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This is the JoCo De-brief podcast, Episode seven with Dave Burke and me, Jocke Willink. Dave, let's debrief. What do you got?

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Right on. We've got a project manager, so he's one of four senior project managers and the PM's at this company.

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They don't have any direct reports.

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What they've got is they've got a pool of what they call junior consultants. So basically a pool of folks that support them on the different projects.

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And the senior project managers work with the junior consultants to solve problems.

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This guy has been recently hired as a senior PM is works with other PMS who are all way more experienced than 15 years more senior to him. And they've got their own way of doing it. They are a little bit more independent than him, not big delegate. It's kind of like to manage their programs and they haven't really.

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They haven't really done a good job of mentoring and involving those junior project, those junior consultants. So what this guy is struggling with, one of the challenges is dealing with this. He wants to evolve those relationships with those junior consultants and help them.

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But he doesn't want to step on the toes of the senior consultants. So he sees the need, this little leadership void to bring in the the evolution of these consultants. But he also knows he's new. He needs to navigate that without overstepping his bounds. And he also wants to make sure that he doesn't take all the stuff on his own. He's got a job to do. And that consulting piece is important and he doesn't want to get overloaded with the work.

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Well, I give him right now out of the gate on a for awareness because a lot of people coming out of the gate, especially they're young and they're they're fired up.

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They can't even comprehend that maybe it might rub some people the wrong way to start, you know, being the the shining example of a mentor to the young troops.

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So good for him. He gets an A for awareness. Yeah.

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At this point. No, I do. And I think also the awareness of that these junior consultants also need to be mentored and realizing that, hey, this is a role that that he needs to fill. So.

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The first part of that conversation we had was. Really just getting as he recognized and he knows this, you're the junior guy, so you need to tread lightly. You cannot walk in here and start with, hey, you're welcome. I'm here. I'm here to fix things.

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When you and I talked about this, there's this concept that you keep coming back to the term the minimum force required. So the amount of influence, the amount of exertion you want to push to get the outcome that you want without doing it so much, that it's very clear that what you're doing is applying force to the Senate to the situation, which is interesting because some people don't even recognize that there's a spectrum of force that can be applied.

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They only recognize that there is one level maximum force. And even if they don't recognize maximum force, they just kind of roll around at like Level seven force who that's what we need to get done. That's that's how some people roll.

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And what's really cool is if you want to look at that spectrum, there's this spectrum of maximum force where you're just imposing your will on your subordinates.

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When you get to a true minimum force, all of a sudden you're in a spot where the the people that are having the force applied to them don't even recognize it. It's so subtle that they just actually think they're proactively doing what it is that they want to do. And they don't realize that they've been guided in a way, by this this unseen, unfelt force that's moving them in the right direction. So if you can lead without saying a word, without, you know, with barely doing anything, you have effectively led with the minimum force required, which is the goal.

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Why? Because every time we use force of any level, it's an expenditure. It's an expenditure of leadership capital. So when we impose our will somewhere, it's it's spending our leadership capital. And we are trying not to spend our leadership capital. Yeah, indeed. The other component that I wanted him to look at was. What do you think the other PMS, his three pairs of seniors, what would they what do they want in the end? They probably want to be supported by this pool of junior consultants as best as possible, so this isn't something he needs to look at and go, hey, there's a problem.

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And what I need to worry about is creating a bigger problem for my peers. He's actually helping solve a problem that kind of like you said, maybe they're not aware that this problem is is an issue because the way that they they manage the situation. But as he influences and becomes central to the evolution of how that team operates, that team is just going to get better. And the beneficiaries of that is going to be those peers. And if he thought of it in the terms of as I'm doing this and finding ways to mentor those teams, he actually is helping his counterparts.

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And so there's not really if he looks at it the right way, there's not really friction resistance there, assuming it doesn't do what you just described, which is walking in, you know, the the the level 11, I'm here to fix problems that. Oh, by the way, the implication would be is those are problems you've created. I wasn't even here for this, but clearly these are the things you've been doing wrong.

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He can actually help those other project managers, those those other senior guys without them even really knowing it.

