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The government encourages but does not require senior executives to move among agencies to gain leadership experience. Most stay at one agency for the majority of their careers, building expertise in a particular field. Indeed, many stay in one office at one agency. Would mobility make them better leaders?

That question is stirring much debate across government as the 30th anniversary of the Senior Executive Service approaches. Congress established the SES in 1978 to encourage the formation of a cadre of executives who would switch agencies and assignments, responding to the government's needs with talents and skills honed during a career full of varied experiences. Instead, most SESers rise through one office, developing specialized and technical knowledge that grooms them for top jobs there.

There are obvious advantages to the system as it has evolved, rather than as it was envisioned. Executives who stay in one place become carriers of vast institutional knowledge, seemingly indispensable to the operations of their offices. They provide continuity of knowledge and management, as political appointees and military officers cycle through the temporary slots that oversee the career bureaucracy. They understand the highly technical work that their agencies undertake. They develop long-term relationships within their agencies, and with executives at other agencies, contractors, congressional staff and outside groups in their fields. Such strong connections cannot be overrated.


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Nonetheless, several agencies this year have taken up reviews of the SES, and the mobility factor in particular. "To be successful as SES members and fully support the enterprise, [executives] need to acquire a progressively broad, diverse and complex portfolio, undertaking whatever development activities are necessary to perform at an ever higher level," said a summary report produced at an Office of Personnel Management forum in April.

Some executives contend that mobility would help make the SES stronger. They point to the military officer system, in which leaders are required to move around to develop broad perspectives and experiences, and to the private sector, where executives commonly switch employers and fields.

Through their reviews this year, both OPM and the Defense Department appear to be moving toward the idea of two tracks within the SES. One would be for executives who stay at one agency their entire careers because they need highly specialized knowledge. Another would be for executives whose specialties are cross-cutting, meaning they are needed at every agency, not just one. Chief information officers, procurement chiefs and human resources leaders are examples of cross-cutting executives for whom mobility would be a smart move. Their specialized knowledge is functional, rather than technical.

The Defense Department is encouraging all executives to develop an "enterprise perspective," or an understanding of how their work fits into the overall mission of defending the nation. Some of them still will be single-office executives. Others will be "enterprisewide," expected to move around in the department.

So would mobility make executives better leaders? One answer: no for technical executives and yes for functional ones.

COMMENTS

  • I feel that mobility of personnel aspiring to become part of the SES core is more beneficial for both technical and non-technical areas. Mobility between NASA centers enhances ones technical and overall ability to operate on a higher level. It helps one to understand things that may not be otherwise understood, if they remain at one center. If you have a technical background, moving around helps to increase your technical knowledge and expand your database of contacts.
  • Why does the government always look for the drastic changes? Wouldn't a mandatory periodic professional developmental assignment be more feasible? Requiring six months of every three or five years be spent with another similar organization could provide the experience and broad overview. I agree, the Army has not fared well with changing their leaders every two years, it's much too often! Four years would be good, enough time to actually do something constructive.
  • Mobility is a time tested method of providing broader experience. With improved communications and greater use of it, I suppose that technology provides an argument for avoiding mobility when the monitor tells us much of what we need to know, but I don't think there's a true substitute for immersion in different environments to more fully understand them. My bias, perhaps, comes from having been required to be mobile when first starting in the VA when even non-supervisors and non-executives were expected to be mobile in order to earn advancement. I have greater respect for those who have broader experience since they tend to understand others better as a result. A related analogy is travel. I can't think of many experiences that can substitute for that; reading is a distant second method since it only provides a vicarious experience. I don't think there's much of an argument to limiting this to "functional" vs. "technical" specialists. My stronger bias would be toward getting executives out of centralized roles so that beltway expectations don't become a standard for everyone. Some think they can gain expertise without experience, which is really just a request to dumb down the test so some can think they've passed.

Brian Friel covered management and human resources at Government Executive for six years and is now a National Journal staff correspondent.