25 Differences between Private Sector and Government sector Managers
It’s become a saying that government would be better if it were only run by private-sector managers using standard business practices. Now after compiling the activities of both government and private sector managers and with the insight of the Department of Energy we are able to point out 25 different reasons why government management and business management are not the same.
- The size,
dollar value, and complexity of many government programs exceed that in
the private sector.
- The
government has fewer measures of progress or success than the private
sector, although that is changing as a result of the Government
Performance Reform Act requirements. Spending on a program is not
equivalent to progress. The private sector has profit as a clear-cut
measure.
- Most
individuals join private sector organizations with the expectation and
hope that they will have an opportunity either to earn Significant amounts
of money or to be trained such that the opportunity to earn significant
amounts of money could occur in a later job.
- The
individuals who join governments do so knowing that high compensation
rates are not possible; they join for other reasons such as providing for
others and/or having more power/responsibility than in the private sector.
Managing these two dramatically differently motivated groups is
significantly different for each group.
- The civil
service and compensation rules of the government make it more difficult to
encourage outstanding performance and discourage poor performance.
- There is a
very little personal gain in the government for taking risks on policy or
programs and being successful in achieving the goals more effectively.
However, there is potential for substantial criticism and other personal
loss if the innovative attempt fails.
- The key
reality to the private sector is market-driven competition, whereas the
same in the government is almost always a legislated monopoly.
- Private-sector
managers worry about creating added value, i.e. a product or service that
can be sold competitively to the public. This requires the ability and
skill to change, evolve, adapt and improve constantly. The government is
frequently quite different. Managers in the government often know what
needs to be done and desire to do it but are facing restrictions of laws,
regulations, policies, often made years earlier for other circumstances,
that prevent prompt action.
- Authority
and responsibility in the government tend to be asymmetric while authority
and responsibility in the private sector are more clearly balanced.
Responsibility in the government can be enormous while authority is
frequently quite limited.
- Authority in
government may be ambiguous and unclear in some circumstances. In other
cases, it is very clear and tightly restricted through laws, regulations,
policies, and directives that leave little, if any room for individual
initiative.
- In most
outstanding private sector organizations there are clear, well-understood,
job-by-job, top-to-bottom goals, and objectives. In government, goals, and
objectives have been ill-formed, fuzzy and soft. The Government
Performance Reform Act and individual departments are striving to change
this. Goals in the government are often divergent which may lead to
confusion.
- The
senior/political leadership in Departments and Agencies turns over more
frequently and to a larger extent than occurs in the private sector.
Cabinet Secretaries do not stay longer than three years on average;
Assistant Secretary tenure is less than 24 months. New Cabinet Secretaries
frequently replace significant numbers of senior leadership in their first
year. This causes starts and stops in the direction of Departments or
Agencies. The only similar private sector situation is a hostile takeover.
- The average
years of experience either on the substantive matters for which they are
responsible or in management generally for political leadership is much,
much less than their counterparts in the private sector. This is
particularly true for individuals below level of Cabinet Secretary.
- The main
goal of most political appointees is to promote the policies of the
Administration and/or change the policies of the previous Administration.
Few political appointees focus on organizational management issues because
they have no experience; will not be in government long; and desire to
focus on policy issues, not management issues. Political appointees
receive little encouragement to focus on management issues.
- The various
forms of control on a government agency versus the few on the private
sector are staggering. A government agency has at least three different
leadership groups to which it is responsible. One has 100 CEOs (the
Senate); one has 435 CEOs (the House) and one has one CEO (the President)
and at least 435 assistants (the White House staff including OMB, CEA,
OSTP, NSC, HSC [Homeland Security Council] and others). The result is that
there are confusion and potential delay on most significant issues or
decisions. Furthermore many Council] and others). The result is that there
is confusion and potential delay on most significant issues or decisions.
Furthermore many of these “CEO’s” and/or their staffs require reports
about actions and/or their approval or clearance for actions sought to be
taken by the agency in accordance with existing laws and policies.
- The staffs
of the Appropriations, Authorizing and Government Oversight committees are
very powerful and can directly or through their members’ direct government
agency actions. The Executive Branch disregards such staff at its peril.
No similar institution affects the private sector.
- The norm in
the Executive Branch is for Secretaries to have multiple Special
Assistants with even Assistant Secretaries having from one to three.
Unless these assistants are experienced and/or wise, which is not normal,
they can cause confusion to the subordinate officials about what is
desired by their principal. In the private sector special assistant
positions are rare.
- The
oversight of an Executive Branch agency is much greater than of an
organization in the private sector. That oversight is by both governmental
and non-governmental entities.
- Governmental
Oversight. (a) Each Department has an Inspector General who is charged
with evaluating the Department for waste, fraud and abuse, and poor
management. The IG has access to any aspect of the agency business and
reports its findings simultaneously to Congress and the Secretary. (b) The
Appropriations, Authorizing and Government Reform committees in each
chamber have periodic hearings or other forms of oversight over the
agency. (c) Congress itself has the General Accountability Office, the
Congressional Budget Office, and the Congressional Research Service, which
investigate, to varying extents, and write reports on the Executive Branch
agencies.
- Non-governmental
oversight. This is also more extensive than that of the private sector.
The national press, general media, and trade press cover the Executive
Branch extensively. There are multiple “think tanks” concerning almost
every aspect of the Executive Branch, which writes reports criticizing
Executive Branch actions. The affected private or public sector
stakeholders will provide information and leads to the press and the
Congress. These stakeholders are frequently organized through trade
associations or non-governmental organizations, which know how to
influence government action.
- “Whistle
blowers” receive more encouragement and protection in the government than
the private sector and are thus more active. They provide insights and
information to the Congress, the media, and/or the affected stakeholders
because of policy differences with the Administration, anger with their
employer, or for other reasons. The government is much slower in action
than the private sector; there is little sense of urgency or time; the
analogy of the time and distance involved with turning an oil tanker is
apt.
- Career, and
on occasion political, staff in the Executive Branch has the ability to
slow down and/or derail actions of the Secretary or President by very slow
compliance or “apparent” compliance with decisions and/or orders. Those
who wish to slow or delay action may provide information to individuals in
other parts of the Executive Branch or more often to those outside the
Executive Branch in the private sector or the Legislative Branch with the
expectation that they will challenge or question the action being directed
by the Secretary or the President. Such lack of support of the
organization’s leader and/or loyalty to the organization would rarely
occur in the private sector.
- Since
political appointees know that their job tenure is very finite, they
frequently spend a disproportionate amount of time considering or working
towards their next private sector activity. This distraction, with its implications
for the performance of the individual and those organizationally above or
below the individual, does not occur in the private sector.
- In
government, issues are rarely “permanently” decided with little chance of
modification or reversal. Changes in control of the White House or one or
both houses of Congress can frequently lead to a reconsideration of
previous firm decisions, whether or not the external fact situation has
significantly changed.
- Because the
tenure of political employees is limited compared to career employees and
the relevant experience of the political employees is likely to be less
than that of the career employees, there are significant opportunities for
conflicts between the “B Company”, i.e. the career employees who “B there
before and B thereafter” the political employees. The career employees
recognize that the Congress or the private sector may react negatively to
changes being proposed or implemented by political employees who will be
departed by the time the negative reaction affects the government
organization.
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