Beat The GMAT - the MBA Social Network

 
  • Home
  • Forums
    • Forum Home Page
    • Featured Experts
    • I just Beat The GMAT!
    • Admissions Success Stories
    • GMAT Strategy
    • GMAT Math
      • Problem Solving
      • Data Sufficiency
    • GMAT Verbal and Essays
      • Sentence Correction
      • Critical Reasoning
      • Reading Comprehension
      • GMAT Essays (AWA)
    • Business School
      • Research MBA Programs
      • The MBA Application Process
      • MBA Student Life
    • RSS Feeds
  • Self Study
    • GMAT Library
    • Getting Started
      • Getting Started on Beat The GMAT
      • Intro to GMAT
    • Study Plans
      • The 60-Day GMAT Study Guide
      • Custom GMAT Study Plans
      • 700+ GMAT Student Stories
      • How to Develop a Study Plan
      • 3-Month GMAT Study Plan
      • 1-Month GMAT Study Plan
      • Verbal-Focus GMAT Study Plan
      • 2-Week GMAT Study Plan
      • Retaking the GMAT Plan
      • 3-Month TOEFL Study Plan
      • The Best 'How-To' Study List
    • Books
    • Resource Links
    • Practice
      • Daily GMAT Math Question
      • Daily GMAT Verbal Question
      • Free GMAT Flashcards
      • GMAT Error Logs and Tracking
    • Inspiration
      • I just Beat The GMAT! Success Stories
      • The Beat The GMAT Scholarship
        • 2012 Beat The GMAT Scholarship
        • Beat The GMAT Scholarship Alumni
  • GMAT Courses
    • Verified GMAT Course Reviews
    • GMAT Course Discounts
    • Economist GMAT
      • Economist GMAT Course Reviews
      • Economist GMAT Discounts
      • About Economist GMAT
    • GMAT Prep Now
      • GMAT Prep Now Discounts
      • About GMAT Prep Now
    • Kaplan
      • Kaplan Course Reviews
      • Kaplan GMAT Discounts
      • About Kaplan
    • Knewton
      • Knewton Course Reviews
      • Knewton GMAT Discounts
      • About Knewton
    • Manhattan GMAT
      • Manhattan GMAT Course Reviews
      • Manhattan GMAT Discounts
      • About Manhattan GMAT
    • The Princeton Review
      • The Princeton Review Course Reviews
      • The Princeton Review GMAT Discounts
      • About The Princeton Review
    • Veritas Prep
      • Veritas Prep Course Reviews
      • Veritas Prep GMAT Discounts
      • About Veritas Prep
  • MBA Application
    • MBA Watch
    • MBA Admissions Library
    • MBA Admissions Course
    • Expert Profile Evaluations
    • MBA Essay Breakdowns
      • 2012-2013 Top B-School Essays
      • Berkeley Haas Essays
      • Chicago Booth Essays
      • Columbia Business School Essays
      • Dartmouth Tuck Essays
      • Harvard Business School Essays
      • INSEAD Application Essays
      • Kellogg Essays
      • MIT Sloan Essays
      • Stanford GSB Essays
      • Wharton Essays
    • Research MBA Programs
      • Research MBA Programs Forum
      • School Selection
      • Business School Trends
      • International
    • The MBA Application Process
      • The MBA Application Process Forum
      • Resume
      • Business School Essays
      • Recommendations
      • Interview
      • Waitlist
      • Financial Aid
    • MBA Student Life
      • MBA Student Life Forum
      • MBA Student Life Articles
  • Blogs
    • All GMAT and MBA Blogs
    • Pre-MBA Blogs
    • MBA Student Blogs
    • Business School Blogs
    • GMAT Company Blogs
    • GMAT Tutor Blogs
    • Admissions Consultant Blogs
    • How to Add Your Blog
  • Products
    • GMAT & MBA Marketplace
    • MBA Admissions Course
    • Essay Writing Course
    • Free GMAT Flashcards
    • The 60-Day GMAT Study Guide
    • Daily GMAT Math Question
    • Daily GMAT Verbal Question
    • GMAT Error Logs and Tracking
  • MBA Watch
  • The GMAT/MBA Library
  • GMAT Discounts
  • GMAT Course Reviews
  • MBA Admissions Course

