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Join the Party

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In election years past, I’ve avoided the temptation to endorse a particular presidential candidate. The temptation this year is, if anything, stronger than ever, but talk about a slippery slope …

So this week’s re-run from 2007 isn’t so much an endorsement than a suggested thought process for deciding who deserves your vote.

Or, if that’s too hard, who deserves your vote less.

– Bob


I’m going to form a new political party — the Competence Party. Our platform: Competence does matter … a lot more than policy.

We’re deep in the heart of presidential electioneering. Here’s what I haven’t heard from any of the candidates: “If you elect me, I will appoint the best people to every position in government, and I define ‘best’ as ‘most qualified to effectively take care of the people’s business.”

Here’s what I also haven’t heard: “As president, I will insist that everyone who works for me gives me the most accurate information possible — the information I need to hear, not the information I want to hear. I will base my decisions on this information. The only time I will trust my gut is when I decide what to eat.”

Anyone can present ideas that seem brilliant in sound bites and PowerPoint slides. It takes competence to make something useful happen. Most of what any administration ought to be doing is pretty much the same regardless of any policy specifics. That’s especially true if you inject competence into the process of policy formation, to weed out the alternatives that just won’t work.

If you think I’m singling out the current administration, or any recent administration for praise or criticism, I’m not. Form your own conclusions about either or both.

This is about the coming election. Based on the current round of speeches and debates, there are only three conclusions a reasonable person can draw. One is that the candidates think policy issues are all that matter — that if you’re headed in the right direction, then everything else will happen as if by magic. Another is that one or two candidates really do care about competence but are afraid to raise the issue for some reason. The third is that the candidates figure we citizens don’t think competence is important.

Nothing, not even character, is more important.

If you want to join the Competence Party you have to accept the party’s platform. Raise your right hand, place your left on whatever book you want (the Competence Party doesn’t much care where or whether you worship, so long as you’re good at what you do) and vow to uphold these principles:

  • We will know what we want to accomplish, be clear in how we describe it, and know why it’s a good idea.
  • We will concentrate our efforts on a small number of important goals, recognizing that if we try to accomplish everything we’ll end up accomplishing nothing.
  • We will be realistic. We will choose courses of action only from among those possibilities predicated on all physical objects obeying the laws of physics, human nature not somehow changing for the better, and what has gone wrong in the past having something useful to teach us.
  • Our decisions will always begin by examining the evidence. And we will recognize that when our cherished principles collide with the evidence, the evidence wins. Every time.
  • With new evidence we will reconsider old decisions. Without it, we won’t.
  • We will never mistake our personal experience for hard evidence. Personal experience is the evidence we know best. It’s also a biased sample.
  • We will think first, plan next, and only then act. The only exception is a true emergency, where making any decision in the next two minutes is better than making the right decision sometime in the next several days.
  • We will never mistake hope for a plan. A plan describes what everyone has to do, in what order, to achieve a goal. Vague intentions and platitudes don’t.
  • We will sweat the details. Vague intentions and platitudes don’t have any, which is why those who stop with them always fail.
  • We will put the most qualified person we can find in every position. We’ll find some other way to reward high-dollar campaign contributors. Also, if we find someone is not able to succeed at what we’ve asked them to do, we’ll replace them with someone who is.
  • We will never blame anything on the law of unintended consequences. Our job is to foresee consequences, which we can usually do if we think things through.

No, I’m not really going to try to form the Competence Party. It’s enough of a challenge applying these principles to our day-to-day work. I’m not really suggesting you join, either — you’ll have plenty to do applying them to your day-to-day leadership.

And, anyway, building a political party from scratch isn’t something I’m competent to do.

Comments (3)

  • Bravo! Just as good (and even MORE relevant) than the first time I read it, so many years ago.

  • Excellent reminder!

    One unique aspect of this election is both candidates have had experiences with staffing at the highest levels of government. Looking at who they chose (and their analysis of who they chose) is a worthwhile exercise.

  • This ages well Bob and unfortunately no one has met the criteria since you wrote it. There is a management take away from the election mess. It is how to disagree.

    As a leader, you should allow employees to bring up almost any topic with you and have an adult conversation with them. That can be about projects, corporate issues, and even compensation. Doing that builds trust.

    Our tribal world of us vs them isn’t doing favors for anyone. That goes for politics and corporate culture.

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