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The Top 7 Traps When Moving from Business to Government
Peter Daly and Michael Watkins / Monster.com
Are you considering transitioning from business to government? According to government human resource professionals, you’ll need to watch where you step.
A recent survey of senior public-sector HR executives conducted by us – Peter Daly and Michael Watkins, coauthors of The First 90 Days in Government: Critical Success Strategies for New Public Leaders at all Levels – found that in contrast to business, performance failures can have consequences measured not only by financial standards but by embarrassment and political defeat.
To ensure success, you will want to avoid what more than 100 surveyed senior government HR officials report to be the seven most common traps business people fall into when they move to government.
Trap 1: Failing to Understand Government’s Fishbowl Nature
Many new arrivals are “not able to adapt to the political climate and being in the public eye where you are scrutinized when you make decisions,” says one senior public-sector HR professional in the survey. Leaders in businesses often are shielded from the sort of public, media and political scrutiny and second-guessing that accompanies high-profile government appointments. The admonition that new arrivals hear – “imagine how this will seem on the front page of tomorrow’s newspaper” – is no jest.
Trap 2: Thinking Too Narrowly About Stakeholders
Satisfying everyone is impossible, so creating coalitions is essential. In business, there are shareholders, Wall Street analysts, customers, regulators, partners and employees. In federal government, there are almost 300 million citizens, 535 elected representatives, 3,000 or so members of an elected administration, thousands of special-interest constituencies and lobbyists, unions, regulatory bodies and many others.
Trap 3: Not Grasping How Performance Is Measured
In government, finance is but one measurement to devising a strategy. The bottom line, if one even exists in government, is always trumped by political crises, public policy or constituent pressure. Success often entails tolerating financial conditions that would never be entertained in business.
Trap 4: Underestimating the Constraints
Many new arrivals “attempt to make changes that simply can’t be made because of statutes and regulations,” says another HR professional. Leaders in government do not have the option of selling off an agency that performs poorly. They must change and improve it. Private companies are constructed with change in mind, while government is designed for just the opposite – to remain stable. Agencies are governed by complicated regulations, staffed by people doing narrowly defined tasks and overseen by managers whose responsibility often is to assure that rules are followed.
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about 3 years ago
2 comments
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about 3 years ago
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about 3 years ago
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over 3 years ago
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Bluehealer
over 3 years ago
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I work for the government and this sure hits the spot, You are absolutly dead on target with this message.
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over 3 years ago
2 comments
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Pydynkowsky1951
almost 4 years ago
6 comments
1. Don't write, say, or do anything you wouldn't want the world to see.
2. Pick your allies carefully.
3 & 6. The better you perform in your job, and department, the more likely someone will say, "They're doing a bang-up job in Blah Department. They don't need anything." If it works, don't mess with it.
4. Maintain the status quo.
5. Serving the public is its own reward. There is no "I" in team.
7. Know what SLOW means? AND Pick your battles very carefully. A successful small skirmish is better than a lost campaign, no matter how brilliant it looked.
I think I grasp the concept of government. Thank you for the information.
Micha25
about 4 years ago
2 comments
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tub
about 4 years ago
20 comments
These are wonderful insights! Very helpful. Thank you.
michaelrobertson
over 5 years ago
2 comments
A good article that rings true about working for the government. I personally am transitioning from government service to the private sector for these exact reasons. I feel as if I am being underutilized at this point in my career, and due to the slow promotion rates within the system, I will not be in a position to effect change for another 8+ years. More power to persons wishing to move into the government sector. Just remember though, don't do it for the money or the praise, do it for the service. Your ultimate customer is the American people.
norma
over 5 years ago
2 comments
thanks for the informatiion. Would you be more job specific and the basic qualifiers for these positions. I am in a transition stage, want to go to work asap, I dont know how to address my resume and will most likely have to do some job training. Hopefully most companies do their own training requirements. My background is a varietyof experiencesand I am willing to learn.