FBI Director Robert Mueller Describes Agency’s Post-9/11 Transformation

by The Harbus on October 22nd, 2012
Learn more about The Harbus and The Unofficial HBS Interview Guide.
Posted in
  • Career
  • Clubs
  • MBA and Beyond
  • Student Life

Students at HBS often read case studies about leaders contemplating key challenges, an activity they tend to engage in as they stare out windows. Few of the leaders in our case studies faced as harrowing a challenge as the one faced by Robert Mueller on September 11, 2001, exactly one week into his tenure as the sixth Director of the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

In a wide-ranging address and Q&A session last Thursday, Mueller described his efforts to transform the FBI from an agency focused on law enforcement into one focused on counterterrorism after 9/11, leadership lessons he learned along the way, and the principal security challenges facing the US in the years ahead.

As all new leaders do, Mueller said he arrived at the FBI on September 4, 2001 with a vision encapsulating the priorities and objectives that were going to define his tenure as Director. As happens to many new leaders, if not all, those priorities and objectives quickly went out the window.

“Clearly 9/11 was a cataclysmic event for everyone, but especially for an institution such as ours,” Mueller said. “When I came in I expected I’d be doing the types of cases I’d done as a prosecutor, but of course that changed when September 11 happened.”

Mueller recalled his first meeting in the Oval Office with President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and other members of their administration in the days after 9/11. He opened the meeting by instantly talking about what the FBI had done in the immediate aftermath of the attacks.

“About three of four minutes in President Bush said ‘stop it,’ and he said, ‘Bob, what you’re telling me the bureau is doing is what you’ve been doing for 100 years; my question for you today is what is the bureau doing today to prevent the next terrorist attack,’” Mueller said. “For the next four years of his term the question was always the same, he would ask me that every day.”

In order to reorient the agency and prevent another attack, Mueller made counterterrorism, counter-espionage, and cyber protection the FBI’s top priorities, and shifted resources to those areas.

He also set about developing the FBI’s intelligence capacity, both internally at the bureau and externally in its relationship with other government agencies like the Central Intelligence Agency and National Security Agency.

The new expectations facing the FBI as it transitioned into an agency focused principally on counterterrorism and preventative efforts had a direct impact on Mueller’s leadership style. Acknowledging the advice of leadership experts who exhort leaders to delegate tasks to their people, Mueller said his daily briefings with President Bush made micromanagement of counterterrorism a necessity.

“If I have to brief the president every day, I had best know what’s happening in my organization with regard to every threat,” he said. “I micromanage that area to this day; our institution simply cannot afford to have us not be top down involved in that.”

Though his tenure as FBI Director will end next September, Mueller shared his thoughts on what the future would hold for the agency. For one, he envisions cyber security becoming the top priority for the agency, with important implications for the future leadership of the agency.

“I would expect that five years down the road, you will not be able to operate at the highest level of the organization without having spent time in cyber,” he said.

Mueller said the agency’s focus on cyber protection would require new legal frameworks that would allow the FBI to conduct investigations. In response to a student question about the balance between protection and civil liberties, Mueller said he believed the FBI had struck “an appropriate balance.”

“Any changes to our methods have to be done within the confines of the Constitution,” he said.  Mueller said he still had the habit of knocking on wood any time somebody congratulated him about the agency’s success in preventing another 9/11-style attack. As he reflected on his tenure as FBI Director, he said adaptability was essential in an environment where constant change comes with the territory.

“I think the key to whatever success we’ve had is due to our people, from being open to change, being very flexible in our organizational structure, in our short- and long-term goals, and to being responsive to the threats we face each day,” he said.

If you liked this article, let The Harbus know by clicking Like.

RELATED ARTICLES

Ask a Question or Leave a Reply

The author The Harbus gets email notifications for all questions or replies to this post.

Guidelines:

Some HTML allowed. Keep your comments above the belt or risk having them deleted. Signup for a Gravatar to have your pictures show up by your comment.

Click here to cancel reply.

