Jocko Podcast - The Debrief w/ Jocko and Dave Berke #5: How to Announce Your Presence as The New Boss

Episode Date: October 5, 2020

Jocko and Good Deal Dave Analyze some issues and look for solutions.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Jocko Debrief podcast, episode five with Dave Burke and me, Jocko Willink. Dave, let's debrief. What do you got? We've got someone that just got promoted into a key position in a big company. She's now running operations. First female ever to hold this position on this company. East Coast company long, been around for a long time. And everybody in this position for her has been.
Starting point is 00:00:32 a man, been kind of a male dominated organization a little bit, and she's stepped up into this role. She's awesome. She is totally ready for this job. And she's getting some feedback from folks kind of helping her prep her, how she's going to introduce herself, how she's going to announce herself to the team. Hey, I'm the new head of operations. This is who I am. And a lot of the advice she's been getting is, hey, you got to go in there hard. You kind of, you got to, I come in there. And I think the phrase that they're using is you got to announce your presence with authority. You can't come in all timid and meager.
Starting point is 00:01:08 You've got to come in strong and let them know that you're here to run this department and that you're going to make this happen. So she calls me. She's like, hey, I've got this thing coming up. This is the advice that I'm getting. And she's aware. She's like, I don't. I understand what they're saying, but I'm not sure if that's right.
Starting point is 00:01:32 And of course, my perspective is like. Like, hey, actually, I think your instincts are on the mark. I don't think this is necessarily good advice. Now, look, the advice that she's getting is coming from a good place. They're trying to get her, they're trying to set her up to be successful, and they understand that. And they're right. She can't come in meager and meek and frail and like, oh, I'm not sure this is right for me. But here I am.
Starting point is 00:01:57 I said, but you don't need to announce your presence with authority. I said, as a matter of fact, listen, if you don't. don't want to, you don't need to announce yourself at all. There's a literal announcement that went out to this company in the form of a memo that said, announcement, new head of operations is this person. So if you don't want to announce yourself at all, you don't need to because it's already happened. I said, but what you really should think about is, what are your expectations for this role, for you in this role? So what are the things that you think that you need to do in this role. I said, so why don't you tell me what are your expectations? What are the
Starting point is 00:02:35 things you're thinking about? Well, I want the team to do well. I want to give them the things that they need. I want to help them and give them the resources and the tools and the training they need so they can be successful. We kind of went down this list of all the things that she felt was her job. And as you can probably tell from this list, she's a trooper, she's in the game, she understands it. And of course, like with 83.9% of every question that it gets asked, it's right in leadership strategy and taxes. This is, hey, what do you do on day one? You don't need to walk in and say, listen up.
Starting point is 00:03:12 I'm in charge now. Here are my expectations for you. Here's what I want you to do. Just walk in. Tell them, hey, listen, I am honored to be in this role. I am thrilled to have this opportunity. I care about this team. and I want to help this team be successful.
Starting point is 00:03:30 My expectations that I will do whatever it takes for us to be successful. So I did the role play, who said, hey, if you just come in and your opening speech is 30 seconds long, and that's all you say, how do you think they're going to react? She's like, well, they'll probably be fine with it. I said, good, then why don't you just do what you think you should do? And it's not that that advice was bad in the sense of like they're trying to set you up to fail, but how do you think it's going to come across if you want and go,
Starting point is 00:03:56 hey, listen up, I may not be the person. you thought was going to be in this job, but I am. You might have had some ideas how things used to be or who should be in here, but I'm in charge now. And it's so, when you're on that detached per second, it's so obvious when you see that. Again, you do not want to go in there to be a pushover. I said, but the opportunity for you to show who you are as a leader,
Starting point is 00:04:20 your opportunity to really reveal what kind of leader you are and what they can expect from you isn't going to come from the speech. As a matter of fact, the speech probably is. isn't maybe even been all that memorable. You don't need to make it a big deal. You in enough time are going to get challenged with leadership issues that you're going to have to get engaged in and get involved in. And that's what kind of leader you are.