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Yeah, the friction that he needs to watch out for is everyone else's egos and his own ego. But that's the friction. That could be a problem here, because ultimately, from a sense of broad alignment, hey, what we're doing is we're training our subordinates so they can better support us.

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Is there anyone that votes? No. OK, great.

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So we're all kind of on board with this. As long as you can keep away from people's egos and not scratch their precious ego, we should be able to move forward.

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Yeah, how can I help? How can I help this group of people better support you and the projects that you're leading. Get a little bit of advice, get a little support and then take responsibility for that and just watch them be the beneficiaries of that. So the ego never gets part of that equation at all. And at the exact same time, you've probably got this pool of junior consultants that are probably struggling because these three different leaders, probably all different.

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They got their own nuances and they probably don't know how to manage that relationship as well as they could. And what they really need is some some mentorship. And if he can gently become the person that helps these junior consultants navigate those relationships with their bosses, that team is just going to get better. They're going to they're going to be better at what they're doing and he's going to be central to their development.

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And it can be something where he he doesn't he doesn't need to take credit for that. He doesn't need to be acknowledged as the one doing it. He can be the one that recognizes what the senior folks need. And now the junior folks can better support them. And he becomes the quiet or almost silent influence in making everybody in their role better. So the outcome of this and the cool opportunities is a huge leadership opportunity. It's easy to be the reason why that entire team starts to perform better.

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So this reminds me of a little trick.

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It's a trick. It has to two situations that you can utilize this trick, it is subordinate jobs or let's even call them menial jobs.

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So one one way to use this trick is, you know, you're my boss, Dave.

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And we could take this case right here.

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Hey, Dave, I know that it's kind of a pain to to to mentor these young troops. And, you know, I know you got more important things to do. I don't mind doing it because I'm kind of new here.

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And you're like, you know what sounds like good call Jocke, but you go ahead and mentor them.

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So I actually just subordinated my ego, elevated your ego, and I got to do exactly what I wanted to do. This is something that you can do all the time. You can use that trick all the time, even though, look, we both know.

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We both know factually. Is there anything more important in the world than than educating and mentoring and raising up the troops below you in the chain of command? There's nothing more important.

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But if somebody wants to sluffed that job off to me, I'll take it all day long and I'll make it seem like it's some tedious, meaningless thing that they have to do. So that's one way to utilize that tool. The other way utilize that tool is when you now you're working for me, Dave.

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And I know that you need to you need to like some help. You need you need to you need to hone your skills at whatever.

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So what do I do?

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I say, hey, Dave, you know, you seem like you've got a handle on this. Can you teach a class in it? And it's something that I know you need work on, but I go, hey, you know, Dave, I know you need to hone your skills right down to that. Say, Dave, you know, I think you've got a good handle on this. What do you say?

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That, hey, can you can you can you teach the rest of the guys at Echelon Front about cover move?

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Can you just do, like, a little thing about that just so everyone kind of gets your perspective and you go, yeah, yeah.

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No problem, JoCo. I got it, you know. Yeah, I know, I know. Everyone kind of looks up to my skills when it comes to cover and move and boom. You say you've got it and now you go, hey guys, AFSA. Hey everyone. Dave is going to spend 15 minutes going over a cover move because I think he's got a good perspective on it. And now you actually dig in, you teach it, you learn it, you understand it better and.

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We all win. So that's a cool thing to do, it's a cool little skill to have some cool little technique to have in your in your back pocket, whether you're using it to overcome someone's ego or whether you're using it to provide someone with a little ego lift while you're actually improving their skills, both situations when win.

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I'll remember that next time you ask me to do something when you really getting that right on. All right.

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We're going to the next one. Yeah, I think so. Is this problem solved? Dude, this problem is on the track to being solved. And the cool part you started that was an A for his awareness. The conversation we had, his awareness was a huge part of it. To recognize the just the the just to recognize the terrain that he was on makes the tactical things that he's doing so much easier because he actually sees the big picture.

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Now he's just supporting that bigger strategy as opposed to walking in thinking, hey, I came out these guys really hard now. I set myself up in a bad situation. He didn't do any of those things. So like you said, that observation.

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He understood what was getting into. So you've heard me say before, there's nothing more important than knowing where you are on the battlefield. That's obviously the most important thing. Once you know where you are, great.

