case of total absence
of any harmful events do people feel safe. After a robbery,
a murder or a plane crash they will identify with the victims,
i.e. they will imagine what it would have been like if it had
happened to them. Safety, then, is regarded as a state of “zero
error”, and not as a process of systematically reducing
risks.
On top of this, people
show a contradictory attitude to safety in their day-to-day
lives: many are willing to run far more risks on the road, in
their home or with their leisure pursuits than they are exposed
to in what they regard as “dangerous” situations
such as flying. This all has to do with loss of control: when
driving their car, people usually have the (false) impression
that they can ensure their own safety; in a plane they are powerless,
and their safety is in the hands of the pilots and the air traffic
controllers. And this, in turn, creates a certain mistrust of
these professional groups.
Every company
needs its fans
Any organisation needs
to have its network of supporters and sympathisers. Drawing
on the stakeholder model of concentric circles, its own board
of directors and its supervisory authority (which usually don’t
solely consist of technical specialists) are in the middle,
followed by its executive management, its management corps,
its other personnel, their families, its neighbours, its customers
and final consumers, the media, the politicians, the population,
its partners, its suppliers and even its competitors. It’s
never more vital than in a crisis situation that the politicians
should have a good opinion and a relatively accurate understanding
of a company, or that word-of-mouth can provide a supportive
riposte to any accusations that emerge. In this sense, it does
matter how many articles are published that show the company
in a favourable light, how often its people give presentations
at outside events and how many high school students are offered
an insight into the company. All these actions can help maintain
such circles of sympathisers and supporters. A good reputation
can take decades to establish – but only seconds to be
destroyed.
Market research specialists
talk of “share of voice” here. If the voice of the
company is too soft, or cannot be discerned at all, the orchestra’s
other instruments will be heard instead. And they may not be
in the most accomplished of hands.
Trust: an
essential foundation
for top performance
Public service companies
urgently need the confidence and the trust of the broader public.
Trust is created through both (perceived) competence and appeal.
So trust will not be generated only by imparting technical information;
it also requires the creation and maintenance of a favourable
overall image.
Trust is important
for three reasons:
– first, because the company’s main courses are
set (or blocked) by external political bodies, – second,
because the prestige that a company's professions enjoy will
be a key criterion in the career choices of future new recruits,
– and third, because that same prestige can be a key motivator
for the company’s employees.
On the last two points, it should be emphasised that this is
not a matter of making the employees feel like infallible monarchs.
A constant dissatisfaction with the standards already achieved,
a ceaseless endeavour to further improve and a desire to “reach
for the stars” are vital drivers in any company that needs
to ensure safety and security. But these traits, too, will only
thrive on a basis of healthy self-confidence.
To those who may be
fearful that discussing such complex issues as air traffic management
among a broad lay circle will lead to an increase in emotional
and unobjective debate, it should be countered that the risk
of the latter is ever-present anyway. The question is whether
such discussion should only be embarked on in the wake of a
crisis, or whether it should be continuously pursued with appropriate
respect. The broader public need not know every detail, of course;
but the aim should be to communicate a basic technical understanding
and appreciation, and to convey the fascination of the air traffic
controller’s job (and thereby further raise its standing
and appeal). After all, the demands of the air traffic controller’s
profession are not unlike those of the pilot’s; and the
overall goal is still to lend as much credibility and goodwill
as possible to the brand of the ANSP.
The means for achieving
this include publications (e.g. like the present Skymag), the
company website, media releases that are clear and informative
and a reliable media relations unit which provides prompt and
clear answers to journalists’ inquiries. First and foremost,
though, what is needed are an open attitude to communications,
binding communications guidelines (e.g. that all media inquiries
are directed to Media Relations) and the serenity to explain
the same things time and time again (aren’t we all a little
slow on the uptake sometimes?). And what is also required is
authoritative and extensive internal information that makes
the company’s employees feel they are taken seriously.
All of the above demand determination, too: it is a lengthy
process.
Any company needs
its fan club. Apple has one, and Intel, which does not deliver
directly to the final consumer, has raised its brand’s
standing by affixing its “intel inside” sticker
to laptops and PCs. So how about making air travellers proud
of the fact that their ticket names the people who provide for
their safety on it, too?