DIMENSIONS OF MANAGER WORK: EXECUTIVE INSIGHTS

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06158528
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RIPPUB
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U
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21
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October 29, 2024
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August 19, 2024
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F-2013-00715
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June 1, 1980
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Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 DIMENSIONS OF MANAGERIAL WORK: EXECUTIVE INSIGHTS Bernard L. Mooney, Ph. D. Center for the Study of Intelligence Central Intelligence Agency Washington, D.C. 20505 June 1980 (b)(3) QNFflJEHTIAL Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Report #2: THE EXECUTIVE ACTIVITY LOG This is the second of a three-part series. The first report was entitled "The Executive Interview". SYNOPSIS The Pace, variety and pattern of activities recorded in the Activity Logs when contrasted with the activities of executives in business and industry indicate the following about the work of Agency executives: 1. The pace is hectic and the sequencing of activities and their duration demand high levels of flexibility as well as the capacity for operating under tight time constraints with minimal information. 2. The work is primarily oral and aural and it demands effective communication and listening skills. 3. At the higher executive levels there appears a greater emphasis upon the capacity for understanding the "vocabularies" and perspectives of the many disciplines whose efforts must be coordinated. 4. Executives expend considerable time directing the activities of subordinates; success would appear to rest heavily on supervisory and interpersonal skills. S. The work tends to accentuate the "here and now" at the cost of reduction in time devoted to planning. 6. Contacts with persons outside the Agency do not constitute a significant part of an Agency executive's daily routine. 7. Agency executives appear to place more emphasis on acces- sibility to employees than do their peers in business and industry. Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 About this study: The Central Intelligence Agency, perhaps even more than other organizations, has devoted considerable effort through the years to incorporating within its selection and training programs the latest and most effective concepts and procedures of management science. A continuing expression of this concern and effort is apparent in the Report of the Team of the National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA Team, 1979). The team's recommend- ations for actions to be taken by Agency senior management draw particular attention to the development of executives and managers. The feasibility of acting upon the many ambitious recommend- ations of the NAPA Team involves the Agency's ability to develop a taxonomy for executive management positions, i.e., the ability to "sort out" key executive positions according to the essential nature of their job demands. This project has been designed to respond to the team's recommended "identification of the behavior � demands of Agency executive positions." The project was organized and conducted under the DCI Fellowship Program of the Center for the Study of Intelligence, during March 1979 through May 1980. The project design called for collection of data regarding verifiable behaviors in which Agency executives, (defined for the most part as supergrade or SIS positions), engage �as they accomplish the requirements of their jobs. The history of re- search in the area of managerial behavior has emphasized the futility of using a single data collection methodology. Though the need for multiple data collection methodologies has been stressed (Campbell et al., 1970; McCall et al., 1978), to date only one published study of executive managerial functioning has included all three of the recommended methodologies, i.e., the Survey, Interview and Activity Log (Lau et. al.,1979). In keeping with expert opinion, the design for this project in- corporated use of the Survey, the Interview and the Activity Log methodologies. Given the resources available, it did not prove feasible to include in the project executives serving outside the Headquarters area. The most obvious impact of this exclusion falls on the D Career Service. / (b)(3) Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 CONFIDENTIAL Though the three data collection methods are complementary, the character of the data gathered via each does differ. As a consequence, the findings derived from each methodology will be presented as "stand-alone" reports. Within any given report, where data derived from another methodology will help in clarif- ication and explanation, these data will be provided,. The three reports, then, consist of: 1) The Executive Interview, 2) The Activity Log, 3) The Critical Activities Survey. Bernard L. Mooney, Ph. D Center for the Study of Intelligence 2 June 1980 a REFERENCES Campbell, J.P., Dunnette, M.D., Lawler, E.E. III., Weick, K.E. Jr. Managerial Behavior, Performance, and Effectiveness. McGraw- Hill Book Company, New York, 1970. Lau, A.W., Broedling, L.A., Walters, S.K., Newman, A Harvey, P.M. The Nature of the Navy Civilian Executive Job: Behavior and Development. Navy Personnel Research and Development Center. Technical Report 79-27. July, 1979. McCall, M.W. Jr., Morrison, A.M. Hannan, R.L. Studies of Managerial " Work: Results and Methods. Technical Report 9. Center for Creative LeadeTS-Eip, Greensboro, North Carolina, May, 1978. ---corrtfrEst-T4A1--_ Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Report #1: The Executive Interview Synopsis In the view of the Agency executives interviewed: 1. They work long hours (including long work weeks) and the higher one's level, the more time given to the work. 2. Because of their extended workday, and workweek, they have incurred the penalty of loss of earned annual leave. 