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"The
Most Effective Organization in the U.S.",
by Robert A. Watson and Ben Brown (Crown Business, 243 pp., $25)
o
you know what group management guru Peter Drucker calls the most
effective organization in the U.S.? Probably, if you already skimmed
the subtitle of the book above. It's the Salvation Army. And, in
a few ways, this is perfect timing for a book about the good red
Army.
This book,
had it been released, say, in August, would have likely been buried
in the business section at Barnes and Noble, never to be seen by
those of us who don't read business-management how-to books, and
who remain relatively ignorant about those guys in quasi-military
uniforms who ring the bells by the red tin kettles at Christmas
time.
Retired Salvation
Army national commander Robert Watson wrote The Most Effective
Organization in the U.S. to pass on a little of the "Army
spirit" to an unlikely community the business community.
But the book is easily for anyone. Filled with stories about the
Army's beginnings in England and early radical Salvationist days
on the streets of Manhattan as well as about its gradual
mainstreaming it's a good primer on the Salvation Army and
the good that they do. For manager types, it has the added bonus
of spelling out some of their keys to success.
Of course,
ultimately, the main key to success may not make it into every office.
Theirs is a little help from the Man upstairs which Americans
United for the Separation of Church and State, and the like, may
not quite embrace.
What's a shame
though, is that the book did not come out a few months later, giving
Watson and his coauthor, Ben Brown, some time to include a write-up
on the marvelous work the Army has done since the first plane hit
the World Trade Center on September 11.
Within 45 minutes
of the terrorist attacks, about 200 Salvation Army officers got
themselves to the crash sites in New York City, Virginia, and Pennsylvania,
assisted by some 5,000 volunteers. No one ever asked them to. They
never had any terrorist-attack training. They just got into their
vans and got down only to face the collapse of the first
tower, which covered their vehicles with the building-flesh-ash
mixture that was to be found all over lower Manhattan in the hours,
days, and weeks to come.
The Army's
"holistic" "soup, soap, and water salvation"
ministry would feed rescue workers for days. In fact, the Army is
still down at Ground Zero now. Quickly setting up 21 mobile feeding
stations in Manhattan, they served 300,000 meals in the first 72
hours after the attack. And they plan to remain there until the
last worker has gone home feeding, massaging, providing phone
cards, counseling, praying.
It's easy to
figure out how an organization with a relatively small staff (3.4
million, including volunteers) can manage to tend to everyone who
asks for help whether the disaster be the unprecedented September
11 or a hurricane, flood, job loss, sickness, or injury. Its mission,
in its own words, is "to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ
and to meet human needs in His name without discrimination."
This is not
fine literature. It's written like a business book. But it's a nice
look at a group that answers to a higher boss the Highest,
in fact and for which so many Americans, in every zip code,
must be grateful.
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