Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Apprentice Los Angeles: Who's responsible?


Watching The Apprentice Los Angeles this week, I was reminded of a conversation about a seemingly unrelated subject: football.

"Larry" had played football in high school and college. When he watches a game, he says, "I would never boo a player. Sometimes one guy seems to make a mistake - but he was doing his job. Another player wasn't following the game plan."

And that's what happened here.

Kristine - the competent-looking lawyer with the rimless glasses - teamed up with Nicole to create a promotion for some new condos in Las Vegas. Of course, Kristine's game plan was a little shaky: she wanted to get out from under the shadow of Heidi, whose competence shown on most tasks.

But as Kristine worked on the brochure, Nicole decided to take a nap. Kristine decided to let Nicole sleep. After all, she reasoned, Nicole had been useless on this task so far.

So Kristine decided to write the whole brochure herself. She attempted to do the work of 2 people.

And she came close...except that she got one phone number wrong.

True, in marketing, that's a very serious mistake. On my own articles, getting the contact information wrong means, "What's the point?" If they can't find me, why bother to advertise?

But if Nicole had been doing her share of the work, Kristine might have had time and energy to pay attention to those little details. If they had worked together, they might have proofed the brochure more accurately.

So who should get fired?

In real life, hopefully you wait to collect more data to establish a pattern. But someone else's mistake can make you look bad, in football and in business. You weren't supposed to be on the receiving end of a catch, but it comes to you anyway...and you miss. You weren't supposed to handle this part of the job...but the other person disappears.

Almost always, these situations tend to be lose-lose, once you're caught up in them. Best to prevent them from happening in the first place. Football players don't always have a choice but professionals can make a concerted effort to hang out with winners, even if they risk being overshadowed.

A controversial call, either way.

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