By Allan Holmes | Tuesday, August 21, 2007 | 02:15 PM
Jared Sandberg, author of the “Cubicle Culture” column in The Wall Street Journal, writes today about how purchasing agents, supply managers or any lower level manager in charge of a process that is elemental to the smooth working of an organization can capriciously exact his or her power to slow down work needlessly.
While the examples in the column are mostly from private-sector firms (although Sandberg offers up one, and a rather funny one at that, from the Navy), one doesn’t need to work too hard to see the parallels to the federal government. What comes quickly to mind are political appointees who hit resistance from career bureaucrats who work with the knowledge that the appointee will be gone in two years anyway, so why change? Also, entrenched IT managers resist consolidating infrastructure and IT processes. The Department of Homeland Security comes to mind as an example.
A quote from the column that is relevant to the government workplace: "'You might have the keys to the kingdom,' human-resources executive Mike Farrell notes, 'but if you don't have the keys to the gate, you're shafted.'"
Comments
WAKE UP Wise Old Owl! "Politicos" may come and "politicos" will go, but the Bureaucracy will endure forever.
Charles W. Thompson | Tuesday, August 28, 2007 | 10:38 AMThe poloticos have the power. The law gives it to them.
Career people, like me, carry out the decisions. We do the million tasks that make things work.
Show me one good example of civil servants frustrating the politicos. It cannot be done.
Wise Old Owl | Wednesday, August 22, 2007 | 02:36 PMABOUT THIS BLOG
Allan Holmes on what's happening and what's being discussed in the world of federal information technology.