Starting point is 00:04:41 So open up the book, refresh that a little bit. Do not announce your presence of authority come in and let them know what you expect in the expectation is that you're here to help the team win. I'm, clearly when you get into a situation like this and you knew what's going on with a company, but just for someone that's not, that someone that doesn't understand the whole concept,
Starting point is 00:05:06 we work with companies, so you have an understanding of what the situation is on the ground that she's going into, which means that you know that she's going into a functional team, right? Not a bad team, not a team, where they're firing the leader because everything's all jacked up.
Starting point is 00:05:22 Those are different scenarios, and those are also scenarios that I talk about leadership strategy and tactics. And even in those scenarios, Does that mean that you roll in there and you come off the top ropes? Not usually not off the top ropes unless You've got some catastrophic Moral or catastrophic ethical issues then it might call for
Starting point is 00:05:45 You know some some heavy hitting coming out of the gate So so there's that and there's but you have a team a functional team Well how do you take over a functional team? Yeah, you go to you go to page 157 of leadership strategy and tactics and you follow those those guidelines. When it comes to, here's an issue where it makes me a little nervous and probably this is probably making her nervous too. Hey, here's what you better do. Like if someone, if I was getting ready to go meet my team for the first time and someone
Starting point is 00:06:23 says, hey, listen, here's what's going on. You better do this. That would start to make me question. Like, wait a second. If you're needing to tell me how to introduce myself to the team, you must not have a lot of confidence in what's going on here and you must be worried and you must see me as weak. And so that, I'm sure that starts to creep into someone's head. I was doing my first interviews for the officer candidate program that I went into in the Navy. And so, you know, I was talking to the executive officer at the time at SEAL Team One.
Starting point is 00:06:58 And, you know, he was heading up this officer review board. I think that's, yeah, officer review board where I would go in and meet with these three or four officers and they would ask me a bunch of questions and they would give me a recommendation based on how he responded. And I wasn't really nervous or anything. But, you know, he just as a good leader, he said, hey, let's talk about the thing that you're about to go to. He's like, are you nervous?
Starting point is 00:07:21 I'm like, not really. And he goes, okay, well, good. He goes, check this out. When you go in there, there's no reason to be nervous because you're in there for a reason. You're in there because you've been recommended to get this position. And so you're in there because you're professional and you are smart and you come up with good answers and you've shown leadership potential. That's why you're going in there. So when you go in there, essentially what he said was, and this is really good advice.
Starting point is 00:07:52 With a little caveat, when you go in there, he said, be yourself, right? Which is essentially what you said to this woman, hey, what would you, you know, what do you think you should do? And she said it. And you're like, yeah, so you should be yourself. So you have to be yourself. And the caveat is, listen, you're going into an environment. You are going to be professional.
Starting point is 00:08:13 This is why I say there's a little caveat. Because being yourself, you have to use at least some level of caution. because you might be a very nice person. You can err on the side of being too nice. You can err on the side of being too hard. What I recommend is you err on the side of being a little bit too hard. Does this mean come off the top ropes?
Starting point is 00:08:43 No, but it is much easier to start with a tight leash and give slack as people earn trust and whatnot. than it is to go in there with a bunch of slack, and then all of a sudden you've got to jerk the chain, and now that's a problem. So air on this, I mean, you know, we joke about it all the time. Laif jokes about it all the time
Starting point is 00:09:05 because when, you know, when he came into task unit bruiser, I didn't smile at anyone for six weeks, and Colonel Hackworth didn't smile at anyone for the first month. And so why is that? It's airing on the side of being professional. It's airing on the side of being, was that the right word, hard?
Starting point is 00:09:19 I guess being professional. Air on the side of being professional, not overly friendly. Because overly friendly is hard to judge the way people are going to respond to that. People might go, oh, cool, she wants to be our friend. And she, you know, that's the way it's going to be. Cool. I don't really have to listen to her. So err on the side of being professional.
Starting point is 00:09:44 The last thing I had was, and now this is the counter to being too hard. The counter to being too hard is, why would you need to come in there and be all authoritative? Well, it's because you're insecure about people thinking that you're a good leader, which, when you go in and you act all authoritative, everyone thinks, they don't think, wow, that person's really authoritative. What they think is they're not very confident in their leadership skills, and that's why they're trying to browbeat us with their rank. Yeah. So you think you're coming across one way be by being hyper authoritative, but what you're really doing, what you're really doing is putting yourself on being on report for being insecure about your leadership.
