| PERSPECTIVES >
Petr Fejk: Kamikaze in the zoo
Written by: Monika Mudranincová
Photo: Pavel Veselý
Initially despised, the 38-year-old
director of the Prague Zoo has changed the facility beyond recognition
in five years. Following the floods, his former opponents have become
allies.
When you won the tender to become the zoo's director five
years ago, you found yourself in a difficult position, as you were
neither a zoologist nor a veterinarian by training, which meant
that you had to earn the respect of your 180 employees. How did
you bring that off?
When I started here the zoo couldn't be changed from within, so
it was decided that a person from an entirely different field should
be brought in. It was like a kamikaze role. I'm the first purely
managerial director in the Prague Zoo's history, and I must admit
that building respect is a neverending process. The first two years
were a struggle for authority. I'm a fairly strict boss, and I demand
order and maximum performance - such an approach suits some people,
but it gets on others' nerves. I see the fact that I'm not a zoologist
as a personal handicap that gave my employees a chance to demonstrate
their lack of faith in me. The best defense against this was to
learn, and to take advantage of experiences gained at other zoos.
| Career
highlights |
| 1988 |
graduated from Charles
University School of Philosophy, majored in Czech Language
and Literature/History |
| 1990-93 |
taught
at gymnazium in Libeň |
| 1993-97 |
owned and operated the
Belmondo rock club |
| 1997-present |
appointed
director of Prague Zoo |
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Is it true that after you arrived you were shocked by the
work habits of some employees? How did you show them that the party
was over?
Yes, that's true. When I caught someone stealing, I fired him. When
I caught a driver under the influence of alcohol, he too was let
go. I even went so far as to installing a time clock. Most of the
employees turned against me at that point, but they finally acknowledged
that I wasn't harassing them, I was just trying to make them come
to work on time.
How do you motivate your employees?
Our organization is funded by the state, so I can't give them much
financial motivation. I try to at least show them that I respect
their work. Sometimes we organize events and get together outside
of the work environment, and I try to praise them, but I'm not too
good at it, as I'm rather reserved. Additionally, I try to give
my employees a feeling of prestige. People who take care of animals
aren't just shovelers of manure. They must also have a deep knowledge
of animals.
Your arrival was marked by a broader, more aggressive method
of presenting the zoo to the public. Did you plan to promote the
zoo as you would any other firm?
I'm convinced that an organization or institution like a zoo must
be based on presentation. We have to attract people to the zoo in
order to carry out our mission. We're like a museum - we'll either
be dignified and monumental, but dead, with no one visiting us,
or we'll be an active place people like to go to. I like communicating
with the public. The zoo is something that we all hold in our hearts
- children, youngsters, parents, and the elderly. Our expositions
are first-rate; we have a graphic artist, we turn out press releases,
we organize social events, and we sell gift items. We want to offer
full-value to politicians, entrepreneurs, sponsors and the public.
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You are an innovator in many respects. Have you ever encountered
fear or even resistance on the part of your employees due to innovations
that you try to introduce?
Yes, there's always an initial wave of resistance against anything
new, starting with our logo, which was my little revolution, through
the time clock and working with computers, to our efforts to make
our animals on display more active.
How were you able to break down this resistance?
You can never break it down completely, it's a never-ending story.
For example, the animal tenders here have little microphones, and
they tell visitors about their charges. This is still very traumatic
for many of our people, as they aren't used to communicating with
the public. I even hired a psychologist to help them overcome this
inhibition. I'll have to convince them over and over as I introduce
new things.
This year's floods placed an extraordinary burden on the
zoo, and you faced crisis management. How did your relationship
with your employees change in this situation?
The floods naturally brought us together - suddenly, our earlier
disputes seemed petty. When you're in a boat with someone with who
you've been arguing for five years and you're trying to haul a gorilla
into it, things have to change. I know that we'll fall back into
our old habits, but for now we still feel the euphoria of belonging
together. During the crisis it was irrelevant who was in charge
and who was an employee.
Both you and your team were attacked by the media for killing
some animals, and there was even speculation about the importance
of the zoo's existence. How did you survive the media pressure?
It was very cruel, and I heard some employees that it was the worst
time of their lives. I personally expected negative articles, and
I responded to them immediately. I patiently explained what carrying
out the largest evacuation in the history of all zoos meant. The
hardest thing for me was to stay calm and cool in this situation,
but to simultaneously show my people that I was going through it
together with them. When Gaston the seal or some other animals died,
the tenders felt it as the loss of a family member. When the press
expressed suspicions that it might have been our fault, it was a
hard situation without a solution for many of them.
For some nursing animals the evacuation posed great dangers,
with their very survival at stake. Were you worried about your people?
Could they possibly refuse to carry out your orders?
I was most worried that a fatal injury would occur. Our people were
truly not thinking about danger. I was present at all of the critical
situations, such as the transporting of gorillas on boats - they
are huge animals that were under stress, and taking them by boats
was sheer madness, completely against all the safety rules. If something
had happened to someone, I would have taken it as my own personal
failure. Although it's painful for me to kill an animal that cannot
be evacuated, it's still a more acceptable decision than to watch
it kill a defenseless person.
What do you need to improve about yourself in order to
be the ideal boss?
The ideal boss should be strong. He has to be normal, and he mustn't
fly off the handle. He should have healthy common sense and an internal
engine to make him absorbed in his work. He has to have a system,
he has to be rational. He shouldn't have the clutter around him
that I have on my desk, because a neat desk means a well-ordered
mind. He has to know what he wants, and how to achieve it. I think
I handle relationships with people well. By nature I'm a reservedly
honest, rationally communicative control unit that keeps a certain
distance but can look at things with feeling. Sometimes there's
so much work that I can't do everything - I teeter on the brink
of collapse, and in the end, nothing is properly done about most
of the things that must be done properly. That is my shortcoming.
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