Fire Engineering
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THE WORLD’S NEWSSTAND®
Leadership
Excellence:
Communicate Your Vision
BY RON KANTERMAN
W
E’VE ALL HAD BOSSES WHO APPEAR TO BE
good leaders but who are terrible managers, and
vice versa. Both disciplines take hard work. Management entails lots of planning, organizing, staffing, delegating, budgeting, and other responsibilities. Can you be a good
leader and a good manager at the same time, good at one and
not the other, or lousy at both? Yes to all three! A chief of a
small combination fire department who was a great manager
and administrator could justify an ice delivery to the firehouse
on a 5°F day in February and get the funding from city hall,
but he couldn’t lead the members to the breakfast table—he
had no people skills and tended to mess with the troops
regularly. When I asked him why he did that, he answered,
“Because I can.”
Leadership isn’t necessarily what’s on your collar. Respect
for rank comes with that rank, but respect for you as a person
comes with having the right qualities. Think about the best
leaders, officers, and firefighters you have worked with. What
made them what they were? I’ll guess they were trustworthy,
dedicated, and well-read people with great integrity who had
respect for others at the highest levels.
Also think about the worst leaders you’ve come across. You
can learn from the bad ones, too, because you will know what
not to do!
VISION AND A COMMON BOND
Consider the greatest leaders of all time. They were able to
lead the masses and bring them to the place they wanted their
people to be—for example, Dwight Eisenhower, Abraham Lincoln, H. Norman Schwarzkopf, and Fiorello LaGuardia. They
all had one thing in common—vision. If you are going to be a
leader in your organization or the leader of your organization,
you must have a vision. Don’t confuse your vision statement
with a mission statement. Most emergency services organizations have a mission statement that include words like service,
dedication, best, customer, quick, efficient, effective, ability,
and so forth.
But a vision statement is much different. It’s your opportunity to dream a little and shape your vision into what you
believe the organization should and could look like. Put aside
the budget and all the other current obstacles, and develop
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your vision for your organization. Once you’ve done that,
share it with your staff. It may become a group vision at this
point and then start to filter down to the line.
“Our firehouses are 100 years old. We need new quarters.
My vision is to build new firehouses.” Sounds impossible? If
you don’t believe in your own vision to start with, it will never
come to light. You must believe in it yourself to make others
believe that it’s possible. If a vision just came to you and you
responded, “That will never happen,” either modify the vision
while still keeping with your ideals or change the situation
preventing fulfillment of vision.
The leaders mentioned above were effective because they
were also great communicators. They all had a vision they believed in that they could share and communicate to the masses
and thus change the lives of others. If you want to be an
effective leader within your organization or beyond, you must
have a vision, the passion to make it work, and the ability to
communicate it at all times and at all costs. Most importantly,
you must first believe in it yourself.
VALUES
A leader has to strike a balance among all the members in
the organization. When I ask my audiences where they get their
values, most answer “from home or parents.” We are a product
of our environment. We read about kids in bad neighborhoods
growing up in a single-parent home, surrounded by drugs and
crime; the media reports that some are in gangs by age 12.
Once in a while, we see a success story of one of these kids
who got out and made something of himself, but most do not.
They simply become a product of their environment.
Each member of the organization brings his own set of
values to the table. As a leader, you must not only deal with
them, but you must understand them, too. Your job is to sort
through the pile of values on the table and bring everyone to
a common ground. That sounds easy. It isn’t! It’s hard work
and takes perseverance.
BE PROACTIVE
You must create the environment and lead by example.
Chief Peter Lamb from North Attleboro, Massachusetts, says,
“What you allow to happen without your intervention becomes your standard.” He also used the letters of his name to
develop a personal leadership model. I did the same below.
