'll admit it: I’m fascinated with the story of US Airways Flight 1549, the jet
that was heading from New York’s LaGuardia Airport to Charlotte, North Carolina,
but ended up landing in the Hudson River instead.
Part of my interest is that I fly a great deal, so I can identify
with what happened to the passengers and crew. But my greater fascination with Flight
1549 is that there are larger-than-life management lessons that can be taken from
this January 15 incident—lessons that are worth examining and remembering no matter
what field of endeavor you’re in.
Lesson No. 1: Don’t ever discount the value of experience.
Experience can bring smart, time-tested thinking to difficult business problems—the
kind of thinking that can help organizations perform better during difficult times.
US Airways Capt. Chesley B. Sullenberger III safely landed a jetliner in the Hudson
River under the most difficult of circumstances. His ability to rapidly size up
the situation, weigh the various options and safely execute a seldom-tried emergency
plan is testament to his many years of flight experience. "In many ways, as it turned
out, my entire life up to that moment has been a preparation to handle that particular
moment," Sullenberger told Katie Couric on CBS’ 60 Minutes.
Sullenberger’s experience made the difference in this situation,
and this speaks to a larger issue: Experience matters in every organization. There’s
great value in people who have solid and relevant experience; they can represent
the difference between success and failure. I’m sure the passengers on Flight 1549
appreciate the experience Sullenberger brought to bear when he landed in the Hudson.
Would all have ended so well if he had been downsized in a corporate cost-cutting
move and replaced with a much cheaper, less-experienced pilot? Who knows, but who
wants to take that chance?
Lesson No. 2: Training is important in good times and bad.
Training is a line item that’s easy to whack when budgets get tight, because it’s
not always easy to see its immediate payoff. That misses the point, however. Training
is about getting people ready to execute and put their training to the test when
the organization needs it most.
The New York Times made this point when it noted an exchange
between Michael A.L. Balboni, New York state’s deputy secretary for public safety,
and Sullenberger. Balboni said that he shook the pilot’s hand, looked him in the
eye and thanked him for a job done brilliantly. Balboni said Sullenberger "said
to me, in the most unaffected, humble way, ‘That’s what we’re trained to do.’ No
boasting, no emotion, no nothing."
Has there ever been a better example of the value of a training
program than that? He could have pointed to any number of factors that helped him,
but the fact that he pointed to his training (and experience) shows just how critically
important it can be. This makes a great case for why organizations should really
resist the urge to slash training budgets when times get tough.
Lesson No. 3: It’s all about the team. If you watched the
60 Minutes segment February 8 with Sullenberger, you noticed that he had his entire
flight crew on camera with him. That’s because he has gone out of his way to emphasize
that it wasn’t just him, but his entire flight team that was responsible for safely
landing Flight 1549. He said that there has been too much about him in the aftermath
of the landing, and "not enough about the team."
Sullenberger clearly knows that the best success is shared
success. He has gone out of his way to make sure that his team is recognized, because
organizational success is rarely about an individual. It’s a principle that too
few managers understand, but one that we need a lot more of as we all struggle to
keep our organizations afloat in these tough times.
The lessons of Flight 1549 are well worth remembering. In
the end, it was solid, well-executed people management practices that made the difference
between "miracle" and what could easily have been a disaster.
Workforce Management, February 16, 2009, p. 50
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