Receive new posts by email:  

6 Lessons on Leadership from Capain Bligh

by Alec Satin on 15 September 2008 Print This Page

6 Lessons on Leadership from Capain Bligh

While out and out mutiny may be rare on project teams, lackluster performance and disconnects between the project manager and the team happen more often than they need to.

Observing some of the actions and attitudes of the cold, hard Captain William Bligh can provide you with a measure to use against your own behavior as a project manager.

For those who are not familiar,Mutiny on the Bounty tells the fascinating true story of First Officer Fletcher Christian’s mutiny of 1787.   While the book is excellent, the quotes in this post are taken from the 1962 film version starring Marlon Brando as Christian and Trevor Howard as Bligh.

Here are Bligh’s 6 guidelines for leadership.

How many of these describe your attitudes or the attitudes of other project managers you know?

1.  Fear is the Best Motivator

Bligh sees laziness and weakness in both officers and crew members. Early in the film he incorrectly accuses his first officer of interfering with the progress of their mission.  When Fletcher questions him on this, the Captain responds, “You would do nothing to speed its progress.”  As for his crew, “The typical seaman is a half witted, wife beating perpetual drunkard.”

The Bligh style leader believes that a team is only ever truly motivated by fear.  “Cruelty with a purpose is not cruelty, it’s efficiency”.

2.  Policies and Procedures Must Be Followed To The Letter

Upon overhearing a crew member speaking against him, Bligh orders the man to receive the full punishment of two dozen lashes in accordance with the naval code.  While the punishment is being administered, he commands that it be given harder.  “You are going too lightly.  Lay on with a will or you will take his place.”

3.  You Must Have a Fanatical Fixmindedness to Metrics

The narrator describes how the Captain, “….studied his charts hour upon hour to the exclusion of all else.”  Bligh’s terrible decision to take the shorter South American route around Cape Horn instead of the traditional African route around the Cape of Good Hope was made solely to shave 5 months off the voyage.  The Captain knew at the time that only one other ship had successfully made the journey in Winter, and that a cost of 50% of the crew.

In project management, we refer to this as the path of numbers over common sense.

4.  Treat Information That Doesn’t Fit Your Plans as a Direct Challenge to your Authority

In the midst of a terrible storm Bligh goads Christian, “Afraid of a little weather?”  When Fletcher responds cautiously that the masts are in danger of breaking, Bligh verbally strikes at him. “Are you arguing with me?”

5. Take No Regard for the Well Being of Your Team

Trevor_howard_marlon_brando_mutiny_on_the_bounty_movieBligh sees everyone as expendable and secondary to the success of the project.   After one of the Captain’s orders leads to the death of a crewman, Fletcher requests a proper burial for the man.  Bligh explodes at him. “Never mind Norman!  We lost one full league before I countermanded your order!”

Don’t be fooled.  It doesn’t really matter if your project is on time, on budget and on scope. If you destroy your team, you are a failure as a project manager.

6.  Make Crucial Decisions Without Providing Explanation

After coming through four weeks of horrifying weather, Bligh suddenly institutes “half rations”.  As a team member observed, “Starving the crew is not going to make the ship go faster.”

Have you ever been on a project where the the team’s task deadlines are shortened by half but overtime is forbidden?  This gives people a choice of poor performance or working without pay.

Words from the Admiralty

At Bligh’s court martial, he is exonerated, but reproached by the Admiralty with these words:

The Articles of War are fallible as any Articles are bound to be.
No code can cover all contingencies.
We cannot put justice aboard all our ships.
Justice and decency are carried in the heart of the Captain, or they are not on board.

You can watch a trailer here:

TwitterPlease tweet this post!
If you liked this post, subscribe to get the latest items.  Follow on twitter to stay connected.  Add a  comment.
Wish you well as always.  -Alec

{ 3 trackbacks }

Dermal
6 October 2008 at 10:29 am
Proud Postings: Making Project Management Better — Project Shrink
18 November 2008 at 3:39 pm
IQ Matrix Blog » Blog Archive » The Path to Extraordinary Leadership | IQ Matrix
23 January 2009 at 3:03 am

{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Sue 20 September 2008 at 11:29 am

I never made the connection between a previous boss of mine and Captain Bligh. But I think you just described him to a “T.”

Great post.

2 Cindy King 28 September 2008 at 4:35 am

A great post. I stumbled it and included it in my Get International Clients Sunday Blog Carnival (posted at http://getinternationalclients.com/get-international-clients-sunday-blog-carnival-21/).

Cindy King´s last blog post..Get International Clients Sunday Blog Carnival #21

3 Alec Satin 28 September 2008 at 6:52 am

@Sue – Once we recognize these characters for what they are, we naturally become empowered. Good that this is “a previous boss”! Thanks for your comment. P.S. Your gravatar image is beautiful.

@Cindy – Very kind to include me in your Blog Carnival! I’m still learning about these – may follow your lead and begin one in the future.

With kind regards,
Alec

4 Wulf 30 September 2008 at 11:55 pm

As a writer, I think Captain Bligh is awesome; I’d like more characters like that in my books. As a software developer, I think you’ve described most of the dot com era. As a martial arts teacher, I think this article captures some astute parallels to the sorts of philosophy and character we strive to instill in students.

Great work!

5 Mitchell Allen 8 December 2008 at 7:59 pm

These are good analogies. I, too, worked for such a person.
No one ever wanted to take the initiative on his behalf. Talk about destroying a team!

All managers should be required to read this book. Afterwards, if they see nothing wrong with Captain Bligh’s behavior, they should be demoted!

Cheers,

Mitch

Leave a Comment

CommentLuv Enabled

Previous post: Does your email pass the Wordle test?

Next post: How to treat the new guy