FIRE ENGINEERING April 2013 139
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THE WORLD’S NEWSSTAND®
Fire Engineering
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THE WORLD’S NEWSSTAND®
● LEADERSHIP
Use your name to create your own. If you continually let the
tail wag the dog and the day comes when the dog must wag
the tail, you will have to go over Mt. Everest to get there. You
must set the stage, create the environment, set the tone, and
do whatever you have to do, but you must lead at all times,
not just when it’s convenient. You are charged with setting the
tone for ethical behavior, even if you were the biggest prankster in the firehouse. Once you get elevated to the next level,
“You can’t play cards with the guys anymore,” as a former boss
said when I moved up a notch.
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SELF-DEVELOPMENT
Before we dive into self-development, consider the “KANTERMAN” GAL (Guidance Acronym of Leadership).
Kidding: Are you kidding yourself and those around you
that you are or can be an effective leader, or are you really
committed? This is hard work—you have to apply yourself
every day.
Accept that you have problems, and work on them. Fix the
big ones first; the small ones will fall in place.
Never forget your leadership role and what your responsibilities are.
Take action every time. Don’t procrastinate.
Evaluate each situation carefully for the best plan that will
result in the best possible outcome.
Remember who you are, where you are, and the effect you
have on the organization at all times.
Make good decisions based on the best information you can get.
Act on everything with diligence and purpose. Prioritize
your work.
Never put yourself ahead of the organization. If you follow
the organization’s goals and objectives, the things you want for
yourself will eventually come.
Build effective relationships. Cooperation works most of
the time, and cooperating with your team is as important as
your team cooperating with you. Sit and listen to members’
points of view and ask for their input. Let them know up front
that you may not use their ideas, but you want to hear from
them. Try a brainstorming session even though the first one
may be more like a light drizzle. If your people have never
been asked to contribute to the cause, you may get that “deerin-the-headlights” look. It’s okay for you to start it off with an
idea or two, but then let them do their thing. You’ll be very
surprised to hear what comes from your troops; it lends itself
to ownership.
When you are each locked in your corners, butting heads,
and trying to get to a “win-win,” move to higher ground. Agree
to disagree if you have to, and move on. At least you agreed
on something. When you are conducting a disciplinary meeting, always reserve judgment until after you have all the facts.
Don’t rush to judge! Do your homework; when you’re wrong,
admit it, and don’t get defensive.
In my last command, two members appeared to have made
a serious mistake in their work resulting in what I believed
would be a life hazard to personnel. In anger, I hastily drew
up the papers for a two-day suspension for each member,
which would have resulted in dismissal on their next offense.
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THE WORLD’S NEWSSTAND®
LEADERSHIP ●
Not only did I misjudge their “supposed
bad actions,” but I felt it was my duty to
admit the mistake and make it right. The
disciplinary action was expunged from
their records, and I not only verbally
apologized to the men but also sent
them a letter apologizing to their families for bringing undue grief on all of
them. Not only did this make it right, but
these men remained committed workers, and we continued to respect each
other. Fire Marshal Bill Hopson of Ocean
County, New Jersey, says, “If you mess
up, fess up, clean it up, and move on.”
Those are words to lead by.
Learn and contribute. As the leader
of an organization, you are expected
to continually contribute to moving
the organization forward. Generating
new ideas creates excitement among
the members. Try new things. If something new doesn’t work, try something
else. Get out of the box and see what
everyone else is doing. Smash the box,
and either rebuild it or go without it. Go
to conferences and seminars, and bring
home new knowledge (not just a bag of
brochures) and, most importantly, apply
new knowledge rapidly. If you hear or
see something great at any class, seminar, or school and you get home and
shelve it, you’ll never pull it out again.
On returning from a National Fire
Academy class about 10 years ago, I left
that oversized white binder with a note
sticking out of one page on my desk.
That one page was going to change
the way my department responded to
buildings because of a new method of
preplanning that was contained in this
book. I knew if I shelved the binder, I’d
never pull it down. It sat on my desk
for three months until I got to it. I had a
meeting with my staff; we looked at it,
and all agreed it was the way to go. The
project took 10 months to complete, but
we were better for it.
