| 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                  
                                     
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                 
                                 
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                     
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                    Small Unit Leadership 
                                    
                                    
                                    Part 2 of a 12 part Series 
                                    
                                    
                                    The Jump Start 
                                    
                                    
                                    Robert Mallory, Contributing Writer 
                                    
                                     
                                    The Use of Power 
                                    
                                    Its your first day in your assignment.  Perhaps you are a 
                                    newly appointed leader, or you have been transferred into a new assignment.  How 
                                    do you establish leadership?  How do you get
                                    things moving in the right 
                                    direction?  You have the positional authority, the stripes or bars or whatever 
                                    symbol of leadership. The position is only one type of leadership power and for 
                                    the most part the weakest. 
                                                
                                    As you study your craft,
                                    leadership, you will find that there are several types 
                                    of leader power.  Many people have a difficult time with the word power; It 
                                    can carry negative connotations.  Recall our first article and think of our 
                                    definition of leadership  The art of influencing human behavior toward 
                                    organizational goals.  In the leader realm, power is the amount and type of 
                                    influence the leader possesses.  First, lets define four of the power bases you 
                                    can work from as a new leader and then we will explore how to combine them into 
                                    a plan to jump start your leadership. 
                                               
                                    
                                    Compensatory Power - 
                                    The ability to reward team members.  Rewards can be  
                                                praise, cash, 
                                    a corner office, a title, control over schedule and priorities,  
                                                
                                    recommendations, choice of the next assignment, promotion, or any number of  
                                                things.  In 
                                    the police service, compensatory rewards are usually
                                    recognition and  
                                                special 
                                    assignments. 
                                    
                                                Expert Power
                                     Knowing the task, 
                                    especially when you know the task better  
                                                than the 
                                    subordinate.  
                                               
                                    Referent Power  
                                    Respect of your subordinates. Usually developed when you
                                     
                                                have a track 
                                    record of making successful decisions and you develop bonds with  
                                                your 
                                    subordinates.  
                                    
                                                Positional Power
                                      Authority based 
                                    solely on your job description. 
                                    
                                               
                                           
                                    There are several other types of leader power, but for a jump start we are 
                                    going to combine position, compensatory, expert and referent types.  Your jump 
                                    start strategy begins by establishing a training program within your new unit. 
                                    We are not talking about a formal training program.  You are going to use a 
                                    short period of time during briefings and in the field to combine these four 
                                    types of power into a leadership jump start. 
                                    Teach to 
                                    Lead 
                                                
                                    Consider that from the Kindergarten through your senior year in high school you 
                                    were programmed by the state to respect the teacher as the leader.  A teacher 
                                    combines the four powers to influence your behavior.  Indeed, next time you 
                                    attend a training seminar watch how people react to the teacher.  Even the 
                                    hardcore eventually sit down and display respect. They listen and often 
                                    learn.  Teaching is perhaps the simplest way to combine multiple powerbases and 
                                    jump start your leadership. 
                                                
                                    Begin by observing your unit as they work through field problems.  For instance, 
                                    imagine one of your units becomes involved in a somewhat complex felony arrest.  
                                    What you are looking for are incidents wherein your officers did an outstanding 
                                    job.  You dont need to be present; you can see their good work from their 
                                    arrest reports or comments from their peers.  During the next briefing, 
                                    recognize them by asking them to tell the assembly about the incident.  At 
                                    first, concentrate these briefings on the officers simply telling their peers 
                                    about the incident.  Get them to emphasize their success and share their 
                                    talent.  Compliment them and follow-up on their presentation by adding your own 
                                    positive comments.  After you have done five or six of these, change the 
                                    de-briefings slightly by having the officer present their incident and then 
                                    ask them, Is there anything you would have done differently?  You are 
                                    beginning to lead them toward de-briefing their work through self-critique. 
                                    Keep these de-briefings positive. 
                                    Clues 
                                    from their De-Briefing 
                                                
