The Public Manager Magazine Article
Ron Sanders opens the May issue of The Public Manager with his thoughts on how management in the public sector compares with the private sector.
Tue May 10 2016
Many of us have wondered whether our jobs as public managers are any more (or less) difficult than those of our counterparts in the private sector, and this issue's Public Manager interview provides some compelling insight into this age-old question. It's with Russ Deyo, who happens to hold one of the most demanding jobs in government: undersecretary for management at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). English translation: That means he's the chief management officer for one of the federal government's largest—and arguably most complex—cabinet departments. His portfolio includes the "Full Monty" of management functions: HR, IT, acquisition, strategic planning and budgeting, financial management, facilities, and security.
That's enough to cause me to hyperventilate, especially when I think about the stakes involved. At DHS, mission failure is not an option, and by definition, the same applies to the management functions that enable them. However, I've had the chance to sit down with Secretary Deyo on several occasions (including but not limited to our interview), and to say he's calm and unflappable in the face of those challenges is an understatement. You see, he comes to his daunting position after a full career in the private sector doing very similar things, and he's pretty much seen it all.
To be sure, he acknowledges there are some significant differences—for example, the media "fishbowl" that we all live in, a 535-member board of directors that is perennially running for office, and the degree of rigid regulation in some areas like HR. However, at the end of the day, he says that management is management—no matter how complex the management challenge (whether in the public sector or private), if you break that challenge down into its individual components, deal with them one by one, and stay true to your core principles and priorities along the way, you'll get there.
That's what gets him through a day, and it's an approach worth remembering—especially when the world of public managers gets complicated.
Ron Sanders
Chairman, The Bureaucrat Inc. Board of Directors
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