Monday, 22 March 2010

Biting back? When, and how?


In the last few weeks I’ve seen two sad episodes of former employees taking shots at their former boss or their successor. When do you “kick and tell”?

If you want people to know they can trust you, and perhaps to consider offering you a senior role in the future, the simple answer is, “Never”.

The first case that caught my eye was an ex-employee of a multi-national organization, who, in my view, took advantage of his high-profile communications background to celebrate, via his blog, the transfer of a former work colleague out of a very visible management position, into a more internally focused role. His colourful language included references to “this person’s malicious self-service” and “hundreds of venomous emails...” I expect you can fill-in the rest.

I have met the blogger and his target and I understand that they might not get on, professionally or otherwise. But this public e-flogging seems likely to ricochet, as well as damage its target:
  • The target (the bloggee?) is tarred by one person’s allegations, which are now stored on hundreds of servers, and there’s no realistic right of reply (call me outdated, but has the idea of “natural justice” totally disappeared?). As a result of this blog, is there any realistic hope that this accusation can ever really be buried? Surely the better approach - if the writer had been genuinely well-intentioned - would have been to raise it with the individual in person, or if that didn’t work, confidentially with the person’s boss, the CEO?
  • For the blogger, on the other hand, I’d recommend that any potential employer or client should read his blog post and think carefully of what might happen if they too were to fall out later. As a result, the new employer or client might well ask themselves, “Why take the risk?”
So, no winners from this.

Then, a couple of weeks ago, at the height of Telecom’s troubles with its new mobile network, the company’s former CEO, Theresa Gattung, indulged in the print version of kicking her successor with heavy boots while he was bruised and flat on the canvas.

Of course she will have insights that most of us don’t and probably there will be some truth in her analysis of the issues. But one thing she should have learned in her time as CEO is that it’s easy to offer gratuitous solutions from the touchline; it’s much harder to apply them when you’re on the field (what the Americans call a “Monday-morning quarterback”).

Among her more headline-grabbing comments was rather disingenuous criticism of her successor’s salary, which you could read as either sour grapes or simple envy - neither of which fits well with a former chief of the country’s largest listed company.

I don’t expect Ms Gattung needs to look for another job, since she was well remunerated in New Zealand terms - even if the amount was, as she noted, far less than that of her successor. So perhaps the fallout for her won’t amount to much. Her comments may even help to sell a few more copies of her memoirs. But a Board looking for a chief executive, or for another Board member, would hope that confidentiality and loyalty will endure beyond the term in office.

From a practical governance perspective, what goes on in the Boardroom isn’t usually that sensitive - you could publish much of it without a second thought. However, if you’re concerned that you might be misquoted or taken out of context later, you will inevitably lose the spontaneity and full, open discussion that are so valuable in getting to good decisions.

So, again, if someone shows a tendency to “reveal all”, a Board might be inclined to ask, “Why take the risk?”

Many years ago, an executive headhunter had a sketch on his wall: an outline of the lower half of a wading bird. The caption read, “Remember that the toes you tread on today are attached to the feet, that are joined to the legs, that support the backside you may have to kiss tomorrow.”

Tread softly.