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That step one, step two is like, OK, what's this terrain look like? How do I fit in this terrain? How can I utilize this terrain? Which direction do I move? What do I need to watch out for? And that's what he did. Knew where he was. Where is he?

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Let's let's outline is where is he on the battlefield.

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He's new. He is less experienced. He has some skills and he wants to do good. That's where he's out. He knows where he's at. That's a very important thing. And then he does a quick terrain study, OK? Other people are more experienced in me. Other people have some egos that probably don't want to get to work. So these are just knowing your terrain and then he's just able to maneuver through that terrain and use it to his advantage.

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That's what you do on the battlefield, what you do on the battlefield. You don't go, OK, there's high ground over there, whatever. No, you go there's high ground over there. I'm going to take it. Or you say, oh, there's an enemy. Strong point. What do you do? Just attack it? No, you go, oh, there's an enemy. Strong point. I'm going to avoid that. That's how you study the terrain of human beings and that's how you utilize the terrain that you're looking at.

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You know where you are. You analyze that terrain and then you maneuver effectively and you actually utilize the terrain.

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That's what you do right on. You've been waiting for me to tie a knot on Mount Lebanon, a couple of podcasts go, I forget which one it was. I was like, hey, people are talking and there's the little there's the little completion of that thought. Yeah. And pulling back from that one, we're talking about the terrain.

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And it was the example of, hey, this this obstacle, this you're not moving that terrain, that you're not moving that mountain, you're not moving that that entrenched position. You you actually have to move around it. You have to maneuver around it. And that connection of what the terrain is and the fact that you're not going to move that terrain, you have to maneuver around the terrain. That's that viewpoint is huge when you're when you're assessing what is you're actually trying to do.

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And then you can go ahead, move yourself into positions on the battlefield where you can no longer move. You can move yourself and you can be yourself into the low ground, you can move yourself up against a cliff where you can't get up that thing and you just have to sit there and suck it up. What does that look like? It looks like, you know, the boss that you paint into a corner by calling them out during a meeting and all of a sudden you've got no you're going down.

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You're just going to sit there and get punished and eat a multitude of ways for that.

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So, yes, if you understand that and you can maneuver through, it's like jujitsu or, you know, you could cross somebody if you're on the bottom and some of the crosseyed on you, you cannot bench press them off you. You can't I mean, maybe if they're a hundred pounds, but if they're equivalent size and weight to you because they can apply pressure in different ways, you can't just bench press them off of you. You can't lift them two feet, you can lift them about an inch and that can give you the space that you need to maneuver.

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All right, next question. All right, this next scenario, well, similar, we've got an experienced engineer. He's he's joined the team. He's a senior engineer. And the team that he's about to join has a reputation of not wanting to work well with other teams. But interesting, the reason behind it is that at least the reputation is that the other teams that sort of they build this product and they deliver to them, the other teams don't deliver.

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So they've got this friction based relationship between the team who just joined and another team that really is designed to support them. And what's happened is that this team, is he on they work with the other team because they have to. But the approach is that they kind of they kind of they kind of track everything so they know the other team is not going to deliver.

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And so rather than build a really good relationship, they kind of monitor all the things they aren't doing. And they kind of got this checklist of, OK, this didn't happen on time, OK? This didn't happen to this quality level. And so that friction has created this other team that has a reputation of not being able to deliver. They don't deliver. And this team's approach is to go on.

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The team will just say this team is the team that doesn't work well with others, but they get the job done. Yes. And now we got the B team is the team that doesn't get things done on time. We underperforms. And the teams approach to working at the B team is to keep track of everything the B team doesn't do, but not really to help them in any way, but not really help. That's exactly right.

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But so remember this, this senior editor just joined that team and again, similar. He knows he has this. He has the sense of eight.

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Our leadership, these two teams work for a boss. What the boss really needs is this product to get out on time, to be at the right quality. And this boss understands that there's unhealthy relationship and he sees right away our approach to doing this actually isn't helping us in the long run.

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So his question and the issues dealing with is the same thing is, hey, how can he evolve this relationship with this other team? That is, by the way, they are underperforming. The B team is the team. They are not doing the things they need to do. And similar thing is what he's really talking about is he's trying to change the culture inside the organization, partially for his team and for this other team that's not under his chain of command, doesn't work directly for him.

