Recently in Crisis Management Category

The July-August issue of Harvard Business Review is far from light holiday reading. Through a wide range of lenses, it aims squarely at business strategy and leadership challenges to be faced in the post-2009 recession world. Leadership in a (Permanent) Crisis by Ronald Heifetz and his colleagues at Cambridge Leadership Associates, reflecting the volume as a whole, is all about national and global post recession trends in the broader business environment that will shape industries over the next several years. As physician and health care leaders we owe it to ourselves, our patients, and our organizations to examine how these will impact us...
Alaina Love may be stating obvious in her June 2 Business Week commentary Leading at the Speed of Thought when she says: "Never before have leaders experienced the scale and complexity of change that they face now" but she thankfully gives us something worth pausing over as she considers some of the leadership adjustments that need to be made simply for survival as a result...
If You Think Worst Is Over, Take Benjamin Graham's Advice, the offering in Jason Zweig's Intelligent Investor column in The Wall Street Journal print edition of May 23, provides some thoughtful guidelines to managing an investment portfolio in uncertain times. Interestingly, and perhaps inadvertently, the same guidelines hold for managing a leadership portfolio in all times. And truthfully, what times aren't uncertain? In today's economic upheaval we are simply more aware of the same uncertainty that exists in "good times." So read this with an expansive mind, with an eye to leading health care organizations today....and tomorrow...
As soon as I saw the title of the May 25 Business Week's cover story (How the Mighty Fall: A Primer on the Warning Signs) I knew I'd found my mark for today's post. I didn't even realize at the time that this was an excerpt from Jim Collins' (Good to Great and Built to Last) new book that turns his prior work literally upside down. As the title implies, it's the quick guide to how high performing companies lose their edge and end up in the toilet. And while it's about companies, it's also implicitly also about leaders. Perhaps even more about the leaders than the companies. And while it's not about health care, it's all about health care. Having worked for at least one of those "great to ashes" leaders myself, I can vouch for the soundness of the analysis and its relevance to health care leaders. Read the excerpt and when it is published, read the book...
Splitting hairs? Not really. Read Hanging Tough in the April 20 print issue of The New Yorker (while not really business press it is the press commenting on business). This piece by James Surowiecki examines the nuances of leadership decision making in both risky and uncertain times. While covering some of the same territory as R&D Spending Holds Steady in Slump, April 6 Wall Street Journal - and the subject of this blog's April 8 commentary Health Care Leaders Should Preserve R&D Spending in Down Times - Surowiecki focuses squarely on characterizing the strategic investment dilemma currently faced by senior health care leaders...
Disengagement Party appeared on economist.com, the web portal for The Economist, on March 31. This brief unattributed op-ed piece explored the relationship between employee engagement and the current economic recession. It opened by questioning the belief that the high levels of employee engagement seen in successful companies over the past decade were due to factors distinct from economic success. The article went on to explore some things that might be done to re-establish - or at least stem erosion - in engagement during a down economy. There are some pearls here for health care leaders - who have always relied upon the personal commitment and mission orientation of employees without having the luxury of being able to bestow large economic rewards to motivate the workforce...

How Toxic Colleagues Corrode Performance is a short sidebar article with a big impact by Christine Porath and Christine Pearson in the April 2009 Harvard Business Review. The authors also wrote the upcoming book: The Cost of Bad Behavior: How Incivility Is Damaging Your Business and What to Do About It. The article is a 3 minute read, at most. But it provides data that drives home a haunting point for health care leaders - and more specifically physician leaders. Namely that the misbehavior of physicians, executives, and managers extracts a far greater toll on organizations than the pain felt when complaints are made.

Porath and Pearson have made a study of incivility in the workplace for years. The results of their poll of several thousand organizations revealed that common "benign" misbehaviors such as rumor mongering, berating management, unfairly taking credit for the work of others, blaming others for one's shortcomings, etc. take a severe toll on co-workers. The article states the following results:

  • 48% decreased their work effort,
  • 47% decreased their time at work,
  • 38% decreased their work quality,
  • 66% said their performance declined,
  • 80% lost work time worrying about the incident,
  • 63% lost time avoiding the offender, and
  • 78% said their commitment to the organization declined


As we all know, health care workplace settings are far from immune from these. We see incivility by physicians, nurses, and clerical employees in office, hospital, and corporate settings. The bar for intervention into benign misbehavior is high. It is largely seen as the result of "personality quirks" that are grey areas for managerial intervention since they fall outside of the ethical and professional guidelines set up to deter and correct "malignant" misbehaviors such as dishonesty, sexual harassment, overt intimidation, falsification of data or documentation, discrimination, etc.


But these results suggest that "mere" incivility is far from a benign condition. Given the increasing pressures we are under to maintain an efficient and productive workplace, it is critically important for health care leaders to be aware of the measurable collateral damage that can result from these behaviors.


Then comes the challenging task of developing awareness, behavioral guidelines and both peer and managerial intervention strategies that result in a culture of civility. And doing this in a fashion that avoids two undesirable situations: (1) the creation of a juvenile code of behavioral rules; and (2) failure to clearly set limits on destructive "benign" behaviors.

The March 15 issue of The Wall Street Journal carried another one of those "business" articles that health care leaders could easily overlook as too corporate. But Seven Lessons for Leading in Crisis, written by Bill George, former CEO of Medtronic and a member of several mega corporation Boards, is important reading for both physician leaders and executive health care leaders - especially these days which are anything but crisis-free. George dismisses the technical causes of the current economic crisis (poor regulation, bad investment decisions, risky investment vehicles) and lays the blame squarely on people just like us: "The root cause is failed leadership....[It] can only be solved by new leaders with the wisdom and skill to put their organizations on the right long-term course."

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