3. Too much of their time is consumed in meetings and in re- sponding to requirements for documentation of their activ- ities. 4. If more time were available, they would devote it to dealing with their employees, planning, becoming more informed in the substance of the activities about which they must make decisions and developing more understanding of other dis- ciplines so as to facilitate inter-component cooperation. S. The candidates for executive positions in the future are bright, creative but lacking in breadth (lacking in the ability to evaluate problems on an Agency versus a com- ponent-centered basis) and in the ability to communicate with components and specialties outside their own. 6. Previous superiors have exercised a more significant influ- ence in shaping their present managerial style than have previous assignments or training. 7. Shifts in executive roles and functions have included a de- cline in the decision-making authority of the executive and an increase in the demand for documentation of activities (typically perceived as non-mission relevant). 8. The most consistent sense of accomplishment in executive work has been derived from actions taken in developing and advancing employees at lower levels. 1 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 CONFIDENTIAL 9. The most consistent critical problem faced is that of in- creased work load coupled with limited resources and limited authority to take direct action in remedying the situation. 10. Increased efficiency can be achieved either by restoring authority to individual executives or by creating a "super" Agency administrative officer. 2 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 LUNPIDENI1AL Executive Interview I. BACKGROUND 'In the research focused upon managerial functioning, the lion's � share of attention has been devoted to the problems of managerial selection, placement, training, development and advancement. The existence of managerial positions and the organizational climates � within which they exist are seemingly dealt with in the research as if they are fixed and universal constants. If there exists any constant in the work environment of a manager it is the factor of change in the numbers and characteristics of the persons available for doing the work; change in the character of the demands of the managerial position itself; changes in the fiscal and procedural resources which are available and acceptable within the organiz- ation. Organizational climate and job situation variables are un- questioned as critical factors influencing managerial behaviors (Taguiri, 1961; Levinson, 1972), yet these factors have been consistently passed over in research projects, largely because of the difficulties in achieving reliable measurement of such factors. Throughout the past several years, critical shifts have occurred within the organizational climate of the Central Intelligence Agency, some as a result of conditions external to the Agency and others as a result of internal restructuring of elements and functions. To provide a framework within which to evaluate data gathered via the Survey and Activity Log methodologies, fresh information regarding the current influence of the organizational climate and situational variables had to be collected from Agency executive managers themselves. Most of the current commercial, measures of climate and sit- uational variables involve assumptions based upon the mission and goals of the organization within which the measures were developed. Few if any of these assumptions are applicable to the Agency. Therefore, to provide the "climate" information required by the project design, interviews were conducted with selected executive managers. A 3 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 II. METHOD (b)(3) (b)(1) A. Interview Design � The content of the interview includes both factual ques- tions ("How long is your workday?") as well as open-ended personal opinion questions ("What would you say are the most important problems you face in your work today?"). Appendix A contains a list of the 18 questions put to each executive inter- viewed. The same sequence of the questions, as well as the word- ing of each, was followed throughout the interviews. At times, actual responses to a given item anticipated later questions. At other times, in response to a given question, executives in- troduced additional topics. Every effort was made not to inter- rupt the flow of the interview and, particularly, to avoid con- straining replies within any rigid format. B. Selection of Interviewees The focus of this project is on Agency executive position(b)(1) rather than on the people in those positions, and the selection(b)(3) of interviewees was based upon position rather than personal data. Official records showed Headquarters executive-graded M(3) positions across the five Agency career services. / (b)(1) /of the 42 positions