                                    The officers own comments on what they would have done differently are the keys 
                                    to initial training.  Tailor ten or fifteen-minute lesson plans based on their 
                                    comments.  For example, if in debriefing an incident, your officers identify 
                                    searching techniques as something they would have done differently, you have a 
                                    training subject.  Within two or three days, while the debriefing is still 
                                    fresh, hold your training.  You can hold the training in regular briefing, or 
                                    alternatively, have one or two units meet you and go over the training in the 
                                    field.   
                                                
                                    In addition to their comments, begin to note what you think they should be doing 
                                    differently.  As your training progresses, add your skills, knowledge and 
                                    observation to the training sessions.  After a few weeks, you should change the 
                                    de-briefs again by asking the assembly to critique the officers.  What do their 
                                    peers think?  What would they have done differently?  As your de-briefings 
                                    progress, introduce tactical blunders from outside your agency; outside your 
                                    state if possible.  Make the discussions as impersonal by removing the 
                                    possibility that anyone present could have been involved.  Outline the incident 
                                    and then ask your unit, What could have been done differently?  By following 
                                    this formula it will take you about six weeks to get to the point where you can 
                                    lead your unit through frank discussions about the their own capers, especially 
                                    the ones that went side-ways. 
                                    
                                    Different Versus Wrong 
                                                
                                    Things can always be done differently.  In police work there are often no right 
                                    or wrong solutions to problems.  Moreover, people will become defensive when you 
                                    tell them they were wrong.  Most people can tolerate thoughts on how to do 
                                    something differently.  The critical point is to keep the discussions positive 
                                    by using positive words and phrases.  
                                    Emphasis 
                                    Safety 
                                                
                                    You should consider almost always approaching any training from the standpoint 
                                    of safety.  Thats right  all training should have a safety component. 
                                    According to a recent RAND study, the historical injury and fatality rates for 
                                    police and career firefighters are approximately three times greater than the 
                                    average for all professions, and place these careers in the top 15 occupations 
                                    for risk of fatal occupational injury[i]. 
                                    
                                    Obviously, police work is dangerous, so any training that emphasizes safety is 
                                    good training.   
                                                
                                    Police work develops a strong safety orientated sub-culture.  Because we rely on 
                                    each other for our personal safety, we reward and sanction behaviors that 
                                    increase our personal safety.  This is one explanation for the code of 
                                    silence.  You are simply less likely to expose a peer to administrative 
                                    disapproval when you depend on that peer for your personal safety.  Personal 
                                    safety may be the strongest motivating factor in changing police behavior.  If 
                                    it is not the strongest, it is at the top.  You can teach any subject with a 
                                    safety component.  You need only be creative to teach ethics, community 
                                    policing, anger management or dispute resolution skills through the lens of 
                                    personal safety.  When you do, your officers will listen and follow. 
                                    
                                    Identifying Training Needs 
                                                
                                    There are no high-speed, low-drag, Teflon-coated tactics that will save a street 
                                    cops life; there are only the basics.  Read the Federal Bureau of 
                                    Investigations summary on police officers 
                                    killed in the line of duty.  The 
                                    basics (like searching and weapons retention) are continually among the top 
                                    elements of police officer fatalities.  As your officers identify training needs 
                                    through their de-briefings you should be looking for common threads.  You will 
                                    see the same issues over and over.   
                                                
                                    Begin to keep a notebook on your training issues.  This will help you refine 
                                    lesson plans throughout your career.  After ten years as a sergeant, I had 125, 
                                    one-page lesson plans in four binders.  Every time I changed assignments or 
                                    shifts I went back to page one and began to work through the book  updating as 
                                    I taught the subjects.  
                                                
                                    In addition to jump starting your leadership role, you are also improving unit 
                                    performance.  At some point you are going to begin to turn the training 
                                    components over to senior unit members.  There is nothing better than a watch, 
                                    or unit, that is so well run the leader need only identify which peer-group 
                                    leader will be conducting the training.  Part Three will look further at the 
                                    development of peer group leaders. 
                                    
                                      
                                       
                                      
                                      
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        [i] 
                                        Latourrette, Tom, D. J. Peterson, James T. Bartis, Brian A. Jackson, and Ari 
                                        Houser. Protecting Emergency Responders / . Santa Monica, CA: Rand, 2003  
                                     
                                    
                                    
                                    
                                     |