The Frontline Leadership Podcast

How One Manufacturing Executive Built a Leadership Culture That Transformed Their Operation

40 min · 12. Mai 2026
Episode How One Manufacturing Executive Built a Leadership Culture That Transformed Their Operation Cover

Beschreibung

When a senior leader inherits an operation in survival mode the easiest move is to tighten the screws. Push harder. Recruit faster. Set new metrics. The honest move is harder. You have to admit it is a leadership problem, then do the work to build a system that actually develops the people you have. In Episode 18 of The Frontline Leadership Podcast, Craig Coyle sits down with seasoned operations executive Melissa Blinderman for a conversation about what it actually looked like to walk into a 750-person distribution operation and rebuild the leadership culture from the inside. Melissa came in from a finance background — not what anyone had on their bingo card — and walked into a team that had been led with command-and-control authority for so long that no one would even make eye contact when she walked the floor. What she did next was not a program. It was not a speech. It was not a consultant deck. It was a sequence of small, intentional, repeatable moves that compounded into a culture transformation. In this episode, you will discover: * Why the "we have a recruiting problem" story is the most expensive sentence most operations leaders inherit * The two-pronged transformation that has to happen at the same time and what happens when leaders only address one * The three small, repeatable routines that did the heavy lifting and why none of them required budget * Why most resistance to leading well on the floor is not resistance at all * What changes the moment a senior leader refuses to ask anyone on their team to do anything they are not willing to do themselves * What good looks like twelve months later — when turnover drops below 40%, the floor starts looking up, and the senior leadership team that ignored the problem starts asking what changed Whether you are a senior leader walking into an operation that has been running on hope and pressure — or a supervisor quietly burning out under a system you did not build — this episode gives you a window into what becomes possible when leadership stops being treated like a soft skill and starts being treated like the operating system underneath every metric on the board. Visit our Website: operationlead.com [http://operationlead.com]Download The Leader's Preflight Checklist: operationlead.com/checklist [http://operationlead.com/checklist]Learn Our System & Process: operationlead.kit.com/requestcall [http://operationlead.kit.com/requestcall] Connect with Melissa: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/melissa-blinderman [http://linkedin.com/in/melissa-blinderman] Connect with Us: Website: operationlead.com [http://operationlead.com]LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/operation-lead [http://linkedin.com/company/operation-lead]Craig's LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle [http://linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle] About the show: The Frontline Leadership Podcast helps frontline leaders become professional leaders by building systematic development infrastructure that activates your workforce. New episodes weekly.

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Alle Folgen

26 Folgen

Episode How to Develop Frontline Leaders Who Can Handle the Conversations That Matter Most Cover

How to Develop Frontline Leaders Who Can Handle the Conversations That Matter Most

There's a conversation your supervisor has been rehearsing in their head for weeks. They know who it's about. They know what they need to say. And every time they see that person on the floor, they find a reason — a legitimate one — to let it wait one more day. That isn't weakness. It's one of the most universal experiences in leadership. And it's one of the most expensive ones to leave unaddressed. In Episode 25 of The Frontline Leadership Podcast, Craig makes an honest argument against himself: systems create structure, but they don't have the conversation for you. After building the complete Preflight Accountability Cadence in Episode 24, this episode goes one level deeper into the human skill that fills the structure with real leadership. At some point, after all the infrastructure is in place, a leader has to show up and say something hard. That's where systems end. And that's where the real work of leadership begins. In this episode, you'll discover: * Why the two failure modes in difficult conversations — the conflict avoider and the conflict seeker — feel like opposites but trace back to the same root * The assumption most organizations are quietly running on about who's “wired” for hard conversations and what it costs every time a good supervisor fails as a result * Why difficult conversations follow consistent, learnable patterns and what that means for how your organization develops supervisors * The Crucial Conversations framework: six steps that can be learned, coached, and practiced, not inherited or hoped for * Why structure and skill are not a choice and what's missing when an operation tries to run on one without the other Whether you’re a senior leader watching supervisors go silent when standards slip or turn feedback into a verdict — or a frontline leader who has been rehearsing a conversation you haven’t had yet — this episode delivers a framework that changes how to show up and what your team experiences when the conversation finally happens. Resources mentioned: Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking When Stakes Are High by Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan, Al Switzler Visit our Website: operationlead.com [http://operationlead.com] Download The Leader’s Preflight Checklist: operationlead.com/checklist [http://operationlead.com/checklist] Learn Our System & Process: operationlead.kit.com/requestcall [http://operationlead.kit.com/requestcall] Connect with Us: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/operation-lead [http://linkedin.com/company/operation-lead] Craig’s LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle [http://linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle] About the show: The Frontline Leadership Podcast helps frontline leaders become professional leaders by building systematic development infrastructure that activates your workforce. New episodes weekly.

