Surprise! : from CEOs to Navy SEALs : how a select group of professionals prepare for and respond to the unexpected /
Saved in:
Author / Creator: | Baiocchi, Dave, author. |
---|---|
Imprint: | Santa Monica, CA : RAND Corporation, [2013] |
Description: | 1 online resource (xxiii, 82 pages) |
Language: | English |
Series: | RAND Corporation monograph series Rand Corporation monograph series. |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11397107 |
Other authors / contributors: | Fox, D. Steven, author. National Defense Research Institute (U.S.), issuing body. United States. National Reconnaissance Office, issuing body. |
---|---|
ISBN: | 9780833081063 0833081063 0833081039 9780833081032 9780833081049 0833081047 9780833081056 0833081055 9780833081032 |
Digital file characteristics: | text file PDF |
Notes: | "RAND National Defense Research Institute." "Prepared for the National Reconnaissance Office." Includes bibliographical references (pages 81-82). Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on February 12, 2014). |
Summary: | This report relates what professionals believe creates surprise, how they respond to it, and how the effects of surprise can be mitigated. To understand how different professions respond to surprise, RAND researchers developed a framework that categorizes professionals' responses to surprise in terms of the time available to respond and the level of chaos in the environment, then conducted discussions with representatives from 13 different professions, including former ambassadors, chief executive officers, military personnel, and physicians. RAND observed that the interviewees all used common coping strategies, such as relying on past experience and trying to reduce the level of chaos in the environment. However, there were also important differences in the responses taken by different types of professionals: "strategists" (e.g., CEOs and foreign service officers) focused more on controlling anger and ego, and communicating and coordinating with others, while "tacticians" (e.g., medical practitioners and SWAT team members) -- who typically have a shorter response time -- focused more on controlling panic and buying time. The report concludes with recommendations on how practitioners can better prepare for and respond to surprise. |
Other form: | Print version: Baiocchi, Dave. Surprise! Santa Monica, CA : RAND, [2013] 9780833081032 |
Similar Items
-
Surprise; a historical and experimental study,
by: Desai, Maheshchandra Maneklal
Published: (1939) -
Strategic surprise in the age of glasnost /
by: Twining, David Thomas
Published: (1992) -
Strategic military surprise : incentives and opportunities /
Published: (1983) -
Killing zone : a professional's guide to preparing or preventing ambuses /
by: Stubblefield, Gary
Published: (1994) -
Ambushes and surprises: being a description of some of the most famous instances of the leading into ambush and the surprise of armies, from the time of Hannibal to the period of the Indian mutiny ...
by: Malleson, G. B. (George Bruce), 1825-1898
Published: (1885)