Starting point is 00:10:30 So we want to be balanced, right? We want to err towards being professional. We want to air with enough confidence and authority that people go, okay, we get it, but we don't want to go to a point where people go, oh, insecure, got it. and don't underestimate, especially if they know you, how easy it is for them to see what you're doing. You walk in like, whoa, Jocko, man, this is, it's so easy for them to see if you're overshooting the mark kind of by design. So just like you said, I mean, you need to be yourself and be authentic. I totally what you said about that and using the examples of, hey, I'm going to come in.
Starting point is 00:11:09 I'm going to make clear, like I'm going to hold the line. And those things, these are the things that are important and this is the way we're going to be. And I can throttle back. That's much easier than trying to tighten up the slack at the beginning. But if you overshoot the mark, they're going to see it a mile away. And it's that thing we talked about before is perspective, is what are they going to see versus what you're seeing? And if you're detached enough,
Starting point is 00:11:28 and it's very obvious how clear it's going to be that you are hyper insecure if you walk in. And out of the blue, like, whoa, that was a really aggressive introduction speech. We've been working together for four years. Where did that come from? And here's the problem with everything that we're saying right now, everything that we're saying right now is going to edge someone towards completely overthinking this, which is why, you know, look, you're in this position, you're being promoted, you're being put in that position of leadership because people have seen the way you perform,
Starting point is 00:11:58 they trust you. So be yourself at, be yourself and then add 6% of professionalism, extra professionalism, and you'll dial it right in there. What's funny is that the conversation that we had took about like 90 years. seconds you know when we when we talk in the phone she's like oh that's great I just wanted to get your take on it it was it's like you said we we've talked way much way more longer than we than we did because it was hey don't overthink this be yourself think about what's important you announce that you know come in let them know what's going on and then move on from there and that was kind of the entire thing did you debrief further oh totally and I mean all good
Starting point is 00:12:36 it was well two things one yes it was all good and two the beauty of that is she was like it was she said it was a non-event yeah it was totally of course it was and that's what we talk about say this is not this thing if people your introduction speech don't if you're taking command of a battalion or a brigade or if you're taking command as a sea those speeches those think they're not important yeah what matters is what you are and who you are during the entire time and we create these things in our mind like I got to hit this speech out of the park you know like it's some big thing ask me how many CO introduction speeches I remember in my 23 career. If you feel the need to go in there and make a big statement, what part of your brain
Starting point is 00:13:19 do you think is feeling that deed? It's a little something called your ego. Totally. So heads up for that. All right, I have a, uh, my debrief term. I think this is my first debrief. And I'll do, um, look, we did something called the F battlefield as a pilot course, uh, where we are taking people to battlefields across the country. And at some point, um, um, we did something called the F battlefields across the country. And at some across the world. And the first one that we did was at the Battle of Gettysburg, the Civil War. And I'm going to actually do a podcast to go into some of, to go into more detail on that battle, lessons learned, leadership, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:14:00 But when I got done with it, I had my notebook. And so, you know, there was, you know, I was there, Leif was there, Mike Sterler was there, Steve Ward was there, Jason Garner was there. Jamie was there and then a bunch of clients. So it was a pilot, so we were all kind of checking out and seeing what the deal was. But as I went through it and I got done, I just took my notebook and I sent you a bunch of words basically to say,
Starting point is 00:14:27 hey, here's some stuff to debrief you on. So because, and the reason is, look, there was a bunch of things that were kind of, look, extreme ownership, laws of combat, leadership strategy and tactic, stuff that there's no reason for me to send you a text and say, hey, here's, here's something. Here's something. Here's an anomaly that I may not have thought through.
