| Punishment is not a good way to correct behavior. Your number 2 is particularly wrong. For punishment to work in affecting behavior, you can't punish for a very unlikely event, especially accidental. Punishment changes behavior by making people anxious and afraid of the punishment. If you punish something that's very unlikely, it does no good. It's like if pushing ctrl-F restarted the stations, and the guy has never pushed ctrl-F before, and never been punished for it. It's very unlikely that he would ever push ctrl-F. But he happens to trip getting up and accidentally hit ctrl-F while he's catching his balance. Does that warrant a heavier punishment? It's more unlikely, certainly, but what would the punishment change about his behavior? Punishment works because you are afraid of it. It works because you want to avoid it. But accidents don't happen because of defiance or a rational decision making process. If you were punished moderately and frequently for a common mistake like hitting F7, it could correct behavior because you would be more vigilant when hitting F6. Having it be proportional to the degree of carelessness in terms of correcting behavior is not important. If someone is more careless, they will get more frequent punishment. If the punishment is too strong, it will just make people fearful instead of correcting the behavior. Firing someone who consistently makes mistakes is a corrective action, not punitive. Punishment is generally more of a cultural thing and less of a means of correcting an issue. Punishment is expected, so it's delivered. In western culture we have a particular need to find someone responsible and punish them. Rarely though do you feel "I don't want to get punished, so I am going to do this right." but it's not uncommon to think "I don't want to get punished so I'll avoid this altogether." Corrective behavior is better when it's not punitive. Look at the design of the software, correct that problem. Look at the systems that allowed this to happen, correct them. Work with the staff and find out why this could happen, help them correct it. If people are punished for writing the software poorly, they're just going to cover up the flaws that they find instead of bringing them to light to correct them. If staff are punished for making mistakes, they're going to hide them instead of seeing if they can fix them. Punishment is often just a game to abdicate responsibility. "Oh, it wasn't my fault. It was his fault. The proof that it is his fault is that he got punished for it. I've done my part to solve this problem." Especially in complex environments like corporations and government, I think that the last thing you should do is look for a person to blame. Instead of looking for the person responsible for implementing the design, or the person who approved it. Look at why it was implemented, how it was approved. Instead of pinning it on an individual, pin it on a system. I think you should only look at an individual if they are committing malfeasance for the purpose of benefiting themselves outside of the system. If the person approved the design because they weren't aware of the potential risk, then find out why. If they approved it because there was supposed to be another safeguard to stop it from accidentally happening, find out why that wasn't there. If they approved it because they gave the contract to their friend who wasn't the best decision, and overlooked issues for a cut, then go ahead and blame them. If there's a problem with the person, say the designer was just irreconcilably bad, then remove him. If it's a problem with training, then train him. If it was something he did as a greenhorn in the past, and now he's much better, then for God's sake don't punish him for a mistake he made years ago when he was put into a project that was more important than the skills he was hired with, unless he grossly lied about his skills. |