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They work together. And probably the first thing that we talked about in one of the first issues is as he sees that there's a long history here, this is a this is how it's been historically. I talked about this idea of culture changes. Look, the way you see it is right. It should be very obvious that what you should do, that the team is help them. That's what they need. Don't underestimate how difficult that is going to be, because the scar tissue of the ateam being burned by the B team goes back a long way.

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And part of it is that, hey, you need to play a little long game here of what you're trying to do. And the other piece of that, that conversation was right out of out of this book is, hey, there's a piece of of this idea of conforming to influence leadership strategy and tactics, by the way. Yeah.

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I'm just I'm just going to like everybody knows what I'm doing.

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But, of course, is leadership changing tactics, because that's that's the reference point for these Real-Life tactical situations, because as he joins the team, guess what the team is telling them. Hey, welcome aboard. Team is awesome. By the way, those guys, the B team, they're terrible. And what you can't walk in is go. Oh, hey, take it easy, guys. Maybe the problem here is actually you maybe you're the reason why that team has been been struggling.

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So you have to do a little bit of that conform to influence and also connect to that little bit of that reflect and diminish, which is a man that's a that sounds terrible. Now, tell me more about that would have been those issues that has affected us and then start to kind of work that down.

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And I said, hey, the first thing you can do, the best thing you could do when you join this team, build some credibility, build some credibility so you can start to create some influence. The other side of this is this. He was hired as a senior engineer. This isn't a rookie. This isn't a brand new guy. He was brought in by that boss to help with this team, to help with the team.

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As an experienced engineer, the likelihood that the boss brought him in just to do engineering things probably isn't the whole story. And when we talked about this, hey, what's how well does your leadership understand the friction? Because, oh, that was that was one of the key points of the conversation of one of the things that that boss says is the problem between his two subordinate teams. So you got brought in as a senior and senior engineer on the team, the team that's doing really well.

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And one of the conversations he was having with you is what's been wrong with that other team that you're not responsible for? So what does it give you that gives you a huge opportunity to influence your team with their team? Because really what the team needs, because you already said is what written out they need help, they need leadership. And your boss probably recognizes that.

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That's one of the reasons why he brought you in here.

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Why do you think the boss didn't put the new leader into the team?

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So if I'm a leader, if I am in charge of this, if I'm the boss and I have these two teams, I've got a performing team and I've got an underperforming team and I bring you in as my next mid-level manager that I'm going to put in one of these two teams, me putting you on the B team. To me, that immediately reinforces the B teams. The problem I'm bringing this guy in and he's here to solve those. He's here to fix you when your team.

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But the connection between those two teams is. There are different teams, but they work really closely together and the team is actually the final there where everything comes into and they're the one that actually deliver the product to the client. They're the ones the team. That's the team.

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So we've got to be there's actually a couple of other teams. The two teams are fine, but all these three other two or three teams feed into the team that delivers it to the client. And I think that is for me, that's the key. That's the key point of friction outward to the to the client that we're serving and also to the relationships inside the organization.

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So I'm going to put you on that team to influence those other teams or the other teams since the team delivers the final product, as are the other teams, slightly maybe even psychologically subordinate to the team. Yeah, I think so, yeah.

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Because that would make sense to me too, that I'm going to take the the pipefitter and say, hey, you're going into the team because that's where everything comes together. And so that's where I need this senior engineer with the leadership experience to go in there and fix these problems.

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And included in that is making sure that you don't have friction with these other teams so you can get the job done. So, OK, so so I'm assuming that you you told the guy, hey, you may want to try helping the B team.

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I mean, that was that's the simplest way to describe the answer, the help with the B team.

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I think the challenging part for him is that he doesn't just walk over the B team and say, here, I'm here to help you. It's actually getting the people on his team, that final delivery team, to recognize that the mindset that I'm going to keep track of all your mistakes, I'm going to highlight all those mistakes.