thus identified, 41 incumbents were available for interview. The interviewee sample was designed to duplicate the career service and position grade structure of the Agency. The degree to which duplication was achieved is displayed in Table 1. Table 1 Agency Headquarters Executive Positions by Career Service and Grade Level Compared with Interviewee Group (b)(1) (b)(3) � Career oulvice (b)(3) D (Operations) E (Executive) I (National Foreign -Assessment Center) M(Administration R (Science and Terlinellogy) (b)(1) 100% (b)(3) Agency Interviewees (b)(1) (b)(3) 100% -----gbWODENTIAL 4:0(3) 4 goiwtion Grade Level `03i`piency orqi 51rviewe es Executive � Pay Schedule GS-18 GS-17 GS-16 Scientific Pay Schedule 100% (b)(1) (b)(3) (b)(3) (b)(1) (b)(3) 100% Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 LUNI-11) Table 1 data, when evaluated statistically, indicate that the interviewee group does not differ significantly from the Agency baseline of Headquarters executive positions in terms of either career service location of the position or position grade level. In �other words, the interviewee group is representative of Agency executive Headquarters positions. .� C. Conduct of the Interview With only two exceptions, all interviews were conducted within the working area of the executive. Interviews ranged from 35 to 110 minutes, averaging 51 minutes. III. OVERVIEW The tone of the interviews is as important as the findings themselves and merits special comment. Time is a precious commodity for Agency executives, yet each participant was highly cooperative in adjusting schedules to accommodate the interview. It was clear that they welcomed the opportunity to describe their work, to comment on the Agency of today, and to volunteer their views regarding the Agency of the future. They pulled no punches in giving their impressions of shortfalls in the Agency's systems and resources, but they also conveyed a pervasive optimism about its future--a consensus that while the world of Agency work may not represent the best of all such possible worlds, there is more than sufficient challenge, satisfaction, and promise of success to keep them motivated in that work. IV. FINDINGS A. Time and the Executive The length of the Agency executive's office workday ranges from 8 hours to 11 1/2 hours. The average is between 10 to 10 1/4 hours. There is a clear trend for higher ranked Agency executives to report longer workdays than lower ranked executives. Eighty- two percent of all executives who defined their workday as 10 1/4 hours or longer are GS-17s or above. In contrast 90% of GS-16 and SPS executives reported workdays of 10 1/4 hours or less. �.C.041'-44�141-11CL- 5 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 TIAL Unfortunately, comparative data regarding executives from business and industry have been collected on the basis of the workweek rather than workday. Executives from the private sector include, in their workweek, time expended outside the office area, e.g., work done at home during evenings or weekends plus ?'business" transacted at social events after hours. Agency executives, due to the sensitive nature of their work materials, are as a rule unable to work at home on evenings or weekends, nor do they characteristically exercise their job functions at social events. Their only option is to return to their offices on weekends. Seventy percent of those who reported working regularly on the weekend, (every other weekend or more frequently), were GS-17s or above. The average workweek of these officers who return to their offices on weekends is 56 1/3 hours. The average workweek for those who rarely return to their offices on weekends is 48 1/2 hours. Executives who report longer workdays also more frequently report returning to their offices on weekends. In other words, longer workdays and longer workweeks tend to go hand-in-hand with higher rank. An additional facet of the executive's time relates to the loss of annual leave. When these interviews were conducted, regu- lations regarding carryover of annual leave from one year to the next were much more stringent. The average reported loss of annual leave was 45 hours. Interestingly, the higher-ranked Agency ex- ecutives (EP, GS-18, GS-17) reported a lower rate of loss of annual leave (average 40 hours) than GS-16 and SPS-ranked executives (average 58 hours). Agency executives GS-18 and above report an average annual leave loss of 24 hours (50% report no leave loss) while GS-17 and GS-16 executives report an average loss of 54 hours (only 27% report no leave loss). Though it is impossible to make direct comparisons between time subsumed by work-related duties between Agency executives and those in the private sector, it is clear that in the Agency (as in the private sector) the higher one's executive level, the greatet the amount of time given to one's work. However, it is also clear that higher level executives in the Agency are more circumspect and, perhaps, foresighted, in their use of leave than are lower-level executives. Most higher-level Agency executives readily admit that earlier in their careers, uncertainty as to the real criticality of problems which arose tended to override decisions on use of their annual leave. They stated they now feel more confident in identifying real Agency crises. When these exist, they deal with them accordingly, expanding the length of either their workday or their workweek. Most higher level executives point to their present use of annual leave as a positive indicator of their own coNr IDUTIAL . 6 ' Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 CONFIDENTIAL increasing self-confidence, maturity and effectiveness as senior managers. If, per impossible, more time were available to Agency ex- ecutiyes, how would they use it? The greatest number. (29%) stated they would give the time to contacts with their employees-- both absorbing employee perspectives as well as educating employees about Agency career opportunities. Twenty-seven percent singled out the aspect of planning for the future which they feel is presently shortchanged and to which they would devote all additional time "credits" granted them. Twenty- four percent indicated they would expend their additional time "credits" developing greater in-depth personal knowledge of all elements of the memoranda for which they must assume responsibility. Most of this latter group is drawn from among NFAC executives. Seventeen percent denied any need for extra time in their day since they feel they presently give adequate time to each and every job requirement. The remainder of the executives expressed rather individualized uses of additional time credits, including one whose stated goal was: "...to get my own work done." If indeed 83% of the executives can identify activities to which they would devote extra time "credits," then what activities currently devour their time (for better or for worse)? A re- sounding 61% stated that their greatest time-eater is meetings (with their own staffs, with superiors, with Agency panels and . committees, with other Agency components, with elements outside the Agency). While these executives are split (50/50) on the importance of their presence in these meetings, the great majority believe there exists a more efficient way to accomplish the goals of the meetings either without their attendance or in less time than is presently demanded. The next most significant time-eater mentioned (stipulated by 27%) is the demand for paper- documentation ranging from personnel evaluations to detailing current and future planned activities and contingency actions, feasible under a wide variety of fiscal or procedural possibil- ities. In regard to the two time-eaters of meetings and docu- mentation, one executive stated: "...it seems now frills are more important than substance.. .now it's less important what you do and more important how you do it." Given the executives' contention that time-eaters deprive them of the time they feel they should give to other activities, how do they attempt to cope? .Some 29% use the solution: "I just CONFIDENTIAL 7 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 CONFIDENTIAL close my door." The vast majority (67%) attempt to cope by: ex- tending their workday (early or late), coming in on weekends, mentally working through problems at home--either in the evening or upon awakening, or while commuting to and from work. B. Required Traits The numbers of traits or skills executives regard as neces- sary in their work range from as many as seven to as few as two. If one were to aggregate the references to the skill of: "getting along with people; being empathic; being understanding," then clearly every Agency executive cited the need for the ability to relate to people. However, the nebulous quality of this "ability to relate to people" hardly constitutes a clearly definable skill. Among the variety of skills and traits mentioned are: integrity, candor, stamina, good health, stability, common sense, thick skin, decisiveness, patience, intelligence, self-confidence, confidence in subordinates, ambition, objectivity, and equanimity. Of note is the fact that approximately one in eight executives targeted the area of communication skills (particularly writing skills) as critical in their work. This matter of communication skills will surface again later in executives' comments regarding perceived assets and liabilities of those managers who will become the ex- ecutives of the future. C. Desired Traits While 20% of the executives felt they currently possess the skills and traits necessary in their work, 80% indicated a need for additional ones. Of the latter, six indicated a need to update and expand their current profegsional skills. The other 27 cited skills from specialty areas outside their own, ranging through mathematics, law, engineering, and fiscal matters. The most frequently cited specialty area is that of computer science. Also mentioned were: writing skills, skills in evaluating and utilizing employees, foreign languages and knowledge of management science. D. Executives of the Future When asked their perception of assets and liabilities of the human resource pool from which future Agency executives will be drawn, most officials emphasized the intelligence, creativity and impressive credentials of today's upcoming managers, but balanced this by citing a number of perceived deficiencies. CONFIDENTIAL 8 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 CONFIDENTIAL Using terms like "lack of breadth, lack of experience, lack of Agency knowledge," they observed that today's Agency managers possess a decidedly narrow perspective which limits their effect- iveness in dealing with specialties, disciplines and professions outside their own. The executives emphasized that effective � functioning at their level demands the capacity to understand the views and-values not only of those people for whom they have responsibility, but also of those with whom they must deal on a cooperative basis. (Note under