Starting point is 00:14:53 And most of this boiled down to me thinking, you know what? I just re-explained this to everyone and people said, oh yeah. Okay, got it. So here's a couple things. The first thing that I sent you was implied intent. implied intent. So we've all heard of commander's intent. We all know what that is. Commander's intent is, hey, this is what we're doing and this is why we're doing it. And again, I'll go into some of the details about why this came up in the Battle of Gettysburg between the various generals that
Starting point is 00:15:27 were there from, you know, Robert Lee and his subordinate generals. And so I will absolutely get into that stuff. But so this idea of implied intent, it's this. Look, if I tell you, hey, Dave, the intent of this operation is for you to secure this mountain top so that we can then push forward with cover from the high ground. So if I tell you all that, right, it's very obvious. That's the commander's intent. What I realized, and it's something that I realized that I've never put into words before until I was talking through this and explaining that when you're in charge, you have not just your commander's intent that you give verbally, but you also have an implied intent
Starting point is 00:16:12 that is the nature of your very being. And I realized that so much of my commander's intent throughout my entire career was based on implied intent. By knowing me, you knew that this is what, I would want. I knew what you expected. Yes. This actually happened at Eschleon Front.
Starting point is 00:16:45 And it was Jamie and Jen and Lynn and the rest of the team during a muster. And they were going incredibly psycho to test everything and make sure that the line was going to be through as quickly as possible and make sure that registrations would go through and make sure people weren't waiting in them. line and make sure that the things that needed to be handed out were in the right place, the right time, and that the, everything was going to be perfect. And I never pulled them aside. I actually did it after. I did it during the debrief. I said, you know what?
Starting point is 00:17:25 Jamie, you and your team realized. You never, I never said to them, but here's the deal. I said to them after the fact, I said, listen, if this event is disorganized and people have to wait in line and people are confused about where they're. going and there's no one to check them in and if all those things happen and people are coming and paying money to a leadership event and we can't even execute the leadership event smoothly I want my money back immediately. Jamie never had to ask me, hey, should we should we should I hired an extra two people to make sure that the line? She didn't ask me that. The implied intent was this
Starting point is 00:18:04 better be the best thing ever on the battlefield. Hey, When it came time for Laif to either close with and destroy the enemy or, you know, maybe leave a situation to avoid contact, he knew, Seth knew, the guys knew what the implied intent was. Look, if there's bad guys and we have an opportunity to take the fight them, that's what we do. So there's an important part about implied intent. So do you see where I'm coming from? Do you have a commentary on that? Yeah. What I was writing down
Starting point is 00:18:42 is thinking is it lets me know what I should do without you ever telling me what to do because I know you well enough as my leader, as my boss, as whatever,
Starting point is 00:18:51 I know what you want so I know what to do when you're not around to tell me. And I also don't need to go, hang on, let me call Jocko and see what he's thinking here.
Starting point is 00:18:58 I don't have to do that when there's no time to do that. Yep. Another good example it was that we were at Desert Warfare training in the beginning of our workup and task in a bruiser
Starting point is 00:19:06 and guys, we had a night off And normally guys, when they have a night off, they go drinking in town and have a good time and they come back and no one even asked me. Because the implied intent was, we're here to train. That's the most important thing in the world. So that's part one of implied intent. Here's part two. If I am sending you on an operation or on a mission and my implied intent is not valid for this situation, I better be damn sure to explain.
Starting point is 00:19:40 I explicitly tell you that my implied intent, or I better make it perfectly clear what is happening. So if I'm always telling you, hey, you know what, Dave? If my implied intent is always, look, you know me, you know I'm aggressive. You know if we get in a firefight on the battlefield. We better take the fight to the enemy, take them out, destroy. That's what we do. What, we train like that.
Starting point is 00:20:02 We go and workup. You've done 20, 25, 30 missions like that with that attitude. Now all of a sudden, we get put into a different AO. and we have a very sensitive politician that's there, and they've started to assemble some coalition supporting troops, and the last thing we want to do is cause collateral damage or have any kind of civilian casualties. When we're going out, before you go, I say, hey, Dave, here's what's going on.
