Lessons From LOST
Employment law lessons are everywhere.
Previously on the Blawg, we’ve discussed valuable legal training you can glean from such unexpected sources as The Office, Dilbert, March Madness, Mr. Rogers, Simon & Garfunkel and – occasionally – even lawyers.
Today, we offer up some deep employment law thoughts inspired by last night’s finale of one of the world’s most-loved TV shows: LOST.
The Set-up
If you’re one of the half dozen or so people on the planet who never watched the show, here’s the basic set-up: a plane crashes on a remote island and a small pack of survivors tries to get rescued before they all kill each other. Basically, it’s Gilligan’s Island with lots of symbolism and guns.
The show revolves around the intense interpersonal conflict that results when people work together to tackle seemingly impossible problems under seemingly insurmountable odds. Sounds a bit like the modern American workplace, doesn’t it?
With that in mind, here are my . . .
Top 5 Don’t Get LOST Employment Law Lessons
- You’re truly LOST without a team. The very best way to avoid needless disputes that can bring down an entire enterprise is to foster an environment that puts the team above the individual. The show’s mantra “live together or die alone” was repeated by someone on the show every 27 seconds or so. That’s great advice.
- Be careful whom you follow. Don’t make alliances with bad people — you could end up in a bad place. Headlines from the past few years featured several prominent HR execs getting hauled into court or even jail after they went along with various questionable schemes. There’s an old saying: “Bad company corrupts good character.” Don’t let that happen to you.
- Adversity = Opportunity. LOST‘s characters were in near-constant peril. The good ones saw each challenge as an opportunity: they rose to the occasion and grew as leaders and as human beings. That’s a great lesson for today’s trying times. Don’t sit around whining about the economy, a lack of resources or other things beyond your control. Seize each day and make the most of it.
- Keep key stakeholders engaged. Employers can learn a lot from LOST‘s amazing ability to keep its audience engaged during its six-year run. The show’s “management” created a compelling vision up front and then used a variety of creative means to keep viewers hooked, including online wiki-communities, blogs, podcasts, Twitter tweets and frequent Q&A sessions. If you want a successful enterprise, you must must must must must keep key stakeholders engaged. If you don’t, they’ll leave.
- Manage expectations or your audience may revolt. Of course, one problem with high engagement is high expectations. Viewers came into last night’s LOST finale with unrealistic hopes and approximately 1,847 unresolved questions. When the conclusion inevitably fell flat and approximately 1,793 questions remained unanswered, many fans turned on the show, filling cyberspace with lots of anti-LOST venom. The lesson? Manage stakeholder expectations carefully and answer key questions as thoroughly and honestly as possible — or risk facing potentially uncontrollable wrath that could damage your brand.
COMING SOON: Lessons from American Idol. Stay tuned.