Section IV, C., the executives who expressed a need for greater understanding of specialty areas outside their own, typically explained their needs as: "...to improve my ability to Understand and communicate with... scientists...computer specialists...economists...etc."). The officers who cited "lack of breadth" as a deficiency of the Agency's executives of the future feel that greater breadth (greater understanding of other disciplines plus insights into the "big picture," i.e. how the Agency should operate as a total organization) is developed solely as a function of on-the- job experience. These same executives feel that the younger ex- ecutives of the future have been advanced with such rapidity that . the requisite foundations for effective interdisciplinary com- munication have not been laid. E. Influences Upon Managerial Style Over one-fifth of those interviewed stated that their present managerial style has emerged independent of Agency-related experi- ence. Most of these individuals indicated that the essence of their style emerges from their own personal value system--a system which has been evolving throughout their life span. Whether cited singly or in combination with other influences, the factor cited as exerting the greatest influence on present managerial style is that of people�typically the model set by one's superiors. This "influence by example" of superiors is described as selective rather than total. In other words, Agency executives selected only those elements of their superiors' styles which they chose to imitate. In several instances, executives identified certain elements in the style of previous superiors which they re- solved would never become a part of their own. Next in order of importance as an influence upon present managerial style is training. Of all references to training (18 persons), four cited previous, external graduate studies, 9 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Lu six cited internal management training (Managerial Grid = 3; Levinson Institute = 3) and eight cited external Agency-spon- sored management training (the several War Colleges, Harvard, Columbia, and the Center for Creative Leadership, Greensboro). Of those who cited Agency-sponsored external management training, there was consensus that exposure to managers from other . federal agencies and the private sector was a key element in their positive evaluation of the training experience. Last in order of importance is the influence of specific assignments (in terms of the job demands as distinct from the influence of one's superiors). While high ratings on the in- fluence of people and training are rather evenly distributed across career services, high ratings for the influence of as- signments are concentrated in the I (NFAC) and R (DD/ST). F. Shifts in Job Demands Over 85% of the senior officers responded that they had experienced definite shifts in their roles and functions. This question stimulated unequivocally negative responses. The ex- ecutives emphasized.shifts for the worse rather than for the better. In this vein two topics were accentuated: 1) a perceived decline in the authority of the executives accompanied by an in- crease in responsibilities, and 2) a dramatic increase in re- quirements for documentation of decisions, actions and plans. Expressed in several ways, these two topics account for over 78% of the shifts in job demands cited. The first perceived shift--decline in authority with in- crease in responsibility--is set in the context of control of human resources. To a greater extent than executives in other federal agencies or in the private sector, Agency officers feel skilled in rapid analysis of problem elements, quick and incisive decision-making about what is to be done, and lightning-fast organization of the resources necessary to get the job done. The present emphasis upon panels and boards as the appropriate mechanisms for human-resource management is perceived by the executives as contributing to a reduction in their quick-re- action capabilities particularly in regard to mustering the resources for doing the job. This perceived stumbling-block in the management of human resources is magnified by the fact that their substantive work requirements are, on the increase while opportunities to expand their work force are almost non-existent. CONFIDENTIAL 10 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 No executive rejects the need for an equitable human re- source management system. In fact, as a group, they heartily endorse the concept. They do feel, however, that present mech- anisms do not give proper weight to their understanding of work priorities or to their grasp of the capabilities of their em- ployees. As one executive put it: "It's like being the coach... but Someone else selects your team.. .and everybody blames you if you don't take the championship!" The second perceived shift--the increase in demands for documentation of decisions, actions and plans--was described as particularly onerous since most executives do not see �this as related to the mission of their component. In'other words, executives see documentation requirements as eating up the time they would otherwise devote to the mission itself. Of equal importance is the fact that most executives state they receive minimal or no feedback from their documentation efforts. As � one executive said: "All that documentation must go to some administrative staff somewhere which keeps gathering data...and if that staff ever comes to any