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I'm going to shove those mistakes in your face. And I'm going to let my boss know that despite all your mistakes, we're still making that happen, actually hurts us in the long run. It actually undermines us in the long run, because what we need from that other team is we actually need a better product sooner and on time. And so that help actually is recognizing that his own team, the team that he's now responsible for is where we can make the biggest influence.

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So you want to hear how I learned this lesson? Yes, I love when you write stuff that I learned this lesson.

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I was going through basic school training and in basic SEAL training, you have room inspections. And during your inspections, they, you know, they check your bed. It's got to be made a certain way.

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They check your floor. It's got to be swept and waxed and and your boots have got to be polished. And you're all the stuff. Right. All the standard kind of military stuff. Well, they also expect your dive gear or your swim gear because we're not even dive. This is in first phase.

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You don't even have diving yet, but you have a life jacket which has a little metal actuator, which has to be clean and rust free. And you polished this brass canister of CO2 until it's like a gleaming and you have a knife and your knife has to be razor sharp.

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So so I had my I had three roommates. So we have roommates. You're in you're in a barracks, but you have four people to a room.

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At least when I went through it was and my roommates, we all we all got along great. We had a great crew of guys in there and they come in and we spent the whole weekend like I didn't go out. I mean, you could do weird thing about seal training. People don't as you can go out on the weekend, if you wanted to go get drunk on a Saturday, you could do that. I didn't do that.

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I sat there, sharpen my knife and polish my boots and starts my uniforms and just was trying to get ready for these inspections. Now, you don't pass these inspections like, well, you just you're just not going to pass these inspections. But you still, in my mind, try as hard as you possibly can.

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So anyways, I spent the whole weekend and so did my roommates. We were all stripped the floor. We waxed the floor. We make our beds, we repaint our helmets. We do all this stuff, sharpen the knives, polish the boots.

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So. I was good I was good at polishing boots for sure, I was good at sharpening my knife for sure, I was pretty good at these menial tasks. I'm pretty good at just doing meaningless like labor. Right.

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So the one of the instructors comes in and he's going through my gear and he picks up my knife and my knife is razor sharp, razor sharp.

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And he takes it and he picks it up and he shaves the hair on his arm and he's like gives me like the nod of approval.

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And I'm thinking, That's right. That's right. Then he walks over that. He walks over to one of my roommates and he's got his gear, picks up his knife. It's not as sharp. And he goes, you know, and he says, hey, whatever, whatever the name is, he goes, Hey, Smith, your knife sucks.

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And then he and he goes, Willink, what kind of buddy fucker are you?

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Don't even teach your friend how to sharpen his knife. And then he walks back over, picks up my knife and on the bunk beds that we have, there's a there's a metal pipe across, you know, the the the the foot of the bunk bed and he just takes a knife.

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It goes just smashes it like blade onto the thing.

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King, King, King, King just ruins this knife and then tells me to go hit the surf and then tells him to go and we all go to the surf.

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But the point there is think about that from the reality of that situation. What kind of loser am I if I'm taking care of myself over here, but I'm not taking care of my body, my friend, my teammate.

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And so when you document and show me the list of the things that the other team failed on, you make me sick to my stomach. I am not impressed in any way, shape or form or the performance of your team. In fact, I'm I'm I actually I actually don't like you. If you bring me the list of what the other guy and what the other team mistakes that they made, I don't like you as a person and I want to hurt you.

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So that's just so crazy. So if you think about it from that perspective and this is one of those things, right?

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This is one of those things where our minds play a trick on us, because the trick is it's so obvious when I when I tell that story, when I say, hey, Dave, if you bring me the list of the mistakes that you're that you're pure made, that's what you do.

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I don't like you and I'm pissed off at you. You're a bad teammate. You're a bad leader. I don't like you.

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It's so obvious, right. No one likes that guy. But when we're when we're in that position, when we're in that position, we think, you know what?

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I'll look good. I look good if I show the boss what the mistakes. Here's a list of the mistakes that Dave Burke made here. Look at look at how bad Dave Burke is. It's such a loser thing to do. So don't do that.

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Don't do that. Instead, help them out.

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And nobody, despite whatever history's going on here, nobody even really wants to be on that team.

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Nobody really wants to be a part of that part of the team where the rat the rats are, by the way, that hang up on one note, I didn't take that. I wanted to say rat. Yeah, because that's a rat right there.

