A Rapid Response Process Is a Must-Have in a Chaotic World

Updated on

A Rapid Response Process Is a Must-Have in a Chaotic World. Here Are Eight Reasons Why.

Get The Full Ray Dalio Series in PDF

Get the entire 10-part series on Ray Dalio in PDF. Save it to your desktop, read it on your tablet, or email to your colleagues

Q1 2021 hedge fund letters, conferences and more

Diana Hendel, PharmD and Mark Goulston, MD say without an ironclad system for managing trauma, you may not be able to withstand the volatile forces that could weaken (or end) your business.

Nashville, TN (May 2021)—If someone asked, “What’s your company’s emergency plan?” what would you say? If your response is “I guess we’d call 911” or “I don’t know…pull the fire alarm and evacuate the building?” you’re not alone. Most companies simply aren’t really prepared for a significant disruption. Diana Hendel, PharmD and Mark Goulston, MD want to change that.

“In a world where everything is in flux—from changing customer expectations to shifting employee values to political and cultural instability to climate change—a disruptive event will, eventually, hit your workplace,” asserts Dr. Hendel, coauthor along with Dr. Goulston of Trauma to Triumph: A Roadmap for Leading Through Disruption and Thriving on the Other Side (HarperCollins Leadership, March 2021, ISBN: 978-1-4002-2837-9, $17.99).

“When it does, you’re going to feel it,” she adds. “COVID showed us that. And as many companies discovered, being unprepared can have long term negative implications. But when you have a strong system in place for handling disruption, you can navigate future trauma with far more ease than you would have otherwise.”

This system is called a Rapid Response Process (RRP). It is a standardized, pre-planned approach that businesses can create before a crisis occurs.

“A Rapid Response Process makes a huge difference in how your company experiences trauma,” says Dr. Hendel, who became an expert in organizational trauma after surviving a workplace shooting. “Once it happens, emotions will run rampant, and the more uncertainty there is, the more emotional things will get. A good RPP allows you to respond rather than react.”

The Benefits of a Rapid Response Process

Here are some of the reasons why a Rapid Response Process is so beneficial:

  • It allows people to move into position quickly so they can spring into action. Delays can be costly.
  • It conveys more confidence that the response to a crisis or trauma is organized and not haphazard.
  • It allows organizations to control the controllables. Plus, the increase in employee and leader skills and confidence in dealing with crisis or disruptive change, very likely will decrease the number of things that were previously considered uncontrollable.
  • It reduces chaos. By imposing some structure, you allow for maximum collaboration and coordination while ensuring that people stay in their lanes. It’s clear who the point person is. Much like how a beehive operates, everyone knows their job and performs it.
  • It supports better decision-making and communication.
  • It helps to steady emotions and decrease stress for individual leaders and their teams.
  • It helps leaders get info at a time when paralyzing fear stifles information flow.
  • It gives leaders the ability to filter out unnecessary or unhelpful information (while retaining accuracy of course), and react in a thoughtful, reasoned way when it’s most difficult to do so.

How to put an Rapid Response Process in place:

Gather your rapid response team

Appoint people to this team before a crisis happens and make sure they know their respective roles. It should include all senior leaders and leaders of key functions such as operations/logistics, security, finance, HR, communications/PR, facilities, etc.

Allow the leader in charge to delegate

You need a central commander to manage response activities such as assigning personnel, deploying equipment, obtaining additional resources, etc. This leader must be fully present, visible, and available in the heat of crisis.

Have the team report to the command center

This is a pre-determined location (physical and/or virtual) for monitoring and reacting to events. You should also select a code word that puts the Rapid Response Process into action. Some organizations use “Code Rapid Response” or “Code Blue” as theirs.

Gather relevant information

In a crisis, it’s critical to centralize information, facts, and data. What’s known? What isn’t known? The goal is to organize and coordinate response activities, ensuring that the most pressing needs are met and that resources are properly allocated.

Promote a unifying message

It is vital to deliberately shape and disseminate a message of unity. Make sure your message is one of “we are all in it together.” This helps people transcend the impulse to split into factions and polarize your organization.

Conclusion

Once a plan is in place, you’ll find it’s adaptable and scalable. It can be customized for crises and change events of various intensities. You can train people in it and practice it by “pulling the cord” from time to time so everyone can get familiar with how it works.

“When a disruptive event occurs—and it is truly a matter of when, not if—you will be ready to take decisive action that minimizes the fallout,” concludes Dr. Hendel. “This enables you to quickly stabilize your organization, integrate the crisis in a meaningful way, learn from any mistakes, and get back to work.”


About the Authors:

Diana Hendel, PharmD

Dr. Diana Hendel is the coauthor of Trauma to Triumph: A Roadmap for Leading Through Disruption and Thriving on the Other Side (HarperCollins Leadership, March 2021) and Why Cope When You Can Heal?: How Healthcare Heroes of COVID-19 Can Recover from PTSD (Harper Horizon, December 2020). She is an executive coach and leadership consultant, former hospital CEO, and the author of Responsible: A Memoir, a riveting and deeply personal account of leading during and through the aftermath of a deadly workplace trauma.

As the CEO of Long Beach Memorial Medical Center and Miller Children’s and Women’s Hospital, Hendel led one of the largest acute care, trauma, and teaching hospital complexes on the West Coast. She has served in leadership roles in numerous community organizations and professional associations, including chair of the California Children’s Hospital Association, executive committee member of the Hospital Association of Southern California, vice chair of the Southern California Leadership Council, chair of the Greater Long Beach Chamber of Commerce, board member of the California Society of Health-System Pharmacists, and leader-in-residence of the Ukleja Center for Ethical Leadership at California State University Long Beach.

She earned a BS in biological sciences from UC Irvine and a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from UC San Francisco. She has spoken about healthcare and leadership at regional and national conferences, and at TEDx SoCal on the topic of “Childhood Obesity: Small Steps, Big Change.”

Mark Goulston, MD, FAPA

Dr. Mark Goulston is the coauthor of Trauma to Triumph: A Roadmap for Leading Through Disruption and Thriving on the Other Side (HarperCollins Leadership, March 2021) and Why Cope When You Can Heal?: How Healthcare Heroes of COVID-19 Can Recover from PTSD (Harper Horizon, December 2020). He is a board-certified psychiatrist, fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, former assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at UCLA-NPI, and a former FBI and police hostage negotiation trainer. He is the creator of Theory Y Executive Coaching that he provides to CEOs, presidents, founders, and entrepreneurs, and is a TEDx and international keynote speaker.

He hosts the My Wakeup Call podcast, where he speaks with influencers about their purpose in life and the wakeup calls that led them there, and is the co-creator and moderator of the multi-honored documentary Stay Alive: An Intimate Conversation about Suicide Prevention.

He appears frequently as a human psychology and behavior expert across all media, including CNN, ABC/NBC/CBS/BBC News, Today, Oprah, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Fortune, Harvard Business Review, Business Insider, Fast Company, Huffington Post, and Westwood One, and was featured in the PBS special Just Listen.

He is the author or principal author of seven prior books, including PTSD for Dummies, Get Out of Your Own Way: Overcoming Self-Defeating Behavior, Just Listen: Discover the Secret to Getting Through to Absolutely Anyone, Real Influence: Persuade Without Pushing and Gain Without Giving In, and Talking to Crazy: How to Deal with the Irrational and Impossible People in Your Life.

About the Book:

Trauma to Triumph: A Roadmap for Leading Through Disruption and Thriving on the Other Side (HarperCollins Leadership, March 2021, ISBN: 978-1-4002-2837-9, $17.99) is available from major online booksellers.