conclusions, I never hear about it." When nominating time eaters in their workdays, executives had earlier identified the two most exorbitant as meetings, specifying particularly panels, and documentation requirements. G. Shifts in Managerial Style As is apparent from the foregoing, events have combined to alter the job demands made upon Agency executives. But what of the executives themselves? To what extent has the total experience of operating at the executive level influenced their managerial style? Some 40% insist their managerial style has remained basically unchanged. One in five executives have detected changes in terms of having become "more cynical, hard-nosed, bureaucratic, driven." However, one in three feel they have become more "ready to listen, mellow, relaxed, self-confident, able to delegate work and likely to spend time with my people." The impact of the executive experi- ence is hardly a constant, universal experience. H. Proudest Accomplishment Of all questions in the interview, the query about the executive's proudest personal accomplishment seemed to have had the greatest impact. As several stated: "I'll have to think about that.. .no one has ever asked me that before." NT IA 11 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 CONFIDENTIAL As might be assumed, accomplishments cited are as varied as the achievers themselves, ranging from "establishing a tech- nical collection program...producing several critical intelligence papers... saving the Agency several millons of dollars" to: ...establishing effective collaboration with other Agency elements ...being trusted by my employees" and, finally, in a...somewhat humor- ous vein: "staying alive as an executive." In spite of the variety reflected, 45% of the executives singled out personnel management as the one topic area reflecting their proudest accomplishment. Activities described here ranged from the one-on-one experience ("helping to develop a person I selected and then seeing that person replace me as I moved up") to the more impersonal program-oriented accomplishment ("selling the idea of competitive promotions for clerical personnel rather than seeing people promoted just because the grade of their slot is geared to their boss's GS-level"). I. Current Critical Problems Responses to the qUery regarding current critical problems were as varied as the position titles of the executives. Answers ranged from: "Everything and nothing is a critical problem" to "There are just too many demands to do everything well." Defin- itions of critical problems do appear to involve three major areas: dealing with limited budgets and resources in the face of burgeoning requirements; managing people; and planning. .As to the first problem, it is the universal plea of managers everywhere that if only they had larger budgets or larger staffs (or both), they could carry out their duties more effectively. In the Agency context, however, the problems of re- sources are grounded in reality. Budgets have been reduced, man- power resources have declined, and requirements have increased (both substantive and, most particularly, documentation require- ments). The critical character of the human resource management problem is described as "how to attract good people within salary and grade limits imposed...how to keep the good people I have in view of grade-level ceilings...how to ration the good people I have in order to cover priority projects.. .how to remove the inept performers to make room for top performers...." In this problem area, senior managers are particularly prone to point NTIAL 12 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 �CON F I up what they perceive as their lack of authority. As one ex- ecutive put it: "With all the limits now placed on my authority, I don't know how to do what I know needs to be done." Finally, many executives reiterated their earlier comments about a lack of time for effective planning.. Beyond a lack Of time for planning, several executives (who do set aside time) expressed frustration over their inability to adhere to plans once formulated. As expressed by one executive: "In the Agency, there seems to be an unwritten priority--you must always deal with the present crisis, even at the cost of your long-range plans." J. Surprises As with the statements regarding critical problems, the response to surprises encountered in the executive's present position were expressed in a highly individualistic fashion. The responses include: "the unbelievable volume of work.. .the import- ance of trivia.. .the number of panels to which I'm appointed... the real satisfaction I get from the job...how much easier the job is than I had imagined...." Statements about surprises in the current position do not show any clear tendency to cluster into categories. Of the 37% who indicated they encountered nothing unexpected, most had pre- viously served in the position immediately below their present job, i.e., in an understudy role. K. Proposed Agency Changes The question regarding proposed Agency changes was phrased to suggest creation of a new position title in the Agency in order to increase Agency efficiency as well as that of executives like themselves. Interviewees, however, did not constrain their responses to a position description only. Approximately 35% stated that no new position is required. The majority of these executives expressed the view that a new Agency position would simply "add another layer to be dealt with" and would prove counter-productive. .Most