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And nobody really wants to be a part of that.

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And the way we concluded this was, hey, think about the reaction. I'm talking to him now. Think about the reaction you're going to get from your team. If you carve out just a little bit of bandwidth as a relatively new guy, you head over to that other team and and you help them with some product delivery piece or you give a little bit of bandwidth to them and support them. And this thing that the team's been waiting on gets here just a little bit sooner and it's a little bit better.

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What how did you get the team going to react to that? And I think what you said sort of expands on that makes it more clear if you go from the outside in your team doesn't want to be a part of that either. What they really want to be a part of is a whole bunch of people working together, doing a really good job so that everybody is doing well. That's what they really want. And this little infection of, hey, that's how we do things over here in the team.

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They don't really want they don't want to be a rat. They don't want to be. It's actually not something they really want us to revel in the failure of their counterparts. And if you give them a chance over time to see the difference between the two things and let them get that sense of what it's like to contribute to another team so that they benefit. Now, you get these two choices, which choice do you think your team is actually going to make it?

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That was a choice and it's so straightforward. And I talked about what reaction you're going to get when you show them that this is how you're going to operate and they benefit from that. And here's something to watch out for.

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So so what you said is true in the purest form, which is this I want to be part of the team that does good across the board.

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Right.

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If you take everyone at the highest level and you say, hey, which part, which team do you want to be a part of the team that supports the other teams and consolidates everyone for the win or the team that's ratting each other out? Everyone answers that question the right way.

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Here's the problem.

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That might be what they really want to be a part of, but there's something that's much easier to be a part of, and that is and it's easier to unify a team.

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And it's easier to rip people down than it is to build them up, so we will we will tend towards the lowest common denominator of, hey, it's us against them. It's us against them. It's our gang against their gang. What did I write about?

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Leadership, strategy and tactics. I wrote about that idea of here you are, you're part of this group.

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And it's it happens in boot camp, right in the beginning of boot camp, the drill instructors or at officer candidate school, the drill instructors, they're formulating a common enemy for the class to be against.

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And what that does is unifies us. It's very simple, very simple mentality. Writes A very simple trick to play. Hey, this drill instructors are son of a bitch and we hate him. And he's making us do all these things and it actually unifies the team.

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And what I talked about, leadership, strategy and tactics was what the trap that we fall into is.

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It's really easy when someone says, oh, the boss is a total idiot. It's such an easy step because I want to be friend.

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Dave, I walk into work, you know, I meet Dave for the first time. Hey, how are you doing, Dave? It's good to be working with you. And we're peers. And then you go, hey, by the way, our freaking boss is an idiot.

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And it's really easy for me the next day say, wow, you were right about that guy. I didn't know he's such an idiot. And all of a sudden we're brose. Now we have unified against a common enemy. And that's the easiest path to take.

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And it happens not only with it up the chain of command, but it happens with my team and your team. And it's the easy if you join my team. One of the easiest ways for us to bond is for us to say, you know, it's for me to look at you and say, hey, I'm glad you I'm glad you got I'm glad you're here, man. We need some help because the freaking B team doesn't carry their weight.

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And you go, you got to be kidding me. And all of a sudden we're bonded. So we have to resist that.

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We have to resist that that susceptibility that we all have to utilize negativity as a way to strengthen our core group.

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Look, I'm not saying you never do it right. I'm not saying I never do.

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I'm not saying I never talked about some other task unit as if they were the bane of the world and they didn't even deserve to be in the games. No, I would do that because it's us against them. So, yes, why would I utilize that from time to time?

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Yes, but it's not your go to and I would certainly never make it cross the line where we were actually going to do some kind of extraction or sabotage another task unit that I would I wouldn't do that.

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So it's a little word of caution, there's some things you got to look out for, we have we tend towards the path of least resistance and it's way easy.

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It's way easier to hate and tear down than it is to build and lift up.

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Yeah, I mean, obviously that makes sense, thinking about it and and. There's a piece about sometimes the the the energy sometimes that it takes to continue to reinforce this viewpoint of how how screwed up another team is.

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And I'm even just thinking the idea of, like you guys are tracking this stuff, like, how much time does that like?

