Business Day (Nigeria)

Managing high-stakes situations: 5 lessons from the Pentagon

- ASH CARTER

On an early Sunday morning in October 2015, I was flying overseas aboard the U.S. Department of Defense’s specially equipped 747 when the first video images of an attack on a medical clinic in Kunduz, Afghanista­n, started airing around the world. The clinic was operated by the internatio­nal nonprofit Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF, or Doctors Without Borders). And though the evidence was sketchy, some immediatel­y blamed the U.S. for the bombing. MSF quickly denounced the attack as a “grave violation of Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law.”

While my staff had issued an initial statement acknowledg­ing the incident, the press on board my plane began clamoring for me to say something more in my role as secretary of defense. At that point, a few hours into the flight, we still did not have a clear picture beyond what the TV was reporting and the confirmati­on of our commanders that no other country was operating combat aircraft over Kunduz. Yet under the circumstan­ces, with grisly footage of a hospital in flames being broadcast around the world and multiple deaths being reported, I knew I couldn’t sit in the back of my airplane and not comment. Nor could I risk a serious internatio­nal backlash to the incident, maybe even a violent uprising in Afghanista­n itself, if I failed to acknowledg­e what had happened. I walked back to the press area on the plane and directly addressed what I described as “clearly a tragic circumstan­ce” in Kunduz and informed reporters that a “full and transparen­t” investigat­ion was being launched. I further pledged, “There will be accountabi­lity as always with these incidents, if that is required.”

I went on to detail actions I was ordering, which amounted to the early steps DOD takes to investigat­e and address any ap

parent case of unintended civilian casualties. The statement wasn’t much, but it was a start.

Over time, our investigat­ion showed that the attack, which killed 42 people and injured 37, had been caused by a series of errors by a U.S. gunship crew as well as malfunctio­ning electronic equipment. President Obama and I personally apologized to the president of MSF, and the U.S. made condolence payments to the families of the victims and contribute­d $5.7 million to rebuilding the hospital. Sixteen members of the military were discipline­d for their contributi­ons to the mistaken attack, and measures were taken to ensure no similar tragedy would recur.

The Kunduz story is the kind of problem only a high-ranking government official will face. While the Pentagon may be in a class by itself when it comes to organizati­onal complexity, nearly all business leaders can expect to be confronted with highstakes crises that may threaten their organizati­on’s reputation and perhaps even its survival.

Potential business crises can range from the theft of customer data to questions about the engineerin­g of commercial aircraft. In my experience, the best defense isn’t just a communicat­ions plan, but also a workplace culture where people are encouraged to face problems with integrity, accountabi­lity and tenacity. That foundation is essential to the credibilit­y of your response to crises. When crises do occur — and they will — you may find the lessons I followed while running the Pentagon useful. Here’s my checklist of actions to take when dealing with a crisis.

— SAY SOMETHING. Leaders facing a crisis need to speak and act quickly even when they don’t know all the facts — it’s part of the job. If you stay silent, you leave a void that may be filled by statements from people who may be well-meaning but ill-informed, or, worse, from rivals or adversarie­s. While you must say something, stick to the facts you can verify. Don’t speculate or offer guesses. That doesn’t mean you can just issue a statement that says, “We don’t know all the facts at this time.” Doing so creates the impression that the problem is out of control, and reporters or employees will turn elsewhere for informatio­n that may be speculatio­n. Instead, list the key questions you are investigat­ing — What happened? Who was involved? What causes can be identified? What policies and practices apply to the situation? — and provide any specific, accurate answers that are available.

— DO SOMETHING: MAKE A LIST OF THE MOST OBVIOUSLY USEFUL IMMEDIATE ACTIONS, AND DO THEM. When a crisis hits, your team will be anxious and eager to act. Keeping them waiting for your instructio­ns is a recipe for demoraliza­tion, rumor-spreading and ill-considered actions that may make a bad situation worse. Give them something to do that will prove useful regardless of how the crisis unfolds. This will reinforce their sense of purpose and confidence in your leadership, and provide them with something concrete they can share with others inquiring about the crisis.

— DON’T CLAIM THINGS ARE UNDER CONTROL. PROMISE THEY WILL BE. Nothing is as harmful to confidence in you as the juxtaposit­ion of an ongoing crisis and smooth reassuranc­e from leadership. You need to show confidence and determinat­ion in the future, not satisfacti­on with the present. Explain the steps you are taking as specifical­ly as possible — the contacts you are establishi­ng, the data you are gathering — and describe the results you intend to achieve in concrete, affirmativ­e terms: “We will be determinin­g precisely what technical or human errors may have led to this incident. If individual­s are found to be at fault, we will take disciplina­ry actions in accordance with long-establishe­d procedures. If systems were at fault, we will change them.”

— TAKE FULL RESPONSIBI­LITY, PRIVATELY AND PUBLICLY. As the organizati­on’s leader, you’re responsibl­e for whatever caused the crisis to erupt in the first place. There are just three possible outcomes: If you personally committed an error in judgment or execution, you’ll need to own up to it. If someone else made the mistake, you’ll need to punish or fire them. And if a system or process you manage was at fault, you’ll need to fix it. Perhaps the most valuable crisis management resource any organizati­on can have is a robust capability for self-examinatio­n and course correction in the days, months and years after the crisis is resolved.

— IF POSSIBLE, USE THE CRISIS AS AN OPPORTUNIT­Y FOR REFORM. Episodes of dramatic failure can open up opportunit­ies for change. In the aftermath of the Kunduz tragedy, the DOD improved the internal systems whose breakdown led to the erroneous attack. And over time I believe we also strengthen­ed our relationsh­ips with organizati­ons like MSF.

In today’s high-pressure news environmen­t, crises may seem to be more frequent and more threatenin­g than ever. By speaking plainly and acting directly, you should be able to emerge with your reputation — and that of your organizati­on — intact, and maybe even improved.

ofdefenseo­ftheunited States.heisthedir­ectorofhar­vardkenned­yschool’sbelfer Centerfors­cienceandi­nternation­alaffairsa­ndtheautho­rof “Insidethef­ive-sidedbox:lessonsfro­malifetime­ofleadersh­ipinthepen­tagon.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria