Professional Documents
Culture Documents
3/10/2014
aFriendInNeed
Leadership in Crisis
Situation Overview:
Shackleton sailed with 27 men from South Georgia Island on a British Polar expedition into South
Atlantic aboard the ship called Endurance. The south pole had been recently reached in 1911. The
goal of the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition was to become the first explorers to land on the
Antarctic continent as well as cross it. The original plan was to sail Endurance through the Weddell
Sea and then use dogs and sledges to support the crew of six men to march on the opposite side of
Antarctica.
However, their ship became trapped in the pack ice of the Weddell Sea, before they could reach the
Antarctic coast. For more than eight months, they drifted helplessly with the ocean currents that
carried them to over 670 miles north. Attempts were made to free the ship at times when cracks
appeared in the ice nearby, but it was of no avail. The ice around the ship was thick and solid. The
wooden timbers of the Endurance, unable to withstand the pressure from the ice, eventually gave
up, and massive plates of ice crushed it. Shackleton ordered his members of the expedition to take
shelter on the ice floes surrounding the ship. They were able to retrieve three lifeboats and as many
provisions and supplies as they could from the ship wreckage before it sank.
For the next six months, the floating ice became the crew's home. They were now isolated on the
drifting pack ice with limited supplies. They were miles away from land, without any ship or mode
of communication with the outside world. With food supplies dwindling, the men hunted seals and
penguins for fresh meat. They had initially hoped that the ocean currents would carry the ice floe
towards land, but as soon as spring started, the ice started to break up. Shackleton realized that
they would have to attempt to reach one of the nearby small islands off the Antarctic coast. They
battled the ferocious weather for seven sleepless days and nights and finally landed on an
uninhabited Elephant Island. They were still stranded far from civilization without any outside
communication, and no one knew about their condition.
Shackleton realized that they would have to travel to the nearest inhabited place to get help. The
nearest whaling station was back on South Georgia, some 800 miles away. In order to reach there,
they had to go through the most dangerous and stormy stretches of ocean in the world. He along
with a team of five people left that island eight days later in one of the boats named James Caird to
get help from the nearest whaling station. They faced gigantic waves and stormy weather which
made navigational sightings almost impossible, but managed to reach South Georgia 16 days later.
They realized that they had landed 22 miles from the whaling station. In order to reach whaling
station, they had to go across the mountainous stretch that ran the length of South Georgia. For
traversing mountains, they had no other option but to travel on foot. Shackleton with two of his
men set out to cross the uncharted, unknown mountains of the island.
On May 20, 1916, they walked into the whaling station and the three men on the other side of the
island were rescued the next day with the help from the whalers. It took four months and four
attempts for Shackleton to reach and rescue the remaining crew at Elephant Island. Even after
spending almost two years in dangerously cold weather conditions, all of the expeditions 28
members returned safely.
Leadership in Crisis
Shackleton and his men failed utterly at the expeditions stated goal as they never even set foot on
Antarctica. Nevertheless, his spirited optimism, unrelenting courage and sheer determination
displayed during the crisis have become legendary.
Leadership in Crisis
He came across similar problems that entrepreneurs face in current times. He had to deal with
multiple facets of business such as effective employee hiring, boosting team morale, raising funds,
and maintaining the overall profitability. He set forth his goals, pursued his dreams by grabbing the
opportunity, and handled the funds appropriately using effective utilization of resources.
Additionally, external factors and market condition were not favorable for a polar expedition. WWI
broke out in Europe two weeks before the expedition starting date, and this affected the entire
expedition planning. The war gave him a tough time in hiring crewmembers, finding international
sled dog trainers, or raising necessary funds for polar expedition by selling his vision.
He implemented a unique style of selection and organized the crew by categorizing the candidates
into possible, mad, and hopeless groups. He chose to meet with candidates from possible
category. During the recruitment process, he relied mainly on his instinct for judging the character
of each man. He preferred men with qualities such as cheerfulness and optimism, and he gave
special importance to candidate's sense of humor. Candidates who had experience on fishing
trawlers were his topmost choice. He believed that these candidates would be able to survive the
harsh weather conditions of the South Pole due to previous experience of working extended hours
on frozen, windswept decks.
As soon as the Endurance gets engulfed by ice floes, he realizes that he has to abandon his dreams
of traversing the South Pole. He knew that he must focus wholeheartedly on his crew's survival and
its safe return. He even instructs his crew to abandon tools for collecting specimens on the island as
he wanted the crew to travel lighter. He was simultaneously able to see the overall picture. The
major goal was to keep his crew alive and plan for a safe return. He effectively handled the minor
details, such as the ability to engage and entertain the crew over long, dark days and nights with
very little activity.
Shackleton proves to be an insightful manager under crisis and demanding conditions of friction
between crew members, and seemingly unending boredom. He gave the crew morale a paramount
importance. Even though the expedition was officially over, Shackleton promised to pay the entire
crew for their time on the ice, in the face of conflict and possible mutiny from the carpenter. This
further highlights his negotiation strategies and his ability to convince a group of people. Any
forward progress toward Antarctica was ruled out, yet he followed his usual tasks and kept his
crew on a strict routine. To keep the crew engaged and entertained he used to perform skits and
read poetry during the long nights.
He tries twice to march toward the sea. They had to drag supply and provision laden lifeboats
across snow and soft ice in order to survive. And both times he gives up the effort after realizing
that the progress would fall far short of his estimates. Time and again, he keeps on setting
objectives and a course that was altered due to change of context. This proves that he was not
afraid to make smart mistakes and acted just like a great leader and entrepreneur.
