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Leadership Lessons from a “Successful” Crash Landing

[25 February 2009 | 0 Comments | ]
Posted by Eric Santillan

Crashed Plane

US Air­ways Flight 1549 was a com­mer­cial pas­sen­ger flight from New York City’s LaGuardia Air­port bound for Char­lotte, North Car­olina that ditched in the Hud­son River on Jan­u­ary 15, 2009. All 155 on board survived.

While in the flight’s ini­tial climb out about two min­utes after tak­ing off at 3:25 p.m. EST (20:25 UTC), the Air­bus 320 struck a flock of large birds at about 3,000 feet result­ing in an imme­di­ate loss of thrust from both engines. When the pilots con­cluded that their air­liner would be unable to safely reach any air­field from their alti­tude and loca­tion near the George Wash­ing­ton Bridge, they turned south and headed down the river look­ing for a place to ditch. After glid­ing for about eight miles in essen­tially unpow­ered flight, the air­crew set the air­liner down intact in mid-river at 3:31 pm not far from the USS Intre­pid Museum (Pier 86, North River) in mid­town Man­hat­tan. All 150 pas­sen­gers and 5 air­crew safely evac­u­ated the cabin and were res­cued from the par­tially sub­merged plane by the crews of nearby com­mer­cial and res­cue watercraft.

The entire crew of Flight 1549 was later awarded the Master’s Medal of the Guild of Air Pilots and Air Nav­i­ga­tors. The award cita­tion read, “This emer­gency ditch­ing and evac­u­a­tion, with the loss of no lives, is a heroic and unique avi­a­tion achieve­ment.” [CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL STORY]

We cel­e­brate today the anniver­sary of one of the proud­est moments of the Fil­ipino: a rev­o­lu­tion that ousted a dic­ta­tor. It has been known the world over as “the rev­o­lu­tion that sur­prised the world” because it was done peacefully.

To read more about the EDSA Rev­o­lu­tion, click here.

There have been major changes since that time, but years later, we’re still look­ing for that leader who will bring some hope to the cri­sis of lead­er­ship we are expe­ri­enc­ing as a nation. Maybe we could learn some­thing about lead­er­ship from the man who saved the day for 154 peo­ple who were about to crash. Tell me what you think in the com­ments below.

WHAT WOULD SULLY DO?
By EAMON JAVERS | 2÷9÷09 4:56 PM EST | http://​www​.politico​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​s​t​o​r​i​e​s​/​0209​/​18622​.​h​tml

An econ­omy that’s shed­ding nearly 600,000 jobs per month is in com­plete free fall – just like an air­plane that’s lost both its engines. So in this time of eco­nomic cri­sis, it’s worth look­ing for lessons from the one man who really knows how to han­dle a crash: Cap­tain Ches­ley “Sully” Sullenberger.

After all, the man saved the lives of 155 pas­sen­gers on the stricken US Air­ways Flight 1549, received con­grat­u­la­tory phone calls from Pres­i­dents Bush and Obama, scored excel­lent seats for the Super Bowl, and, on Mon­day, received the key to New York City from Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Surely he has some­thing to offer law­mak­ers entrusted with the fates of 300 mil­lion Americans.

It turns out, Sully’s crash land­ing was more than just a mir­a­cle on the Hud­son. It was a case study of lead­er­ship in a cri­sis. Wash­ing­ton politi­cians would do well to ask them­selves one ques­tion: What would Sully do?

Here are the top five lessons from the crash of flight 1549:

1. Don’t panic: Sul­len­berger told CBS’ Katie Couric that he imme­di­ately knew he was in a life-or-death sit­u­a­tion: “It was the worst sick­en­ing pit-of-your-stomach, falling-through-the-floor feel­ing I’ve ever felt in my life,” he said. But he didn’t let that fear keep him from act­ing calmly and effec­tively. On the cock­pit record­ing, Sullenberger’s tone of voice is even and con­trolled as dis­as­ter loomed.

Les­son: You can’t lead from the fetal posi­tion. There are both Democ­rats and Repub­li­cans who would pre­fer not to have to revisit the notion of a finan­cial res­cue pack­age, espe­cially after the deba­cle of the Trou­bled Assets Relief Pro­gram last year. Sully didn’t want to crash into the Hud­son, either – but he didn’t have a choice.

2. There’s only one pilot at a time: The instant his engines cut out over New York City, Sul­len­berger turned to his co-pilot, Jeff Skiles, and said “my air­craft,” tak­ing con­trol of the air­plane. Stiles responded quickly and sim­ply: “your air­craft.” Notice what the two men did not do: They did not argue over who was in charge, or whose the­ory of crash land­ing was bet­ter. They had only one chance to get it right, and Sully was in the captain’s seat, so he made the call.