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Yeah. And even though that's hard, think about what's even harder. What's even harder is saying, OK, you know what, they got some shortfalls. We're going to help them.

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Hey, the easy path is like we're going to write this down, which is total savages.

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The hard thing to say is, hey, listen, what can we do to make what can we do to support them and help them out? We're here to win. If we if they don't win, we don't win. And that's the long game. That's the scar tissue we're talking about. The beginning with him was like, hey, listen, you're not going to come in overnight and change this. There's there's this entrenched way of doing it. And you're going to play this a little bit longer than you might want to get them to see that.

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And look, I mean, that's that's kind of what we do. We come into these organizations. We come in with these teams. We see things from from a different perspective. We see it from a different viewpoint.

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And then we help make the connection between the principles that we teach and how, if they apply them and where to apply them, how it eventually will make their individual lives better, which makes their team better, which makes our life better. And that cycle is a cycle we're trying to create by helping them connect what we teach to their world.

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So you just mentioned this. You said, you know, you're going to play the long game. And I was I was reading something the other day, and I can't remember where I read it. But check this out when you start talking about the long game. Do you know how long that is when you talk? Let me let me rephrase that. When you talk about the strategic wind, you know how long that strategic game is? Forever.

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Forever. The the the difference between, you know, the tactical and the operational is that the strategic win is unconstrained by time and space.

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So this goes on forever. That's what the long game is. The long game doesn't have an end, which is kind of crazy.

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It's kind of crazy to think that we're doing something because we're going to win. We're going to win forever. So how long is a long game? It's long. It's very long.

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Yeah, what else? Well, again, like I said that so that problem solved. Yeah. Yes. I think we're tracking on that problem. And it was just all these. And look, we get to see these things all I mean, before I drove down here for this, I had I was three hours straight of just individual problems, problem solving on different things with different clients, different situations.

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And that's my life, bro. I get to do that all the time, which is which is actually kind of ridiculous.

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Yeah. I just had a call with a client, which was my first call with this particular client, and he was he said this.

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He goes, you know, I listen to you and I get jealous.

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I mean, this guy is running a big, massive company.

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He goes, I get jealous because you get to learn so much. And I said, you know, normally I deny you when somebody is jealous of me, I say, well, nothing to be jealous of over here, but you should be jealous that that is. I didn't say that to him. But that is a legitimate thing. The fact that you and me and the rest of the team and at some point we get to go through all these different experiences with companies.

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And the other thing is they have to experience a problem for three months. We get in there, we get this condensed version of the problem, we learn about the whole thing, and then we get to come up with a solution in two days.

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And and that's awesome because we get to learn all those lessons along the way. So, yeah, totally. And and for me, the coolest part about it is that I, I mostly stay with the company and we've got multiple companies are a bunch of clients, but I stay with them for a long time and a lot of them come like, hey, you know, we have a plan to work together for maybe three months or so.

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And that might be kind of the going in plan that they have. And we're good to support whatever they want. And that three months. Hey, can you. And we stay longer and we get to see the evolution of these things individually and we get to see the evolution of the organization, how an organization changes. You know, we'll start with like a basic assessment. And then a year later, we get to look at see how much by just applying these just applying these principles, just taking the things that you talk about on the podcast, the things that are in the book, extreme ownership, the things that are in leadership, strategy and tactics, just applying those as we give them that perspective that you look back and think and you can see how much better they are and how much better their lives are.

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And I get to do that every single day.

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You know what's cool? Here's something that I didn't account for in the early days of Echelon Front, in the early days of the front. And I don't know. Yeah, you were you were on board.

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Do you remember me saying, hey, listen. Our goal isn't to set up five year contracts with companies because it shouldn't take us five years, it shouldn't take us three years, it shouldn't take us two years, shouldn't take us one year. We should be able to go in, assess what a company's going through and then get them aligned and organized and get their leadership set and and that's cool.

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And so if it takes us three months, six months pushing, if we're talking nine months, 12 months, I start looking at myself saying, wait a second, we're making a mistake here. Here's what I didn't account for.

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And this has been so awesome, is that when you take a company that has got some issues and you get those issues aligned in two months, well, then all of a sudden they get a massive increase in business.

