Politics 1 Business Case 0
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The appalling outcome of England’s bid to host the 2018 World Cup should come as no surprise to anyone who works in a large, complex, public or voluntary sector organisation.
When I worked in Reading I was involved in the town’s bid for City Status. We had a compelling case - Reading is one of the country’s leading economic hubs with a diverse set of multi-national companies contributing to a thriving business and cultural destination.
Our submission to be considered a City was water tight, with support from the business, public and voluntary sector, coverage in The Times and pundits telling us we were the favourites to succeed.
Of course, like the England bid team, it ended in tears. City status was granted to places, including Preston, who were deemed to ‘need’ it more than us. As one leading academic told us later, “these things aren’t decided on merit and you may just as well scribble the name Reading on the back of an envelope and slip it under the door.”
I often see the same look of bewilderment on the faces of newly recruited public sector communications officers as I saw on the faces of the defeated England 2018 bid team. Why, they will ask, was the decision made to do X when the clear case was made to do Y. “How could they do that to us?”
The answer is simple and it’s a lesson that’s just been learned in front of the world’s media at huge cost. Learning this quickly enables new staff to negotiate and prosper in large, complex organisations. Never learning this leads to a working life of confusion and frustration.
So, here’s the lesson and it’s the reason that seemingly bizarre decisions are made in public life and the reason why England failed in its bid to host the World Cup in 2018: Things don’t happen because they are the right thing to do. Things happen because they are the Political thing to do.
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