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Peter Sells Power to the people
Written by Peter Sells   
Jan. 12, 2011

In my MBA class on leadership a couple of years ago, the professor talked to us about the various types of power that exist in organizations and relationships. Your boss has power over you based on the legitimate authority of a superior position, especially in a uniformed, paramilitary service. Recognized experts wield a type of power based on their reputation and background. There were eight of these categories all together, and the professor said the gurus were arguing about including a ninth – network power – based on the strength of one’s personal and professional connections to others.

Formally defined or not, the power of being connected is not a new concept. It has exploded in scope, speed and functionality and continues to do so with the emergence of Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and other social networks. But essentially, it is the same as the Rolodex or collection of business cards we all lugged around, way back in the 20th century. Let me give you two quick examples of network power in action:

A training officer (let’s call him Lt. Walker – not his real name) and I dropped by the Toronto hazmat conference for a quick look around the exhibits. It was mid-morning, most people were in the concurrent sessions, and we stopped to say hello to the firefighters at the registration table. This is when my friend found out he was on the schedule to present about hazardous materials at collapsed buildings that afternoon. I got on my cell phone and called Curtis Massey, a colleague who owns and operates an emergency planning company in Virginia. I caught Curtis just as he was coming out of the subway in Manhattan. I asked him about a slide on a presentation he had done about the World Trade Centre collapse, which listed a dozen or so hazardous substances that had been detected in the dust at Ground Zero. He told me to call his office and have his secretary get such-and-such disc from his desk, print off that slide and fax it to me. With the information from that slide and the MSDS data for the hazardous substances (readily available), we built a quick PowerPoint that fit the bill exactly. The network power worked because Lt. Walker knew me, I knew Curtis and we were able to share information quickly enough to meet the deadline. That was in 2002; before smartphones.

Next example: I got an email this week from John Lewis, one of the organizers of the Fire Department Instructors Conference in Indianapolis each year. I haven’t spoken at that conference or seen John since 2005. John’s email was essentially an outreach to a member of his extended network:

I have been working with others on the NJ State curriculum for rapid intervention. I know there was a six-alarm fire in Toronto this past week where the RIC had a successful rescue. I saw a copy of the video from the news service up there and was wondering if you could help me find the rescue re-enactment video that they made. It is becoming more common place now for RICs to have success and I think it is because departments are more willing to share this type of information. If you could get me a contact it would definitely help stress the need of RIC here in NJ.

The sentence I highlighted above shows the true power in the networking process. For your information, the subject of my upcoming February FlashPoint column in Fire Fighting in Canada is rapid intervention and mayday.

I referred to myself as a member of John’s extended network because he did not have my e-mail address. He remembered me from FDIC and contacted a gentleman named Peter Hodge, who he knew had worked directly with me in Indianapolis. Peter and I had just seen each other at a conference at Notre Dame University in October, so Peter had my current contact information. By the way, the video that John asked me about can be seen here (it’s not an actual re-enactment; just a news feature with a few seconds of training going on).

Network power: If you don’t know someone with the information, you know someone who knows someone who knows someone with the information. Got any examples to share? Want to increase the power of this network?

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