Show flexibility with your team. That
could mean adjusting working hours for
the administrative staff, accommodating
a shift person with different hours for a
personal problem at home, or bending
the rules but not breaking them.
Develop yourself functionally and technically so you can speak, operate, and
lead at the proper levels across the board.
You don’t necessarily need to know how
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every new tool operates or have it in
your hands when you’re at the higher
levels of the organization, but you need
to understand the concepts so you can
support the need. I can’t make a 4:1 Z-rig
mechanical advantage system, but I know
what it’s for and why the rescue company
needs this device to operate.
DEVELOPING THE DEPARTMENT
Customer focus. Our customers dial
911 and ask us to come and make their
problem go away. The average American doesn’t know or care whether we
are paid or not—“I dial 911 and somebody shows up and helps me.” That’s
the bottom line. But it goes deeper
than that. You must keep up with your
town’s demographics; few communities’
makeup in the country is stable; people
are always moving in and out, and
the ethnicities, religions, and genders
change rapidly. New cultures bring new
challenges for the emergency services.
_________________
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THE WORLD’S NEWSSTAND®
● LEADERSHIP
As the leader, it’s your job to keep up and ensure that your
new customers are getting what they need. You may have to
meet with community or religious leaders to better understand
who they are and what they need. An associate of mine works
in a large city where diversity is the norm. An Italian-American
fire officer, his firehouse was in the middle of a Hasidic Jewish
neighborhood. By taking the time to read about and study
their customs, he created a relationship with his customers in
which they were able to understand his fire prevention and
code issues. Approaching your constituents with a respect for
their traditions, culture, or religion will speak volumes and
probably get the code compliance you’re seeking.
You have internal customers as well—everyone in your
department under your command. You need to fulfill their
requests in the station as you would out on the fireground.
Your people are your greatest asset—take care of them. Other
customers include the other municipal agencies (e.g., the
police, the department of public works, parks and recreation,
and so on.) Take care of them the way you would want them
to take care of you when you call for assistance.
Get involved in your community. Successful chiefs I’ve met
have been part of their local Rotary Club or Chamber of Commerce. One volunteer chief told me that his apparatus hit a tree
on the way to a call. (No injuries; everyone was belted in.) The
local truck body shop called him and asked if it could fix it for
nothing! He had attended Chamber meetings for three years
with all the business people in the town. It paid off.
Always personally support your department. If the
department leadership talks negatively about it, especially in
public, then what could you expect from your people? Most
of us support our departments by simply wearing a marked
shirt or jacket or by displaying a window sticker on our cars.
Remember, however, that you are now a “marked person,” and
what you do affects not only you but the whole department
as well. When a firefighter gets arrested for drunk driving, the
news will report that “an off-duty firefighter” or “a volunteer
firefighter with 25 years of experience responding to vehicle
accidents” was arrested. It’s even worse if you’re an officer. If
you’re the chief, forget it. What you do and say in a leadership
role affects the entire organization.
Collaboration. If you are at or near the top, discuss with
your companies, divisions, bureaus, and units why it’s important for all of you to align yourselves with the department’s
goals, objectives, and guidelines. If you’re a company officer,
lead your members to the alignment “trough,” and have them
take a sip. Many firefighters and officers have told me that
they work in a four-platoon system that has in effect become
four separate fire departments within one. Each shift and
shift commander does it a little differently or, in some cases,
a lot differently. It gets real interesting when a firefighter
is detailed to another shift for overtime and is admonished
by the officer for doing his job the way he knows how. “We
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THE WORLD’S NEWSSTAND®
● LEADERSHIP
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don’t it that way on K shift,” the K shift
commander tells him.
Alignment is key, and leaders at all
levels are responsible for it. Align the
fire prevention bureau with the suppression forces. Align the shifts. You’d think
standard operating procedures/guidelines (SOPs/SOGs) would have taken
care of that. Align the line and the staff.
It’s okay if everyone is singing in different keys as long as everyone is singing
from the same sheet of music.
