I promise not to repost old posts again- at least not soon!- but this is a 2012 one I was forced to recall today.
The notion that a ship's Captain is similar in quality or
character to a shore based CEO or senior manager is hogwash that has been
promoted by the STCW 'management level' certificate claptrap for far too long.
Perhaps this way of defining responsibilities at sea may find some takers among
sailors who have a complex about their jobs being inferior to those ashore, but
as far as I am concerned, this narrow profiling actually devalues what they do.
Because I believe that a Master's job is tougher than a CEO's. In fact, the
nuances in leadership, strategic or tactical thinking, physical action and
mental agility required of a ship Captain- or, indeed, of any rank of officer
or crew at sea- are unique. The 'management' or 'operational' level labels are
plainly inaccurate. This is not an office, where a manager does no manual work.
This is a ship, whose senior most officers often live in boiler suits these
days.
A CEO ashore is probably responsible for larger amounts of
money, but no CEO lives, works and eats with his workforce. No CEO faces the
same living conditions as the shop floor worker. No CEO suffers acute fatigue
and loss of sleep for prolonged periods while making major decisions that
affect directly the physical safety of everybody around, including himself. No
CEO picks up a screwdriver at work one minute and handles a multimillion-dollar
floating behemoth the next. No CEO makes huge decisions all on his own. No CEO
is required to be- within any 24 hour period- alternately a clerk, an operator
of machinery or equipment, a HR man, a security in charge, a factory manager, a
data entry operator, a communications officer, a cashier, an accountant, a
payroll controller, a policeman and an environmental mini-specialist. No CEO is
required to work while spending months away from his family at a stretch. No
CEO will be arrested for even a major disaster- leave alone a minor accident-
in most parts of the world: Bhopal, for example. Hell, a CEO does not even stand
on his feet too much or too often; he travels, works and lives in a soothing
atmosphere with minions to take care of everything, including his cup of
coffee. A Shipmaster, on the other hand,
works in a hostile environment- physical and mental both- that is magnified manifold
by most of the people he encounters that are not part of his crew- the antagonistic
enemies at the gate.
When a CEO makes a huge mistake, the company goes bankrupt
and everybody loses their jobs; when a Captain makes a huge mistake, everybody
dies and everything around is polluted forever.
You may choose what you consider to be the more important
job here; my only point is that any sailor's job cannot be compared with any
job ashore- and promoting that thinking does every seaman an injustice, is inaccurate
and pushes the wrong idea- to prospective and existing seafarers both- of what
a mariner's working life is all about.
Actually, I cannot think of any job that compares with a
sailor's. A soldier's? Some similarities
do exist here- away from family in a hostile environment, for example, but
there are massive differences too. A sailor will not be called upon to face
bullets as part of his job description, piracy notwithstanding. A solider's
life is simpler than a mariners- no commercial, environmental or such
considerations and no job insecurity. On the other hand, although a Bosun's job
is more complex than a platoon leader's, the latter is responsible much more
for the lives of all his men in combat, and the cost of a mistake- or
circumstance- is much higher. In a similar vein, a General is far away from the
action, usually, unlike a Shipmaster, but he is responsible for hundreds or
thousands of lives and his country's security- a huge responsibility. So, no
real parallel exists here either.
I suggest that we should not even try to find a parallel.
Instead, we need to realise that a mariner's job description and
responsibilities are unique and leave it at that. A formal job description is
required only when there is ambiguity or confusion about role, and shipping has
never suffered from that problem. Just say Chief Engineer, and every sailor on
earth will know what that man does, his responsibility and his authority. This
is true for all other ranks, and on any ship on earth. We don't need organisation charts at sea; we
know clearly what everybody is responsible for.
Unfortunately, what has happened is that shipping has fallen
into the management jargon trap where style substitutes for substance- or too
often replaces substance. The result is not pretty and is there for all to see.
Crews are today groaning under the weight of manuals and checklists that have
dubious value but enormous repercussions thanks to stress and fatigue that are
a direct result of this nonsense. I see the 'management level' certification
and the 'CEO' pretentious blah as an extension of this thinking.
It may seem like a small thing, the wording on a certificate
of competency, but it does matter, and I object strongly to it. Not least
because I am a Shipmaster by qualification and profession, not a mere CEO.
.
.
6 comments:
Excellent Article
Very well said
Very well said
Excellent article
true ..true..very true..each and every word
That brings back my flight instructor's comment, when teaching on the pilot-in-command's responsibility to obey Air Traffic Controllers' instructions, within reason: "At the end of the day, his chair rolls on concrete."
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