Starting point is 00:20:35 I know normally we are default aggressive. tonight I actually want you to be default passive I want the security and safety of the populace and the infrastructure to be the number one thing that you think about that is infinitely more important tonight than closing with and destroying the enemy so that's it we have implied intent and we better know what that implied intent is and if you're going to go against that implied intent you better be you better make it explicitly clear. Yeah, that makes sense. And I think of how I have always been as a subordinate when I have worked for other people throughout my career. One of the things I tried to discover very early on about my leadership is what that implied intent was, intent was,
Starting point is 00:21:20 and that can be really, really strong. If I'm working for you, I am working for it. I know what you're implied intent is. That is the strongest thing in my mind to guide my decisions for decentralized command. So if we're going to go out and do anything that's going to be different that implied intent, you've got to almost go out of everybody and say, listen, I know what you would do in this situation.
Starting point is 00:21:41 And I'm telling you why you're not going to do, what you're not going to do and why? Because that implied intent is for me. Like that is the most powerful force that I had as a subordinate leader is what would my boss want me to do here is making sure I understood that. So you saying you got to go out of your way to make it clear. That rings very true with me because as I subordinate, my leadership intent was something I sought to understand early on and really understand because that allowed me to go do what I was supposed to do when they weren't around and do a good job. Yeah, it's interesting. This has had no name before. I'm naming it now implied intent. Now, this links very closely to the next point I want to bring up, which is,
Starting point is 00:22:20 and I've been talking about this, but I just want to, I just want to tie these two things together. It's decentralized command and culture. So decentralized command and culture, look, this is a very easy connection to make, and it's very similar to what we just said. You have implied intent, and then we have, from that implied intent, you start to develop a culture as an organization. And if our culture as an organization is default aggressive, then I know that you can make decisions based on that culture. So culture inside of an organization is like the highest form of decentralized command. And then you can marry that up with another word, culture and values. So if your culture and your values are strong, then people in your chain of command should be able to make 99% of decisions just knowing the culture and the values.
Starting point is 00:23:18 You add some implied intent to that and it's 99.9%. You tell them why they're doing what they're doing and what the parameters are. They can make any of you. You don't never need to talk to them again. So just recognize that values and culture is the highest form of the same. decentralized command and if you haven't instilled values and culture into your team and your team doesn't know what your implied intent is and the thing is this is the thing like I've never never use that word but we've all seen it right but now hopefully people can become conscious about what
Starting point is 00:23:52 imagine if you were working for freaking chesty polar like you don't need to hear anything else you don't need to be told anything there needs to be no briefs the he doesn't need to say a word The implied intent is there. We are going on general patent. Same thing. What's the implied intent? Implied intent is we are not digging in. We are going forward.
Starting point is 00:24:13 Yeah. That's what we're doing. So if you're not going to do that, you need to pull them back. But also as a leader, think about what your implied intent is. And then take that implied intent, capture it, write it down, simplify it, and then distribute it. And guess what you have? You've got a culture, you've got values that are, that create your culture, which then become the backbone of the decentralized command inside your organization. The connection between culture and decentralized command, and as simple as you made that sound, and as I hear it, it's so clear what the connection is, the first time you said it when we were talking about it, I had not thought of into those terms, though.
Starting point is 00:24:58 So if you're listening, you're thinking about, hey, why am I creating? creating values from my organization. Why am I describing what these things are? Decentralized command is what all the leaders want. Leaders want decentralized command. They know that's the end state they want to get to with their team because they can't be everywhere. There's a million reasons why decentralized command is a goal.
Starting point is 00:25:20 But if you don't really think about the connection from culture that it's part of decentralized command, you can miss that in your mind. And when you're doing these exercises where you try to capture a company's vision and writing down the things that define the culture. if you're not making the connection to decentralized command, meaning you're not realizing that those things are what is going to allow your people to do what they should do when you're not around, you're going to miss something.
Starting point is 00:25:47 And when you made the connection, it was still, even for me, a life of like, wow, it's important to say that. Like, why I'm doing this as an organization that we're creating these things because
Starting point is 00:25:58 I want you all to know what to do that is in the best interest of this team when I'm not there. And make that connection for your people. You want me to take it one step for you, one step further for you, Dave Burke? Yes. Check this out. When someone on your team does something that was wrong, that didn't make sense, that you can't understand why, all you have to do is start to deconstruct that decision. And you're going to get to a place where there's no guidance, where there's no values, where there's no, there's no understanding of the why.