FREE GMAT PREP RESOURCES

  • FREE
    GMAT Prep Now Videos and OG13 Improvement Chart
  • FREE
    Kaplan GMAT Practice Test
  • FREE
    Knewton GMAT Challenge Videos
  • FREE
    Manhattan GMAT’s Free Guide To Getting Started With the GMAT
  • FREE
    Free 7-Day Trial with The Economist GMAT Tutor (full access)
  • FREE
    Princeton Review Practice GMAT
  • FREE
    Veritas Prep Free 7-Day Trial - GMAT On Demand

GMAT PREP DISCOUNTS

  • $139 only
    GMAT Prep Now Full Video Course
  • SAVE $150
    Select Kaplan GMAT Courses & Tutoring Services
  • $101 OFF
    Knewton GMAT Complete Prep (5 days only)
  • SAVE $210
    Manhattan GMAT Courses and Services
  • $75 OFF
    The Economist GMAT Tutor
  • 10% OFF
    The Princeton Review GMAT Courses
  • SAVE $770
    Veritas Prep GMAT Courses and Consulting Packages

All GMAT/MBA Articles

  • GMAT AWA Essays (57)
    • Analysis of Argument (29)
    • Analysis of Issue (20)
  • GMAT Horror Stories (1)
  • GMAT Integrated Reasoning (85)
    • Graphics Interpretation (8)
    • Multi-Source Reasoning (7)
    • Table Analysis (10)
    • Two-Part Analysis (10)
  • GMAT Math (757)
    • Algebra (165)
    • Arithmetic (217)
    • Data Sufficiency (260)
    • Geometry (95)
    • Number Properties (121)
    • Permutations/Combinations (26)
    • Probability (53)
    • Problem Solving (278)
    • Statistics (21)
    • Translation (1)
    • Word Problems (124)
  • GMAT Success Stories (59)
    • 600-700 Score (1)
    • 700-800 Score (54)
  • GMAT Test Prep (533)
    • Retake (44)
    • Strategy (398)
    • Stress Management (99)
    • Study Plan (158)
    • Timing (95)
  • GMAT Verbal (679)
    • Critical Reasoning (219)
    • Reading Comprehension (130)
    • Sentence Correction (350)
  • MBA Admissions (2309)
    • Admissions Consulting (611)
    • Essays (677)
    • Extracurriculars (110)
    • GMAT (335)
    • GPA (143)
    • GRE (31)
    • International Admissions (65)
    • Interviews (202)
    • MBA Fairs (37)
    • Rankings (81)
    • Recommendation Letters (163)
    • Resume (120)
    • School Selection (58)
    • School Visits (190)
    • Trends (473)
    • Waitlist (49)
    • Work Experience (219)
  • MBA and Beyond (2537)
    • Career (1591)
    • Clubs (52)
    • Financial Aid (125)
    • Recruiting (208)
    • Student Life (1197)
  • MBA News (166)
  • Videos (590)

FREE UPCOMING GMAT EVENTS

  • June 19
    Free Manhattan GMAT LiveOnline Trial Class
  • June 25
    Free Veritas Prep - Online GMAT Prep Seminar
  • July 9
    Free Kaplan GMAT Preview Class - GMAT Challenge

Follow Us

  • RSS
  • YouTube
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Beat The GMAT on Facebook

POPULAR RESOURCES

  • MBA Watch
  • MBA Admissions Video Course
  • The GMAT/MBA Library
  • 60-Day GMAT Study Guide
  • GMAT Flashcards
  • GMAT Error Logs
  • GMAT Forums

COURSE LOCATIONS

  • New York GMAT Courses
  • Los Angeles GMAT Courses
  • San Francisco GMAT Courses
  • Boston GMAT Courses
  • Chicago GMAT Courses
  • Houston GMAT Courses
  • Philadelphia GMAT Courses
  • San Diego GMAT Courses
  • Washington D.C. GMAT Courses
  • Dallas GMAT Courses

COURSE REVIEWS

  • GMAT Course Reviews
  • GMAT Tutor from The Economist
  • Grockit GMAT Reviews
  • Kaplan GMAT Reviews
  • Knewton GMAT Reviews
  • Manhattan GMAT Reviews
  • Princeton Review GMAT Reviews
  • Veritas Prep GMAT Reviews
  • About
  • Press
  • Community Rules
© Hobsons, Inc. All rights reserved. Please read our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy