If cross-training is not in place at your public affairs
office, consider the predicament you can get into when
a main cog is suddenly removed from the scene as in
the following case:
A year ago, you put JO2 Vetch in charge of
running educator orientation visits (EOV) in the
community relations section of the office. Vetch is
a superb sailor:
reliable, professional and
dedicated. She runs the program to perfection. In
fact, you just recently drafted a letter of
commendation for her.
The CDO calls late Sunday night to inform you
that Vetchs father died in Honolulu, and she is en
route to attend the funeral. An EOV is scheduled for
tomorrow at 0900, but, because of your own
commitments, you cannot possibly fill in for her.
You have got JO2 Rummy and JO3 Stone available,
but they have never run an EOV. The PAO is TAD
to the U.S. Naval Academy for a three-day public
affairs symposium. What will you do?
Now let us install a staff that has been adequately
cross trained as in the following scenario:
You get the same call from the CDO, and, after
briefly pondering the situation, you remember that
JO2 Rummy rotated out of the community relations
section three months ago. As part of his tour there,
he organized and ran two EOVs. Rummy is
contacted and assigned accordingly.
Uprooting Rummy means someone will have to
take over his external release writing duties. You are
covered here too, because JO3 Stone, a broadcaster
by trade, can do the job because she wrote external
releases for four months and has it down to a
science.
Get the picture? Cross-training is vital to the overall
operation of a public affairs office and must be
continuously emphasized in the overall training
program.
Why such an emphasis on cross-training? Because
versatility is the byword of the JO rating. Every JO
follows a unique career pattern that mayor may not lend
itself to being versatile. In some cases, you may come
across a JO with a closed loop career path, for
example, a JO3 with a 3221 NEC who only has
broadcast assignments under his belt. If this individual
is assigned to your public affairs office, you cannot
possibly give him enough broadcast-related
assignments to keep him busy. The answer is you must
get him up to speed on the operations of your office by
cross-training.
Cross-training applies to you, the office manager, as
well. You must be professionally qualified in every facet
of office operations. It is a rare situation where the senior
JO in an office does not occasionally have to write a
news release, give a tour of the base or even pinch hit as
a photographer. You are responsible for maintaining
your basic skills and continuing to develop those in
which you have limited experience.
Benefits
The benefits of a rigorous cross-training program
are numerous. The individual develops a broader base
of experience that can be used not only during his
present duty station, but well into the future. Meanwhile,
the senior journalist will enjoy the benefits gained from
a public affairs office operation that can heal itself
when main players are removed. If your resident expert
on EOVs is 4,500 miles away on emergency leave, you
are not left with an insurmountable problem. By shifting
assignments to cross-trained individuals, you are
assured that the job will get done without a compromise
in quality.
Implementation
Determining the amount of cross-training each
member of your staff receives is entirely up to you.
However, keep in mind that you do not want the
cross-training to be too brief or excessive. If your office
is set up as shown in figure 1-2, consider shifting
personnel among the three main public affairs office
divisions every six to 12 months. A shorter period of
time may not sufficiently serve your training needs or
your ultimate cross-training goals, and a longer time
frame may lead to stagnation and specialization.
DOCUMENTATION
Maintain professional training folders on all your
staff members, to include the date and topic of the
training session, and any other pertinent information.
When the individual transfers, give him the folder to
take to his next command.
CREDIBILITY
Learning Objective: Recognize the principles of credi-
bility as they apply to public affairs office management.
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