Saltwater Leadership Second Edition: A Primer on Leadership for the Sea Services
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Saltwater Leadership Second Edition - Robert Wray
PREFACE
The word primer,
according to Webster’s Dictionary, is a small introductory book on a subject,
from the Medieval Latin primarium. This book is intended as a primer. In no way does it deserve to sit alongside such seminal leadership texts as Karel Montor’s Naval Leadership, which took dozens of people dozens of years to produce. It is intended as a short, simple book that can be read in five-minute snippets by a busy young officer at sea.
Much of the material in this book is Navy-centric. This has three causes: First, the authors have served in the Navy, collectively, for over 110 years, and many of the contributors to this book responded because they knew us from prior service together. Second, due to its size, the Navy has more officers serving at sea today than either the Coast Guard or the U.S. Merchant Marine, so a preponderance of officers-at-sea stories come from that greater population. And third, the Navy has been more prolific in the generation of books about leadership than either the Coast Guard or Merchant Marine. Because this book provides an overview of some of the existing literature, its content therefore becomes more Navy-oriented. In any case, this is a book for junior officers at sea, regardless of service type, community, or agency. We have attempted to make the stories and lessons applicable to all, regardless of the source. We believe any young graduate from Kings Point can learn a lesson from a Coast Guard cutter in the Caribbean, just as a graduate from an NROTC unit can learn seagoing lessons from deep-draft tankers in Alaskan waters.
Finally, we would like to acknowledge the contributions of CDR David Wallace of the USNA Leadership Department for his contributions to chapter 2.
—RADM Robert O. Wray Jr., USN (Ret.)
—CDR Andrew K. Ledford, USN, PhD
—VADM John B. Mustin, USN
—RDML Theodore P. S. LeClair, USN
INTRODUCTION
This book is about leadership, written for leaders at sea. It is not intended to be an academic text. As you’ll see, it’s certainly not a work of literature. It is intended to be functional, simple, down to earth, easy to digest, and straightforward, communicating basic truths without frills.
Leadership deals with the very nature of humanity, with what we are here for, with how we should interact with other humans, with what we should do in this world. It is a serious matter. Some books on leadership necessarily deal with the philosophic and existential issues of why humans do what we do and how we do it. Leadership strikes at the heart of humanity and vice versa. It can be a satisfying and worthwhile study.
Other books focus on the more pedestrian, more pragmatic views of leadership. What is it? How can we describe it? How can we identify the successful ways of leadership? And, more importantly, how can we become successful leaders?
This book focuses on the latter view, specifically for leaders at sea. The authors have been where you are—we know your busy life might not leave room for reading the classic texts cover to cover to learn leadership. Instead, this book attempts to offer you simple leadership lessons in bite-sized chunks that can be consumed and digested between watches and sea evolutions, during the few minutes each day that you might have to yourself. Perhaps the small chunks provided here will whet your appetite.
Given that limited aim, we hope this book meets the mark for you.
CHAPTER 1
LEADERSHIP FOR YOUNG LEADERS AT SEA
A leader is best
When people barely know that he exists,
Not so good when people obey and acclaim him,
Worst when they despise him.
"Fail to honor people,
They fail to honor you";
But of a good leader, who talks little,
When his work is done, his aim fulfilled,
They will all say, We did this ourselves.
—LAO TZU, TAO TEH CHING, VERSE 17, 6TH CENTURY BC
This is the bottom line, right here, up front, on the first page:
Leadership matters. Everything of value in the world happens because of leadership.
Leadership is definable. It’s not some hocus-pocus, touchy-feely amorphous state of mind or relationship. It can be described and defined. It can be measured. You can be a leader. It’s learnable. You don’t have to be born with it. Whatever you are today, you can become a better leader tomorrow, if you choose.
You, too, can make things happen.
Winston Churchill said, in writing to young officers like you: Come on now all you young people all over the world. You have not an hour to lose. You must take your place in Life’s fighting line. Twenty to twenty five! Those are the years. Don’t be content with things as they are. Don’t take No for an answer. Never submit to failure. You will make all kinds of mistakes; but as long as you are generous and true and also fierce, you cannot hurt the world!