Starting point is 00:26:34 So when you see people in your organization that are doing the wrong thing, it pulled pull the string on that. Yeah. You're going to find out why. It's your fault because you haven't given them the implied intent. You haven't them given them the commander's intent. You haven't given them the values and the culture that will drive them to right, make the right decisions.
Starting point is 00:26:57 So how do you fix it? You start to put those things in place. Yeah. That's what you do. Yeah. All right. I guess we'll do one more of these. There was disagreements amongst the leadership at the Battle of Gettysburg.
Starting point is 00:27:19 And there are often disagreements in the way that we get things done. We hear a lot. And I've, this is a quote. Actually, Laif quoted me during one of these debriefs that one of the things that I used to say was, look, if, look, Dave, if you and I'm the boss, or no, you're the boss and we're in there have an argument about how to do an operation and finally say listen jaco you're doing it my way uh so get on board and go start you know start planning your execution this is what i used to tell the young seals when you walk out of that room you execute that mission as if it was your own okay and layf
Starting point is 00:28:04 quoted me on that which is a legitimate quote here's the thing and and again this is all from leadership strategy and tactics. So it's not even like it's that big of a deal. But so they talk about there's two generals. General Lee and General Longstreet. General Lee was, you know, General Longstreet was his, one of his immediate subordinates, who he called his war horse, meaning they had a good relationship. General Longstreet did not want to execute what General Lee's plan was. And so what Leif said was, listen when you and so what he did was when he walked out of the tent with the plan you know generally said listen what we're doing general long street walked out of the plan walked out of the tent and then he waited and hesitated and wait four or five hours and didn't execute and they had to send
Starting point is 00:28:53 a bunch of people like hey what's going on are you going to do this and finally he did it dragging his feet the whole time and and Laif was like hey this is why when you leave you execute it as your own right and then I forget who asked a question or we had you know one of the clients But and as I stood there and was thinking through this they were talking and talking and I said Let me say something here if you don't agree with that plan Don't leave the tent you don't leave the tent Until look Dave if you have a plan that's so good and you can't convince me of it We got a problem bro especially once I've removed my ego
Starting point is 00:29:41 Once or you know once I've removed my ego once I've removed my egos once or you know once I've removed my you go once I've detached from my emotions once I've seen your perspective I've done the right things over here to try and you still can't get me there we got a real freaking problem and that means I'm not leaving the tent I am not leaving the tent now that's the goal now look once you get beyond that there's a bunch of different ways we can go there you know we can go to leadership strategy and tactics where hey you know if you say hey jaco shut up and do it now what is what do I do I can say you can fire me I give up all my influence you'll bring in a yes man look these are all spelled out leadership strategy tactics. I can say, okay, boss, I got it. I'll do the best I can. I go out.
Starting point is 00:30:16 I do the best I can and I mitigate risk as much as possible, try and take care of my team, try and execute the plan, but maybe, like I said, mitigate risk. The stories in Vietnam were Seals a few times got ordered to do things that they did not think was good missions. And so they said, you know what? Okay, cool. We don't want to do that boss. And then boss says, no, shut up and do it. The guys go, okay, cool. They walk outside the wire. They go 100 meters into the jungle. They set up a perimeter. They sit there for the night. They come back, hey, we didn't run in anything.
Starting point is 00:30:44 Same thing with Dick Winters in Band of Brothers. Oh, you want us to do another one of those reconnaissance where we just lost a guy last night and the war is going to be over in any day now? Yep. Okay, got it. I don't think it's a good idea. No, shut up and do it. Okay, got it, boss.