Sharing is another way to get collaboration within your department. Share
your ideas, and solicit new ideas from
within. Share your successes and lessons
learned, and document them. We’re
getting better at that lately; see the Fire
Fighter Close Calls Web site, www.firefighterclosecalls.com, and the National
Fire Fighter Near-Miss Reporting System
also know your department—every
function, position, policy, procedure,
SOP/SOG, rule, regulation, what to do,
and more importantly what NOT to do.
You have to know your people. The
success of every good leader I have
known came from their ability to lead
and having good people around them
to carry out the mission. As a 19-year
chief, I realize that most of my successes came from my deputy and battalion
chiefs, line officers, and firefighters.
I used to love talking to chiefs who
thought they were bigger than their
department members. I always had to
break the bad news: “They’re bigger
than you and, by the way, probably
much better.” They never liked that. Get
that valuable input from your staff, look
at best practices, and benchmark with
your peers and professional associa-
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You must create the environment
and must lead at all times, not
just when it’s convenient.
Web site, www.firefighternearmiss.com.
If we don’t learn from the past, we’re
doomed to repeat our mistakes. Insanity has been defined as doing the same
thing over and over again and expecting different results. Take advantage
of collaborating with other agencies as
well. Many jurisdictions form task forces
with police, fire, and other municipal
services. Get on to these task forces, and
do some cross-jurisdictional work. As
a leader, you are expected to do such
work; encourage others to do so too.
THINK AND ACT
STRATEGICALLY
First things first: You need to know
who you are. You can’t do anything
until you are comfortable with yourself
and confident in your position. Once
you’ve conquered you, then you can
lead others and make the necessary
changes to move your department forward. You must have your act together
and believe in yourself before you can
pre-sent anything to others. You must
_________
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Fire Engineering
tions. Today’s fire service leadership
has no excuse not be on top of current information and technology. A fire
department in 2013 can’t operate like
it’s 1955. Successful leaders are part of
local, county, state, and national organizations so they can get what they need
to stay ahead or at least keep up. Chief
Charlie Dickinson, former administrator
of the United States Fire Administration,
once described “The Five Horns” of a
fire chief: the department, the firefighters, public safety, politics, and integrity.
That last one says it all. If you give
up your integrity, you lose everything. If
you lie to your people and they find out,
they will never trust you again. Some
things you just can’t get back. Maintain
your integrity at all times. Your leadership legacy depends on it.
Part of thinking and acting strategically is consistency in how you handle
your people when things go right and
when things go wrong. It’s most important when things go wrong. Inconsistency can ruin a department, whether it’s
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THE WORLD’S NEWSSTAND®
● LEADERSHIP
allowing four different shifts to operate
four different ways or it’s preferring
charges against one volunteer when two
of them committed the bad act. Consistency is critical to keeping the ship not
only afloat but upright, on course, and
moving forward at all times. Leadership
makes the world move in a positive
direction, so contribute.
Training the troops, the staff, and
yourself and cross-training are the
hallmarks of strategic thinking. Fire
departments that don’t train or do very
little training are doing a disservice to
themselves and the community they
serve. In fact, it’s more important to do
more training when things are slow than
when they’re busy. When things slow
down, we tend to lose our edge.
A large city on the East Coast reported
an alarming rate of firefighter injuries
in the middle to late 1990s every night
on the news. I called a friend who was
a deputy chief at the time, who said,
“We’re losing our edge because the
number of fires is down. With the influx
of the new kids who haven’t seen a lot
of fire duty like we did in the 1970s and
1980s, we’re getting hurt. We need to do
more training.”
Present opportunities for training.
Take companies out of service if you
can. If you’re too small, get mutual aid
to cover you so you can get out and
train. If you’re a volunteer outfit, use a
neighboring company to cover your area
so you can get to the fire academy at
night or on a Saturday morning to get
in those live burn exercises. There are
many training ideas available through
online programs, books, and magazines.
Bring your members the resources they
need to train and get the job done. As a
leader, it’s your job.
DEVELOP YOUR STAFF
Your immediate staff are the people
who will help deliver your message or,
more importantly, your vision. You rely
on this group of senior officers every
day whether you’re in or out of town.
If you haven’t developed them to your
level, you’re cheating them and yourself.
Bosses that have “held back information
because they can’t know what I know”
need to get out of this business.
You must delegate for development
purposes and stand behind them in case
they should trip and fall. Be there to
catch them, stand them up, and guide
them forward.
There are many tools that you can use
for staff development: setting specific
goals, offering constructive feedback,
rewarding performance, and encouraging training/personal development and
flexibility.
“You do not lead by hitting people
over the head. That’s assault, not leadership.”—Dwight D. Eisenhower
____________________
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COMMUNICATIONS
This is the cornerstone of good
leadership. It must be clear and concise
to be effective. It’s almost like giving
fireground commands over the radio.
Almost. You must be consistently open
and effective to maintain your leadership. Part of this is dignity and respect;
yes, treat people as you would like to
be treated. Take the high road. Even
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THE WORLD’S NEWSSTAND®
● LEADERSHIP
when the team manager is kicking dirt
on his shoes and screaming profanity,
the umpire quietly takes his hand and
points to the top of the stadium indicating, “You’re out of here.” Not that you
should throw the person out; remain
calm, evaluate the problem, and quietly
and effectively deal with it. Screaming
matches don’t work; you’ll bring yourself
down to a lower level where you needn’t
be. Show patience and courtesy even
when the other person does not. Here’s
where your leadership skills really kick
in again.
I had an employee more than 10 years
ago with whom I would have confrontations at least weekly. The louder he got,
the softer I got. I called him “Mr. Smith”;
he called me unprintable names.
On the other side of communications,
keep the information flowing. So many
of my seminar attendees say, “They tell
us nothing.” No excuses. Bulletin boards,
e-mail, chat rooms, notices, and good
old one-on-one or group conversations
can get it all done. I tend to send more,
not less, information so they can never
be uninformed.
WHAT WILL THEY SAY?
What will they say at your retirement
party or your funeral? Maybe the standard answers: He was firm but fair ... a
good husband and father ... a good boss
... he cared ... we learned a lot from him
... dedicated ... could be trusted ... never
lied to us ... and so on. If you think they
may not say the things you want, then
you may have some work to do. ●
REFERENCES
Abrashoff, D. Michael. It’s Your Ship : Management Techniques from the Best Damn Ship in the
Navy. Warner Books, 2002.
Abrashoff, D. Michael. It’s Our Ship: The No-Nonsense Guide to Leadership. Business Plus, 2008.
Needham, Robert. Team Secrets of the Navy
Seals: The Elite Military Force’s Leadership Principles for Business. Skyhorse Publishing, 2012.
Patterson, Kerry, et al. Crucial Conversations:
Tools for Talking When Stakes Are High.
McGraw-Hill, 2002.
Salka, John. First in, Last Out: Leadership Lessons
from the New York Fire Department. Portfolio,
2004.
Sargent, Chase. From Buddy to Boss: Effective
Fire Service Leadership. Fire Engineering, 2006.
● RON KANTERMAN, a 37-year
fire service veteran, is a career chief
in southeast Connecticut. He has a
bachelor’s and two master’s degrees,
is an accomplished author, and lectures on a myriad of fire service topics around the country. He teaches
graduate and undergraduate fire
science and emergency management
and numerous other courses at the
National Fire Academy in Emmitsburg, Maryland. He is an advocate
for the National Fallen Firefighters
Foundation and writes “Chief Kanterman’s Journal,” a monthly column
featured on fireengineering.com. He
co-hosts with Tom Aurnhammer “The
Back Step Boys” on Fire Engineering’s Blog Talk Radio shows.
____________
Ron Kanterman will present “Leadership Excellence” on Monday, April
22, 1:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m., at FDIC
2013 in Indianapolis.
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