We have all heard people in leadership positions state, “Our people are our greatest resource.” Unfortunately, in many agencies the employees, especially the front line personnel, are not treated as the greatest resource. My fear is that in today’s political climate with all the demands for “Police Reform” that many agencies will make the mistake of taking the position that the community (meaning external community) is their first priority.
The external community you serve has to a priority, but not the first priority. Your people have to be your first priority. Let me be clear. I am in now way suggesting that you ignore, condone, tolerate or cover up inappropriate behavior. When I say your people need to be your number one priority I mean that you need to provide them the leadership, support and training necessary to effectively do their job in support of and in alignment with the mission, vision and values of the organization.
In order to best serve your community the people in formal leadership positions need to first serve the people they have the privilege of leading. Those in formal leadership positions need to focus on the needs and wellness of their people. Those on the front lines need to know they will be supported when they make a mistake and demonstrate the courage to stand up and own up to that mistake. Your frontline personnel are the face of the agency to members of your community. You need to invest in them.
Seth Godin recently posted a blog titled, Krulak’s law , which speaks to this very topic. In it he writes:
The experience people have with your brand is in the hands of the person you pay the least.
Act accordingly.
(This involves training, trust, responsibility, leadership, dignity, authority, management and investment. It mostly means seeing the front-line people in your organization as priceless assets, not cheap cogs.)
In his important leadership book Infinite Games Simon Sinek talks about the fact that if you want a successful, thriving organization, and satisfied customers (community members) your people have to be your first priority. In his book Setting the Table legendary restaurateur Danny Meyer talks about five groups the leadership teams of their restaurants serve: customers, investors, suppliers, staff and community. He puts Staff at #1 on that list. My two sons are both very successful entrepreneurs in the extremely tough hospitality industry. One of the reasons they are successful is they hire talent, not bodies, and they put that talent at the top of the priority list, support them and invest in their training and development. When Bob Kuehl (now the Chief in Raytown, MO) was the Deputy Chief of Operations for KCPD he used to say, “I have a 1,000 people who I work for.” People would try to correct him and say, “You mean you have 1,000 people who work for you in that Bureau.” Bob would explain that his role as Deputy Chief was to serve and look after the people who worked in the Bureau of Operation, not the other way around. What Simon Sinek, Danny Meyer, my two sons, Bob Kuehl and all good leaders understand is that their job is to look after their people first and when they do, their people will look after the people their organization exists to serve.
When agencies rolled out Procedural Justice training the mistake many made was to teach it as a program to better serve the community; an external focus. Many officers sat through that training and thought to themselves, “I wish that was the culture here and we were treated that way.” If that is what your people were thinking, then the training was likely a waste of time. Procedural Justice should have first been implemented as an internal program where the core tenets became part of the culture of the organization. Once that is done it is an easy transition to say, this is how we need to treat everyone, including the members of the community you interact with daily.
The best way to create and enhance relationships with the community you serve is to have well trained, healthy, rested, well lead people on the front lines of your agency. You accomplish that by making your people your number one priority. This is simple, not easy, but it is worth the commitment and the effort.
Take care.
Brian Willis
Winning Mind Training – Dedicated to helping good trainers become great trainers and great trainers to deliver awesome training.
The Excellence in Training Academy – Where trainers come to grow. Join the Community of trainers committed to the pursuit of excellence in and through training. Use the code eitblog to get the first month’s membership (individual or training unit) free.
Interested in hosting an Excellence in Training Presentation, Seminar or Course? Contact to me at winningmind@mac.com and we can work together to determine what will best suit your needs.