Starting point is 00:30:57 Go down the cellar and drink wine. So that's a whole other thing. But all those, all those subsequent decisions, are based on the primary thing, which is don't leave the tent until you've got to a point where you know you've completely exercised all the demons of the conversation because the chances that you and I on the same team working for the same company with the same goals, which we want to make money, we want to support our clients, we want all these things, or we're at war, we want to kill the bad guys, we want to take our objectives. You and I are aligned. At some level, we have
Starting point is 00:31:45 to be aligned. And if we can't come to a conclusion about what is the right thing to do, I'm not going to leave the tent. That's the first part of it. If you leave the tent, you better figure out which one of those courses of actions you're going to take. I'm going to do this thing to the best of my ability. I'm going to mitigate the risk as much as I can. Like, there's a bunch of things that happened. But it starts with, if we don't agree, I'm not leaving the tent. I wrote down. As you started this, I just wrote down in my little margin, I wrote down ego because I'm thinking, I'm putting myself in that situation.
Starting point is 00:32:17 So I'm Longstreet, you're Lee, we're in the tent. We're doing this thing. And we've been doing this thing. Actually, you and I've been doing this thing at Eschlon Front for about as long as they probably were. You know, I got three, four years into my belt here. So now I'm in a situation. Jocker gives me the big picture brief.
Starting point is 00:32:31 I'm sitting and I'm like, hmm, that actually, that seems wrong. So already right away, that's a very low probability. I'm not saying it's not possible. Like, that's immediate red flag. When I wrote down ego, I was thinking to myself as before I leave the tent, this isn't about me trying to convince you that your plan is wrong.
Starting point is 00:32:51 It's like, for me, it's the opposite of, hey, Jocko, I'm still missing something. I'm not understanding this. And it's not always. There's always that caveat, but the likely issue isn't that your plan is bad. It's that I'm missing something about what you want. And when I wrote down ego, it's, I'm not there. to try to change your mind. I'm there to really figure out what am I doing wrong. So I can't leave the tent until I actually get past what I don't understand. Now, there may be some times that I got to,
Starting point is 00:33:22 I have to come up with a way to maneuver around what you're doing too. But the likelihood, if we are this aligned, and you kind of covered a lot of what I was going to say, which is, I mean, think about the situation here. This is you and I, after three and a half years with all the same goals, objectives, and all of a sudden, I can't get past what you're asking me to do. Okay, what's really going on here? And more than likely what's going on is I've created an answer in my mind that's different than yours. And I want to dig in and get you to see it my way. I can't leave the tent until I actually understand what you're saying.
Starting point is 00:33:58 And that to me is much more likely of a problem that it's me instead of you. And actually, if I take that approach and you see me take that approach, you're actually more likely to go, oh, hang on, hang on. You keep pushing back. Let me see if I'd really understand this myself. Anyway, that's just what I wrote down is thinking of what's going to be the biggest problem for me in that tent. It's going to be me. I have this goal when I'm in a disagreement with somebody. And this shocks people all the time.
Starting point is 00:34:27 But when I disagree with Dave, my goal is to understand why Dave is right and I'm wrong. It's not to win the argument. It's not even not to win the argument. It's like, how am I wrong right now and how can Dave be right? My goal is to have Dave be right. Yeah. And if you go with that approach, it disarms your ego. My ego is factually disarmed because I'm trying to prove that you're right.
Starting point is 00:34:48 And what that allows, it allows the actual problems that we're facing to rise to the surface so we can come up with a good solution. Well, we always try and allegedly keep this podcast a little shorter. So let's try and do that tonight. It's a good place to stop. If you want to dig deeper into all these aspects of leadership in any arena, you want to hear, us and the rest of the Eschelon Front team talking about these things, answering questions. By the way, if you want to ask your question, go to eFonline.com. Join one of our live webinars that are happening all the time.
Starting point is 00:35:24 We'll sit there and talk to you about it. That's what we do. We solve problems through leadership. If you want leadership guidance inside your organization, come and check out our leadership consultancy at Escalonfront.com. I've also written a bunch of books on the subject of leadership. Extreme ownership, dichotomy of leadership, leadership strategy and tactics. Got some other podcasts, Jocko podcast, Jocko Unraveling, grounded, and the Warrior Kid podcast.
Starting point is 00:35:49 And if you want to support any of these podcasts, including this one, you can get some gear from jocco store.com or from origin, mane.com. That's it for tonight. Thanks for listening to The Debrief. Now go lead. This is Dave and Jocko. Out.

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