Are you ready to make things happen? Are you ready to be generous and true and fierce?
Are you ready to be a leader?
You can be. Read this book!
THE SIX BASIC QUESTIONS
What is leadership, anyway?
A good question, and one that many people have studied for many years. There are a hundred definitions.
Webster’s Dictionary defines leadership as the act of being a leader
and defines a leader as a person with commanding authority or influence.
According to Navy General Order 21 (as first issued), leadership is defined as the art of accomplishing the Navy’s mission through people.
In the Commandant’s Instruction on Leadership, the Coast Guard declares that leadership is the ability to influence others to obtain their obedience, respect, confidence, and loyal cooperation.
The Army states that leadership is influencing people—by providing purpose, direction, and motivation—while operating to accomplish the mission and improving the organization.
In our midshipman-leadership text written several decades ago, leadership was somewhat loftily defined as the art, science, or gift by which a person is enabled and privileged to direct the thoughts, plans, and actions of others in such a manner as to obtain and command their obedience, their confidence, their respect, and their loyal cooperation.
Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery said, Leadership is the capacity and will to rally men and women to a common purpose and the character which inspires confidence.
Similarly, Dwight Eisenhower remarked, Leadership is the art of getting someone else to do something you want done because he wants to do it.
Leading sailors is an art, not a science.
—ADM Arleigh Burke
Finally, Harry Truman echoed Eisenhower almost word for word when he said, A leader is a man who has the ability to get other people to do what they don’t want to do, and like it.
In other words: Leadership is the process of getting people to do things.
Now, that might seem manipulative, crass, and simplistic. Maybe it is. But in the end, things happen only because people make them happen, and someone has to get those people to make them happen. That’s where leadership comes in.
What’s the difference between leadership and management?
Another good question, and one often asked by junior officers. Like anything having to do with leadership, there are plenty of different answers. Some say leadership is deciding what to do and why, while management focuses on how.
A manager’s job is to create stability and deal with reality. A leader’s job is to stir emotion and set audacious, grandiose goals that shake the status quo. Too much management and you stagnate. Too much leadership and you get nowhere. Embrace the challenge of striking the balance. Do it well, and the results will surpass your wildest dreams.
—The Management and Leadership Network
Some believe leadership focuses on accomplishing the mission, while management is about doing it efficiently. Management author Ken Adelman says, A leader knows what’s best to do; a manager knows how best to do it.
Others argue that leadership is about influencing, while management is more about operating. But notice that the Army definition of leadership in the section above includes both influencing and operating. Renowned Harvard professor and leadership expert John Kotter says that management is about running things in steady state, while leadership is about causing change.
Management guru Warren Bennis laid out the following distinctions between the two:
• Leaders do the right things; managers do things right.
• Leaders innovate; managers administer.
• Leaders inspire; managers control.
• Leaders think long term; managers think short term.
• Leaders originate; managers imitate.
• Leaders challenge the status quo; managers accept the status quo.
As usual, all these views are right, in their own way. For the junior officer, you will be providing both management and leadership to the folks who work for you, and often the two will overlap. For instance, say you’re working on a tough project and one of your key people has a family situation that needs attention. Deciding to let that person go tend to family matters, even if it hurts your team strength, is a leadership decision. Figuring out how to adjust other team schedules to make it work is more about management.
Why is leadership important?
In the world of the junior officer, does leadership really matter? Isn’t your job really about standing a good watch and managing the few people who might work for you? Leadership is important to you in two ways.
First, it will help you do your job better—today. You are not in charge of three bookkeepers in office cubicles working 9:00 to 5:00 weekdays. Management alone could probably get that job done.
Rather, you are responsible for far more people under far more arduous, difficult, and unpredictable circumstances. You and your team are working 24/7, year-round, in bad weather, in difficult situations, in conflict, sometimes under adversity, or sometimes even under fire. These conditions call for more than management. Your decisions can place your people in danger. Sending a mariner topside at night in freezing foul weather to find and fix a thorny problem isn’t management—it takes leadership to have influence like that. Leading a team into a smoke-filled space to put out a fire isn’t management; it’s leadership, pure and simple.