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They their profitability goes up. They start hiring more people and all of a sudden their growth, they end up with new new issues that need to be resolved. And they already know where they resolve their problems last time. And they see the growth that they got from it. They come right back and say, hey, all right, we need to we need to do this again. We need to we need to go over this. We need to grow.

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When you get our new leaders trained up, like that's what happens.

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So I didn't do a good job of accounting for that when I had that philosophy in my in the early days of Echelon front of saying, hey, listen, you we we are not here to milk you of all this money. We're here to come in, solve your problems and leave. That's what a special operations unit is supposed to do. Come in and solve your problems and leave. Right.

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That's what our goal was.

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And is it echelon front? Here's the deal, though. Once you come in, solve the problems, then growth happens, things change. They acquire other companies. We get mergers and all of a sudden they go, hey, where can we get some assistance again? And it's like, yes, absolutely. You're so when when they win, we win. And it works out good.

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And that happens all the time. We'll work with sometimes one line of business inside a huge company, huge companies, and then that six month engagement will be done. Hey, we have a whole nother line of business out in this region.

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Would you be available? And of course, the answer's always yes. And the philosophy that you talk to me about at the beginning when you were standing up this this l'état program, hey, Dave, you're in a kind of lead this segment here. We are not in there to get our hooks in some company where they are relying on us. We're actually taking the exact opposite approach. We want them to be self-sustaining, to take we teach and not need us anymore.

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And it made sense when you said it, but I didn't have the foresight either of we go in there and we get that feedback and then there's all these other areas. They bring in their acquiring new companies, like you're saying, or they have other segments that are just decoupled from what they're doing. And they're they're asking us to do more. And and one of the cool things we're doing now is it's almost universal. The teams, the companies we're working on want us to help them build their own sustainment team where we train their folks to be facilitators of the same stuff.

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And so, yeah, and once somebody comes back to the well, three or four times, that's when we tell them, hey, listen, we can keep doing this, but we don't want to. You guys should do this on your own. And it's the same thing. You know, this is this is a this is a once again, the special operations models, more of a Green Beret model.

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Right. Which is, hey, we're going to we're going to train the trainers. We're going to train the troops once we've trained the troops and we've got a good amount of troops and they know what they're doing and the leadership is working together. Cool.

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Well, eventually we want to train trainers that can and we do the you know, we've worked with companies where we set up their own, like, customized leadership training program that we don't have to be a part of any more. So our time span has spread out a little more than I originally anticipated when we started this whole thing out. But you're right, the goal is not to get hooks in. The goal is to have people be able to carry on on their own and they are able to high five us.

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We walk away and they carry on in perpetuity for just victory.

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Yes. Check anything else? I mean, that's what you do with an El LDAP, with a with with an El, that program, you do an assessment, you check out what they're doing, their principals, how they're doing it. Look at how we can. Get our principles into what they're doing. We don't have to come in, by the way. We have to come in and take their principles and throw them out. Now, we don't need to do that.

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The principles are line. The leadership principles that we talk about are aligned in any organization, yet any organization to include ones that have never thought about it before or ones that have completely well crafted mission values.

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They fit everywhere. They're as tools to reinforce what they are doing or help them build it from the ground up. They fit everywhere. Right on. All right, we went a little long, and that's a good place to stop. So if you want to dig deeper into all these aspects of leadership in any arena, you can join Dave and me and the rest of the Echelon front team at EFF online dot com, where we will sit there on Zoome or actually I stand.

[00:41:57]

Stand there and answer your questions, solve your problems if you want to go to Yev online dotcom, you can come and talk to us. If you want leadership guidance inside your organization, which is what we're talking about, come check out a leadership consultancy, Echelon Front Dotcom. I've also written a bunch of books on the subject of leadership, extreme ownership, the dichotomy of leadership and leadership, strategy and tactics. Got some other podcasts once called JoCo podcast, once called JoCo Unraveling, once called Grounded and one is called the Warrior Kid podcast.

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If you want to support any of these podcasts, including this one, you can get some gear from JoCo store dot com or you can get some gear from Origin Main Dotcom. Thanks for listening to us as we debrief. Now go lead. This is Dave and JoCo out.