Leadership in Crisis
What parallels do you see between Shackleton and other leaders we have studied?
What were Shackletons strengths and weaknesses ?
Ernest Shackleton skills parallels with global leaders since he possessed all five of characteristics of
exemplary leadership: encourage the heart, model the way, foster collaboration and build active
spirited teams, challenge the process, and envision the future. Consider some recent events: the oil
spill in gulf, financial crisis in 2008, Japanese nuclear disaster, and euro crisis in 2011. Constant
turbulence in the business world has become the new norm, and an effective leadership is crucially
required to contain the ever changing objectives and contexts. Shackleton fundamentally acted as
the glue that prevented his men from untangling; the glue that helped keep his crew sane and
active. His optimism and perseverance inspired the crew members and provided them with hope
that even unachievable goals can be achieved through untiring and guided efforts. He sustained
optimism in the face of adversity and strived toward his goals through constant perseverance.
Strengths: Shackleton has been consistently described as courageous, optimistic, sympathetic,
loyal and driven; undeniably the requisite characteristics that every leader must possess for
earning global respect and recognition. The crew always looked up to Shackleton; his calmness and
ease were infectious and, thus, provided the men with hope even in the midst of worst
circumstances. Shackleton fundamentally knew that the leader must not show the minutest sign of
apprehension, concern or cynicism. If he fails to overpower those emotions then all of his crew's
spirit and their morale would be lost and nothing will be accomplished .
Shackleton believed that actions persuaded more strongly than words and so he led by example. He
was admired for his fair treatment and honored for inveterate behavior among his crew. Shackleton
did not discriminate based on individual's qualifications and, hence, everyone was equivalent in his
eyes: the biologists, scientists, carpenters, doctors, and sailors, each shared same chores around
the ship. He did not believe in special-treatment.
Weaknesses: Shackleton was pretentious to a fault, an aspect that led to the remarkable mistake of
overlooking the whalers' warnings of ice floes and advanced south to Antarctica. At South Georgia,
whalers informed him of the possibility of getting stuck as the waters had become more ice-choked
than at any other time in the history. He knew that earlier adventurers had become trapped in such
icy waters but still proceeded with the expedition. The hiring of crew was also somewhat
haphazard; although the outbreak of WWI can be argued as one of the reasons. He almost provides
no training; most of the crew had no experience in skiing - a skill that is crucial for traversing
Antarctic. Even the commissioned sled dogs from Canada arrived untrained.
Moreover, although the Endurance was equipped with a radio receiver, Shackleton could not
procure funds sufficient for transmitter, which could have been used to send transmissions or
distress signals for help. Furthermore, their gear was designed primarily for trekking across dry
land. He could have procured waterproof boots and clothing as he was informed about the potential
weather conditions. He makes some other errors in judgment which act as a necessary evil to
entrepreneurship. The above mentioned attitudes proves that he may have been too eager to
initiate the expedition.
Leadership in Crisis
Why are people today still so interested in Shackleton? What does this interest tell us
about our own era?
Shackleton's trans-Atlantic expedition is a compelling story of spirited entrepreneurship and
fearless leadership at a time when disaster or crisis strikes again and again. Real leaders, wrote the
novelist David Foster Wallace, are people who help us overcome the limitations of our own
individual laziness and selfishness and weakness and fear and get us to do better, harder things
than we can get ourselves to do on our own.(nytimes.com)
Shackleton epitomized similar leadership style for almost two years on the ice. He has been
referred as the greatest leader in the history for ensuring the safety and survival of twenty-seven
crew members stranded with him facing unimaginably harsh weather conditions. He began the
voyage for fame and glory with a mission of exploring and traversing Antarctica, but it instantly
became a survival mission after the ship froze. Shackleton assumed ultimate responsibility for his
team. Shackleton enabled himself to lead his crew through a torturous two-year ordeal in one of the
most remote and inhospitable places. According to Shackleton, an explorer must have:
1) Determination 2) Optimism 3) Courage 4) Patience.
The same can be said about leadership. His outstanding leadership qualities can be classified into
following characteristics:
1) Lead by example: He taught his crew how to finish jobs and get things done, performed
gracefully under pressure and extraordinary determination. He kept everyone involved, and took
responsibility for the hardest tasks. He valued his crew's needs and always put them before his
personal needs.
2) Boosted team morale: He created a sense of community and togetherness among members of
the crew. He never lashed at anyone in public, lauded his crew members often, and built a relaxing
atmosphere by encouraging team engagement and entertainment.
3) Effective Communicator: He energetically communicated to forge bonds and calmly
communicated to explain the plan of action and back-up strategies during crises. He had a
democratic style of leadership where he valued everyone's advice and opinions before making a
final decision.
4) Spirited Optimism: For him, the true moral courage was achieved by remaining optimistic and
maintaining a positive outlook. He often cracked jokes with his crew members to keep their spirits
high. He did his best to mitigate conflicts between crew members.
Shackletons commitment and responsibility came with a high suppleness of means. Shackleton led
the crew across ice, stormy sea and mountainous land with sufficient supplies and provisions, and
ensured their safety at all times. This combination of credible commitment to a larger purpose and
imaginative, flexible methods to achieve a goal, is becoming increasingly relevant in our tumultuous
times.