most leaders or
managers elicit merely competent performance from their followers,
while a select few inspire extraordinary achievement?" If
you're interested in transformational leadership this is an important
resource.
Revisiting
The Question of Born vs. Made: Toward a Theory of Development of
Transformational Leaders, Tracy C. Gibbons, unpublished doctoral
dissertation, The Fielding Graduate Institute, 1986.
Sources
for the newsletter article:
Meet The Press: transcript for 12/23
New York Times: 12/27, 12/30, 1/13, 1/16, 1/21
BBC News Online: 9/14
Ernst & Young Press Release: 1/15
San Jose Mercury News: 1/21
Business Week: 1/21
Time: 12/31
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