(Why you shouldn't) run your company like an airport


I liked Seth Godin's "Eleven things organizations can learn from airports," wherein he notes, "[Of course, this post isn't actually about airports]."

2. Problems persist because organizations defend their turf instead of embrace the problem. The TSA blames the facilities people, who blame someone else, and around and around. Only when the user's problem is the driver of behavior (as opposed to maintaining power or the status quo) things change.

3. The food is aimed squarely at the (disappearing) middle of the market. People who like steamed meat and bags of chips never have a problem finding something to eat at an airport. Apparently, profit-maximizing vendors haven't realized that we're all a lot weirder than we used to be.

4. Like colleges, airports see customers as powerless transients. Hey, you're going to be gone tomorrow, but they'll still be here.

5. By removing slack, airlines create failure. In order to increase profit, airlines work hard to get the maximum number of flights out of each plane, each day. As a result, there are no spares, no downtime and no resilience. By assuming that their customer base prefers to save money, not anxiety, they create an anxiety-filled system.


Eleven things organizations can learn from airports

(Image: Airport tower, a Creative Commons Attribution (2.0) image from kittysfotos's photostream)