This discussion has been locked.
You can no longer post new replies to this discussion. If you have a question you can start a new discussion

Are there lessons we could all learn from how the modern military copes with unexpected situations?

Hi,


A couple of serious issues I was involved with this weekend made me think of this. One was in the engineering world to do with the day job, I was reviewing a very serious incident report (fortunately no fatalities but very close) involving a mixture of everyone trying to do the best they could, but perhaps over reliant on structured checklists which had completely missed an entire piece of equipment in a fairly unique situation. The other was a medical issue in the family, once again all the individual hospital staff were doing their best, but there was a bit of the process that just didn't cope with a particular situation.


Which made me think of something that's long been at the back of my mind: I've never worked in a military environment, but my impression of the modern military from the contacts I have had is that there is still a very structured hierarchy, chain of command, and focus on process, but equally it appears that somehow there is also the ability for small units to have the skills and freedom to evaluate and make their own decisions when challenging circumstances arise - exactly the key skills that were missing in the two examples above. 


So really two questions I'd really like to know other people's views on (particularly those who have worked across both the military and civilian worlds): firstly are my impressions above correct? And if so (or even if a bit wrong but on the right lines) are there lessons we can learn from how this works that we can apply to the management of engineering activities in the wider world - particularly in safety critical issues where we need structure but also need the ability to rapidly and effectively cope with new problems when they come up?   


Thanks,


Andy
Parents
  • It very interesting this idea that's come through a few of these posts about training, practising, rehearsing - and I assume adapting the response based on feedback (perhaps someone would like to comment on that)?


    Very often, in fact most of the time, in the civilian world it's a case of producing a process, and if it works for 80% of cases then keep using it until something absolutely forces it to change. And don't practice (which I think is the point being made here) every scenario, which means you don't practice (or even identify) the 20% where the process doesn't quite work.


    I think there must also be something about personal responsibility as well - in the civilian world it's perfectly acceptable that if you've followed the process, and everything's gone wrong, then you can say "not my problem". And then, if it's five o'clock, go home. I assume that doesn't quite apply (to put it mildly) when you've got incoming!


    I reckon there's a nice little presentation or two in this if anyone with a bit of suitable background wanted to take it up...


    Thanks for all the comments,


    Andy
Reply
  • It very interesting this idea that's come through a few of these posts about training, practising, rehearsing - and I assume adapting the response based on feedback (perhaps someone would like to comment on that)?


    Very often, in fact most of the time, in the civilian world it's a case of producing a process, and if it works for 80% of cases then keep using it until something absolutely forces it to change. And don't practice (which I think is the point being made here) every scenario, which means you don't practice (or even identify) the 20% where the process doesn't quite work.


    I think there must also be something about personal responsibility as well - in the civilian world it's perfectly acceptable that if you've followed the process, and everything's gone wrong, then you can say "not my problem". And then, if it's five o'clock, go home. I assume that doesn't quite apply (to put it mildly) when you've got incoming!


    I reckon there's a nice little presentation or two in this if anyone with a bit of suitable background wanted to take it up...


    Thanks for all the comments,


    Andy
Children
No Data