Five lessons for leaders from Mayor Bloomberg

02 November 2012 Scott Eblin

While the impact of Hurricane Sandy in the US spread far and wide, the New York/New Jersey area took the worst hit. The scenes of flooding, fires and dangling construction cran were truly stunning.

In the run-up to the storm, a friend of mine wrote that we were likely to see lots of examples of leadership this week. She was certainly right. Some dramatic examples that come to mind are the US Coast Guard’s helicopter rescue of the HMS Bounty crew off North Carolina (see the video here) and New York City firefighters rescuing residents from a waterlogged inferno in Rockaway, Queens.

A less dramatic but equally visible example of leadership this week has come from New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg. With multiple press conferences before, during and after the storm, Bloomberg has kept his citizens informed and, in the process, given a seminar on how to do leadership communications in a crisis. If you haven’t seen one of the mayor’s press conferences, it’s worth a look to see how he does it. I’ve watched excerpts from a few of them today and read through some of the transcripts.

Here are five lessons I’ve learned about crisis communications from Mayor Mike:

Project quiet confidence: As I’ve written here before (long before Hurricane Sandy), leaders create the weather; not literally, obviously, but leaders influence the response of others by how they show up. In all of his briefings, Bloomberg showed up prepared, appropriately concerned and quietly confident that his extended team and his citizens would respond to the storm in the most effective way possible. His quiet confidence likely gave confidence to others in a challenging situation.

 

Be consistent and frequent: I don’t know the exact schedule that Bloomberg has had for his pressers but it looks like he was up for 20 to 30 minutes in the morning and afternoon on the days before, during and after Sandy. Establishing an operating rhythm for his communications enabled him to get his team’s messages out consistently. Keeping people informed helps keep them calm.

Be relevant: Bloomberg and his staff have done a masterful job of talking about the things that matter most to people. He’s kept his remarks relevant by providing information on preparation plans, evacuations, when the power will be back on, transportation updates and even the plans for Halloween post-Sandy.

Make specific requests: In a crisis, most people want to know what they can do to help or at least stay safe. (Then there are those who ignore all the requests at the peril of themselves and others.) Bloomberg has been very clear in asking people to do things that help themselves and the community – evacuate low-lying areas, stay out of public parks until damaged trees are cleared, only use 911 for life threatening emergencies. Most people will honour specific, common sense requests. Leaders communicating in a crisis need to make them.

Put the team front and centre: In every press conference I saw, Bloomberg had the leaders of the relevant city agencies lined up behind him. They were there to answer questions but also to demonstrate that there was a unified effort to address the challenges at hand. Bloomberg went out of his way to recognise specific leaders and their agencies for the work they were doing. In a crisis, people want to know that qualified people have their backs. Bloomberg made sure that New Yorkers knew that.

StartPrev12NextLast

Scott Eblin

Scott Eblin is an executive coach, speaker and author of The Next Level: What Insiders Know About Executive Success. You can learn more about him at www.eblingroup.com and follow him on Twitter @scotteblin.

 


SEARCH
Loading
MOST READ LATEST EDITOR'S PICKS
Social media expert says clamping down on users posting about your product is “missing the point” of
In between the smoke machines and outrageous costume changes there are three important lessons we can learn from this year's
Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates has reclaimed the title of world’s richest man from Mexican telco magnate Carlos
Selling fake goods can cost you, but it can be hard to tell when something is genuine. Here are four warning signs to heed when importing goods.
The importance of maintaining a sense of

Sponsored Links

Private Media Publications

Crikey

loading...

StartupSmart

loading...

Property Observer

loading...

Womens Agenda

loading...