Les­son: Lead­ers have to be allowed to lead. The back and forth tus­sling we have seen between con­gres­sional Democ­rats and the White House over who’s respon­si­ble for cer­tain planks in the stim­u­lus bill is just the oppo­site of what we saw with Sully and Stiles.

3. Impro­vise, Impro­vise, Impro­vise: Sully cranked through a list of options with his co-pilot and with air traf­fic con­trol. Return to La Guardia Air­port? Couldn’t make it. Bear right toward Teter­boro? Still too far. Sully weighed the advice he was get­ting, and made a uni­lat­eral deci­sion, telling air traf­fic con­trol sim­ply: “We’ll be in the Hudson.”

Les­son: Weigh the options, and then move on. Some­times, the worst choice on the table is the only one avail­able. Both Pres­i­dent Bush and Pres­i­dent Obama have been mak­ing it up as they go along – and that’s not nec­es­sar­ily a bad thing. Franklin Delano Roo­sevelt once called it: “bold, per­sis­tent exper­i­men­ta­tion.” For Con­gress, most econ­o­mists agree, that means do some­thing – this prob­lem won’t solve itself with­out a lot of col­lat­eral damage.

4. Experts mat­ter: Sul­len­berger was per­haps the ideal pilot to han­dle the Hud­son land­ing: He’d flown for more than 19,000 hours, ran his own trans­porta­tion safety con­sul­tancy, and had par­tic­i­pated in sev­eral National Trans­porta­tion Safety Board acci­dent inves­ti­ga­tions. Con­trast that with Wash­ing­ton, where all 535 law­mak­ers on Capi­tol Hill have an opin­ion – whether they know what they’re talk­ing about or not. Pres­i­dent Obama him­self bemoaned this ten­dency in the stim­u­lus process: “These days, every­body thinks they’re econ­o­mists,” he joked.

Les­son: Some peo­ple are bet­ter qual­i­fied than oth­ers – some­times you’re the pilot, and some­times you’re the flight attendant.

5. Don’t worry about pub­lic opin­ion – suc­cess makes for great num­bers: Couric asked Sul­len­berger whether he thought about the pas­sen­gers while he was strug­gling to land the plane. Sully said, in essence, no. Instead, Sully was focused on the task imme­di­ately in front of him. “I knew I had to solve this prob­lem,” he said.

Les­son: The pas­sen­gers – and the Amer­i­can peo­ple – are along for the ride. As dif­fi­cult as this is to swal­low in a democ­racy, a fast-moving cri­sis sim­ply doesn’t allow a lot of time for delib­er­a­tion. Hes­i­ta­tion can mean dis­as­ter. Imag­ine Sully con­duct­ing an opin­ion poll – if asked, surely some of the pas­sen­gers would have wanted him to try for Teter­boro, some for La Guardia, and some for the water land­ing. By the time he’d decided what to do, it would be too late to do it. What’s more, it’s some­times bet­ter to make a bad deci­sion than none at all. After all, maybe Sully could have landed at Teter­boro and saved a $60 mil­lion air­craft as well as the lives of the pas­sen­gers and crew. We’ll never know. But debat­ing the option any longer would surely have cost the lives and the plane.

The prob­lem with all this is that democ­racy doesn’t work like a dic­ta­to­r­ial air­plane cock­pit: it’s messy, inde­ci­sive and com­bat­ive. That’s almost always a good thing, except in some sit­u­a­tions that require imme­di­ate and deci­sive action. That partly explains why Sul­len­berger is get­ting ova­tions and the ever-lasting grat­i­tude of his pas­sen­gers, and Con­gress’ approval rat­ings are in the cellar.

What’s scary about the Sully model is that you only know if it works after the fact. Until the moment of impact, every­one – co-pilot, crew, pas­sen­gers – is oper­at­ing on faith. If Sully had been the wrong guy for the job, or if a sud­den gust of wind had tipped a wing into the river too early, we’d be learn­ing the oppo­site lessons now: Sully should have con­sulted more, del­e­gated more, or lis­tened to the air traf­fic con­troller. It is exactly the same with the stimulus.

Still, Wash­ing­ton politi­cians too often feel enti­tled to a hero’s wel­come before they’ve actu­ally done any­thing heroic. Sure, Sully and his crew headed for the photo ops and celebrity tele­vi­sion inter­view­ers – but only after they’d saved the day.

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