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Ekotepe
A monkey looks out of a cage at Ekotepe Organic Farm Nov. 11, 2012, near Adana, Turkey. A variety of animals reside at the farm including peacocks, chicken sheep and horses. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Daniel Phelps)
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Ordering monkey food

Posted 5/21/2013 Email story   Print story

    


Commentary by Jenna Fletcher
39th Air Base Wing


5/21/2013 - INCIRLIK AIR BASE, Turkey (AFNS) -- Several years ago, I had the opportunity to attend an Office Personnel Management leadership academy. During three weeks of intense and quality training, there was one story in particular from our instructor that made a deep impression and has stuck with me after all of these years.

My instructor worked as a consultant in the business world. One time he was asked to consult for a company that had one section with very low morale. As soon as he walked into their office it was profoundly obvious. Everything about the work environment made it clear this group did not like their job, or each other. One of his first questions to the group was, "What do you do here?"

"We order monkey food," was their reply.

Thinking perhaps this was industry jargon, he asked, "What do you mean, 'you order monkey food?' What does that mean?"

After longer conversations he learned that this group's entire purpose was to order several different kinds of monkey food and coordinate its delivery to a warehouse. They didn't know for whom they ordered it, and they didn't know where it ended up.

To learn more, a field trip to the warehouse where the food was delivered was organized. When the group arrived, they asked to speak with the manager. When the consultant explained that the individuals with him ordered all the monkey food in the warehouse, the manager became interested and excited asking all kinds of questions, "Why do you order so much monkey food? What is it for?"

And so, the consultant asked where the warehouse delivered the food. He set up a second field trip for the office and the warehouse personnel. They arrived at a large research laboratory and asked to speak to the person in charge. When they were finally able to meet with the head of research, the consultant explained he had with him the office responsible for ordering the food and the personnel responsible for storing and shipping it. The head of research became overcome with emotion and insisted on shaking everybody's hand. After he had said thank you a dozen times, the consultant asked him what they did at the lab.

"We do AIDS research here," he answered, and went on to explain why they needed so many different kinds of food and how vitally important the food was to the overall research project.

The consultant reported that a few months later when he returned to the office that ordered the monkey food, the changes were remarkable. The office was cheerful and the staff was engaged with each other and their work. There was a huge banner on the wall that said, "We help people cure AIDS."

The moral of this story, which has stuck with me for over eight years, is that people need to understand what they do and why they do it. Not just the nuts and bolts, and the forms and software. Not just technical data and schedules. Individuals need to understand the bigger mission and how they fit into it.

Every machine, organism and organization is complex. Some parts you can see plainly, and it is obvious what they do and why their contributions are important. However, it is the obscure parts, the not readily identifiable capacities, that you eventually recognize as crucially important elements in making something work - in creating success. What at first glance may seem mundane and inconsequential you find just as essential as the higher visibility roles.

There is no job within the Air Force that is more important than any other. There are no unnecessary Air Force specialties. Every unit, individual -- whether officer, enlisted or civilian -- in every organization has a critical role to play for Air Force victory.

Good leaders help their team understand their mission and their contribution. Good leaders make why just as important as what and how. Good leaders don't just lead by example, they lead by perspective.

How does your job ensure mission success?



tabComments
5/31/2013 8:28:01 PM ET
quoteGood leaders help their team understand their mission and their contribution. Good leaders make why just as important as what and how. Good leaders don't just lead by example they lead by perspective.quoteI don't need my leaders to tell me why my job is important I need them to be willing to learn and understand why my unit exists and how we contribute to the mission. It works both ways. Well with true leaders.
Librarian, conus
 
5/30/2013 3:16:58 PM ET
It's so important that we as Airman understand that we know that what we do is so important to the mission. It's a huge puzzle and every piece is vital to its completion. Without the support functions there is no bed no food no pay no promotions or no security. Without the maintainers we would not have any aircraft to fly. Without the pilots the aircraft would just be metal on the ground looking pretty. We are a well-oiled machine when everyone takes what they do seriously and does it to their core values. All branches are also important to the mission and were created for a reason. We need to understand that our sister services often fill in when we are unable to provide a function just as we do for them. We are all Americans fighting for the same cause of freedom and protection of those rights our fore fathers provided for us.
Sgt Puzzle, NY
 
5/28/2013 1:54:36 AM ET
Great message Wonderful example Simply stated....we need to feel that what we are doing has value. It gives us that sense of fulfillment. It's important to being productive successful and just happy in my work day-to-day. It's why I retrained into a new AFSC long ago. My leadership didn't relay the message of how what I did supported something biggersomething of value...when that was lost I was bored and dissappointed.
39 ABW WSA MSgt, Incirlik AB
 
5/22/2013 7:10:00 PM ET
Understanding the why is ideal. But sometimes people just need to do what they are told. Don't make the mistake of allowing people to think they need to know why before they decide to put any real energy behind a task. You won't always have time to explain everything and that shouldn't delay forward movement.
Crusty Chief, Midwest
 
5/22/2013 8:54:57 AM ET
What kind of animal is a chicken sheep as mentioned in the picture text Sounds pretty disturbing.Excellence in all we do.
A1C Snuffy, USAFE
 
5/21/2013 11:00:06 AM ET
Great story and very true. However in some programs you cannot peel back the curtain because leadership knows it is really a self licking ice cream cone.
Sgt Whoever, conus
 
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