- Gates has earned a reputation as an adept manager in a department long resistant to change.
- He has never read a management book - - but is planning to eventually write a book about managing and reforming large public institutions, such as the Pentagon and Texas A&M University.
- Showing respect to the professional who staff and help lead an institution is critical. Without that respect, top managers will quickly find their ideas ignored, or actively resisted.
- Symbols and symbolic gestures are important.
- Holding people accountable is critical.
- In the context of the Pentagon - - "This place is too gigantic to expect that {knowing everything}. What created the problem {mishaps involving the military's stewardship of the U.S. nuclear arsenal} was not taking it seriously enough once they were apprised of the situation."
- Gates has joked that the only management training he received was with the Boy Scouts when he was 14 years old.
- The appropriate management style can be a function of the time period.
- Gates has an open leadership style and doesn't dominate meetings - - but relishes making decisions at their conclusion. He encourages participation, so people have a lot of say, until the decision is made and then, like all good leaders, he expects people to toe the line.
- Gates has said he has become too cautious as the years have gone by.
- Gates worked hard to ensure his ideas were embraced not just by the top generals, but also mid-ranking and junior military officers, teaching classes at the service academies and giving speeches to the various war colleges.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Robert Gates and the Boy Scouts
Key points from the June 20, 2011 edition of The New York Times (Basic Training: How Gates Grew) regarding Gates' four-and-a-half years as defense secretary:
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