We use tools because they
make us more efficient, able to get more done, with less effort.
I use tools a lot, for
construction, software development, management, leadership,
organizing, travel, and I appreciate mechanics
who can really use a tool.
I worked a summer with
Sterling Guthrie, backhoe artist. He had a totally different way of
thinking about work and a more creative relationship with gravity
than did men who stood on the ground. He would use his backhoe
for up, down, sideways, and twist, saving hundreds of man hours and
increasing the production and safety of our crew. Sterling got more
completed work out of his backhoe than any man I’ve known.
I was remembering Sterling
last week while I was on a Caribbean cruise. Every time we left or
came back on the ship we ran a security gauntlet. Ship’s crew,
mainly from the Philippines and Eastern Europe, ran us through a
scanner at a brisk pace, 100% document check, speaking to each of us
by name, actively looking for signs of “not right.” They were
smiling, because smiling increased their engagement with each
passenger, they were engaged because they were going to be on the
ship if anything went wrong, they were establishing personal
connections because that is what experience professionals do.
For that cruise, we started
from the Port of Baltimore, saving time, complexity, and the
security-by-threat of air travel. That was a major bonus.
While I was on the cruise
I got to think about why our government had shut down my municipal
golf course, memorials, cultural institutions. How had they ever
gotten authority to spread that misery?
I remembered a
conversation with an in-law a couple of years ago. He was explaining
the healthy pay bump he got from carrying a gun to his job, “I’m
not a toll collector, I’m a bridge guard!” I couldn’t help
myself, “Really? How many get away?”
When we came back, we went
through US Customs, after 6 runs through private security screening
that week. This time there was no engagement, no encouragement, with
a crew who had decided our security was best protected by being
unhappy and uninvolved.
Providing negative
reinforcement, making no reinforcement the desired state, misses half
the available reinforcement response. Our official customs experience
was a little less efficient than an open doorway.
I used to accept the
occasional government foul up as a part of being a citizen. As
business and social groups have gotten more efficient, the government
I interact with has lowered their successful completion baseline,
while increasing their citizen-threat behavior.
A bureaucracy is a tool,
just like a backhoe. If the operator can’t provide
value while
delighting the customer, it’s
time to get another operator.
Sometimes you have to Drop
The Other Shoe
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