I consider it a great advantage to obtain command young, having observed as a general thing that persons who come into authority late in life shrink from responsibility, and often break down under its weight.
—ADM David Farragut
Being a leader is critical to get your job done, even as the most junior officer in your outfit. If you need further evidence, look at your performance evaluation. Is there a block for management
? Probably not. Is there a block to evaluate you in leadership? Absolutely.
Second, leadership is important to you today because, in most cases, it is the coin of the realm for your advancement in the sea services. The path to the top comprises leadership steps that are critical, without which you’ll never progress. Whether your goal is to become a master or chief engineer of a ship, a captain in the Coast Guard or Navy, or the commander of a battalion of Marines, you can’t do it without successfully demonstrating leadership at every level as you progress.
Is leadership innate or learned?
Leadership is 3 percent innate, 97 percent learned.
Those numbers aren’t exact, obviously—they’re our view of it; and as you’ll find in leadership study, every author has a different point of view. But based on our many, many years of leadership experience and study, that breakdown is pretty close.
Some naturally born elements are helpful. For instance, statistically, being tall appears to help with leadership. The overwhelming majority of presidential elections have been won by the taller candidate. In the corporate marketplace, taller people generally get paid slightly more and are promoted slightly more often. But in a recent meeting of all the Navy admirals in Norfolk, Virginia, the most senior four star was the shortest admiral in the room; the second shortest was his female three-star deputy. So much for height being important nowadays.
Being intelligent also helps. Intelligence can help you be a better communicator and a better solver of problems. It also helps you learn leadership skills faster. There is a positive correlation between intelligence and advancement in corporate-management hierarchies—in other words, senior managers tend to score higher in intelligence tests than middle managers. Similarly, chief executives are, in general, measurably smarter than senior managers.
Finally, for some circumstances, it helps to be big and strong. In some groups, size and strength can assist in leadership. In most groups or organizations, however, it’s immaterial. For most organizations, only your mental strength truly matters. In fact, as you mature through your career in the sea services, you’ll find with every passing year that you’re more likely to be paid to think than to do.
But that’s about it for innate qualities. All the other leadership traits—character, speaking ability, empathy, organization, vision, honesty, work ethic, amiability, courage, perseverance—are acquired traits. They are all learned. They are all available to you. If you didn’t get exposed to them growing up, you can learn them now, if you choose.
How does one become a leader?
If you wanted to play the piano, what would you do? Most likely, you would
• study a book on music and theory
• take lessons from a teacher
• practice the piano
• watch and listen to others play
If you want to learn French, if you want to become a chef, if you want to hit a curveball—if you want to learn virtually anything—your tasks might include
• studying
• receiving instruction from a teacher
• practicing
• observing others
So it is with leadership. Leadership can be learned using these four basic tenets.
Col Art Athens, a leadership professor at the Naval Academy and former commandant of the Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point, New York, has written that leadership can be learned through six fundamental building blocks:
• self-knowledge
• observation
• intellectual base
• mentoring
• adversity
• experience
Athens’s six building blocks are nouns—they provide the foundation of leadership. Our four items above—studying, receiving instruction, practicing, and observing—are verbs. They are what you, the young leader, can do to acquire those six building blocks.
Remember, you can become a leader. You can learn. You do it by
• studying leadership
• having a mentor or a teacher who can help you perfect your skills
• practicing and experiencing leadership
• watching other leaders around you, both good and bad
SPOM: Study, Practice, Observe, Mentor. It’s not rocket science. But, by the way, if you wanted to learn rocket science, you’d learn it the same way!
Leadership and learning are indispensable to each other.
—John F. Kennedy
One note: the four steps above all require one thing. Will. You have to want to be a leader. You don’t become a leader through osmosis or through mere desire. You can desire to be a great piano player, but unless you take the steps to make it happen, it won’t happen. ADM William Pratt, former