Fighting Fires at Work
You have permission to publish this article electronically
or in print, free of charge, as long as the bylines are
included. A courtesy copy of your publication would be
appreciated - send to mhmail@earthlink.net.
Title: Fighting Fires at Work
Word Count: 380
Author: Jeanie Marshall
Email: mhmail@earthlink.net
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=5207
The article is preformatted to 60CPL.
Fighting Fires at Work
Copyright 2006 Marshall House
Out in the forest or in our neighborhood, we recognize a
firefighter rather easily: a heavily-clad person, holding a
fire hose, walking up or down a ladder, or performing some
other tasks that reduce or end a conflagration.
Managers, consultants, and others are often expected to be
fire fighters. Here we do not wear hip boots although,
come to think of it, this is a rather nifty idea. The water
we apply to the fire is taken from our pool of resources
and skills. We use ladders to reach our goals and
comprehend the hierarchy. Fire fighting in organizations
usually means solving crisis problems or calming
interpersonal flare ups.
As a customer, I recently had a series of problems (fires)
while working with a plant manager in a small company. I
tried all the strategies I know as a consultant and manager
and conflict mediator. I even resorted to complaining about
him to his secretary I shamelessly admit that I stooped
that low. She responded with a trace of empathy with me, as
she rose to his defense. She mentioned how hard he works.
With that comment, visions came to my mind of the cat I had
in childhood who chased his tail. He worked hard no
question about that! He usually did not reach his goal, but
when he did, he hurt himself.
In thinking of this plant manager as a fire fighter, here
is the scenario that leaps to view in my mind: With limited
facts, he looks like a fire fighter because he fights
fires. With additional facts, we discover that when no one
is watching, he sets the fires that make him look like a
hero when he douses the flame. So, the truth is he is an
arsonist!
I do not want to imply that all organizational fires are
set intentionally by the firefighters or by anyone. Many
occur by internal combustion. Or carelessness. Or
ignorance. Or because something needs to be burned.
Inside or outside organizations, fires and firefighting
offer a range of possibilities and growth opportunities.
Fires and firefighting can be planned or unplanned. Fires
can be destructive and/or purifying. Fighting fires can be
draining and/or satisfying.
What is your fire? Are you a firefighter? An arsonist?
Burned? Fired up? On fire?
About the Author:
Jeanie Marshall, Empowerment Consultant and Coach with
Marshall House, produces Guided Meditations on CD albums
and MP3 downloads and writes extensively on subjects
related to personal development and empowerment.
Voice of Jeanie Marshall, www.jmvoice.com
|