emphasized the need for a return of authority to the individual executive. Of those who stipulated a position title or, in some cases, an entire staff, the emphasis rested upon the concept of a "super" CONFIDENTIAL 13 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 �C-614*F-1-K-Ifturn� administrative officer dedicated to the day-to-day operation of the Agency thereby relieving the DCI and DDCI of attending to repetitive minutiae. Those who commented on the need for such a position also underlined that success would depend largely upon the individual selected. Particular emphasis was placed on the individual's decisiveness and willingness to take risks. Above all else, however, it was felt the individual selected should be thoroughly familiar with the Agency and its history in order to provide a sense of continuity both for Agency ex- ecutives in general as well as for Directors and Deputy Directors of Central Intelligence. V. COMMENTARY The present report is but one element in a larger explora- tory study of executive functioning within the Agency. As an exploratory study (and the first of its kind in the Agency) no. specific hypotheses were structured for evaluation. Consequently, no mathematically precise, objective results can be reported which would support a specific set of recommendations. This report on executive interviews does paint a picture of the Agency work environment from the standpoint of the executive. It can be of assistance in understanding the situational and environmental factors which affect the job functions of Agency executives and can serve as important background for understanding the findings of the Survey and Activity Log methodologies, which are being published separately. CONFIDENTIAL 14 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 CONFIDENTIAL REFERENCES Levinson, H., The Exceptional Executive. (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1968). Taguiri, R., Research Needs in Executive Selection: A Symposium. (Boston: Harvard University, 1961). CONFIDENTIAL 15 Approved for for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Appendix A INTERVIEW QUESTIONS Every interview was preceded by a 7 - 10 minute background briefing by the interviewer. At this time, the statistical procedures used in selecting interviewees were explained. The confidentiality surrounding the identities of the interviewees as well as the precautions which would be taken in reporting interview findings to erisure that confidentiality were also stressed. Any procedural questions the executive might wish to raise were then dealt with. Questions about the project itself were handled at the close of the interview. SEQUENCE OF QUESTIONS 1. At what time does your typical workday begin? 2. At what time does your typical workday end? 3. Often starting and quitting times vary. Considering that, what do you estimate is the length of your workday? 4. On how many occasions do you find you return to the office on weekends? For how long a time period? S. If prior regulations on the carryover of annual leave were still in effect, how many hours annual leave would you have lost this leave year (1979)? 6. If somehow it were possible to add more time to your workday without extending the workday, to what would you devote this additional time? 7. What activities do you find absorb inordinate amounts of time in your workday? Do not judge the value of the time expenditure; simply identify the "time-eaters." 8. All executives require uninterrupted time for pure con- centration on a problem or -for planning. Do you find this time in your office? If not, where do you find it? 9. What skills and traits do you feel are absolutely necessary in a person who would attempt to handle the responsibilities of your position? --051444A-N-T-1-A-L- 16 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528 --GGAW-PBC-N1-11cL--- 10. 1Based on your experience with this executive position, have you ever desired additional skills or traits which might make you more effective in handling the job re- quirements? Most executives have some familiarity with the "pool" of managers who evidence high potential for becoming Agency executives. As you perceive this group of future executives, what do you see as their assets and liabilities? '12. Managerial style is shaped by many influences. Among these influences are: people you have worked with; as- signments you have held (apart from the people they brought you in contact with); and training experiences. Of these influences, which do you feel have been most important in shaping your managerial style of today.? 13. Since the time you first advanced in the Agency, have you perceived demands the Agency makes upon its 14. Since the time you first advanced in the Agency, have you perceived personal or managerial style: 15. Of what personal work accomplishment are you most proud. to executive level any shift in the executives? to executive level any shift in your 16. What do you perceive as the most critical-problem facing you in your present executive position.? 17. Before you assumed your present executive position, you probably had some expectancies about what the job would be like. Did you encounter any "surprises"? How did the job differ from your expectancies? 18. Can you conceive of a change in the Agency--perhaps creation of a new position--which you feel would increase the efficiency of the Agency and be of benefit to yourself in carrying out your responsi- bilities? LuNrID 17 Approved for Release: 2024/08/05 C06158528