Gestern15 min
Episode How to Build a Culture of Accountability Without Micromanaging Your Supervisors Cover

How to Build a Culture of Accountability Without Micromanaging Your Supervisors

When someone on your team hears the word accountability, there's almost always a reaction before there's a thought. A tightening. A quiet shift in posture. A sense of what did I do? That reaction didn't come from nowhere. It was built — slowly, consistently — by an organization that only ever used accountability as a corrective tool. And when that's the only version your leaders know, they reproduce the same pattern. They avoid hard conversations to stay out of the "bad guy" role, or they micromanage everything because they don't trust a system they were never taught to build. In Episode 24 of The Frontline Leadership Podcast, Craig introduces the complete Preflight Accountability Cadence — a four-component system that transforms accountability from a reactive conversation your supervisors dread into a daily operating rhythm that the entire team owns. In this episode, you'll discover: * Why the two most common failure modes on the frontline — avoidance and micromanagement — share the same root cause * The critical distinction between negative accountability and positive accountability * Why the model of holding each other to the standard during the mission, not after it, is the one your operation needs * The four components of the Pre-Flight Accountability Cadence: Mission, Crew Brief, Crew Responsibilities, and the One-on-One — and how they work together as a system at both the team and individual level * The responsibilities every leader must own to create positive accountability: creation and communication. Whether you're a senior leader watching supervisors either sidestep conflict or hover over their teams, or a frontline leader trying to hold a standard without making it feel like punishment — this episode builds the system that changes how your entire organization experiences accountability. Visit our Website: operationlead.com [http://operationlead.com] https://operationlead.comDownload The Leader's Preflight Checklist: operationlead.com/checklist [http://operationlead.com/checklist] https://operationlead.com/checklistLearn Our System & Process: operationlead.kit.com/requestcall [http://operationlead.kit.com/requestcall] Connect with Us: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/operation-lead [http://linkedin.com/company/operation-lead] https://linkedin.com/company/operation-leadCraig's LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle [http://linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle] About the show: The Frontline Leadership Podcast helps frontline leaders become professional leaders by building systematic development infrastructure that activates your workforce. New episodes weekly.

23. Juni 202612 min
Episode How to Develop Frontline Leaders Who Make Better Decisions Under Pressure Cover

How to Develop Frontline Leaders Who Make Better Decisions Under Pressure

Most senior operations leaders inherit a quiet tax they never named. The supervisors below them are smart, hardworking, and capable — and almost none of them know how to think through a decision under pressure. So they don’t. They walk it upstairs. The leader takes the call, the team waits for the answer, and one more loop of the cycle gets reinforced. In Episode 23, Craig sits down with Christopher Seifert — global manufacturing executive, author of Enabling Empowerment, and former U.S. Navy submariner — for a conversation about the system underneath every decision your frontline leaders are making (and the ones they’re not). Chris does not treat decision-making as a soft skill. He treats it as operational infrastructure — something you install, teach, and coach against, the same way the submarine force teaches it to sailors responsible for nuclear reactors and 150 lives. In this episode, you’ll discover: * Why “just delegate more” backfires and how the Micromanagement Doom Loop traps leaders who never wanted to be micromanagers in the first place * What is actually happening when supervisors keep walking into your office to ask “Boss, what do you want me to do?” and why answering them is the most expensive habit in the building * The shift from giving answers to coaching recommendations — the simple cadence that turns every problem your team brings you into a development moment for the supervisor bringing it * The cognitive biases your supervisors fall into every day — framing traps, anchoring, confirmation, hindsight — and why a real framework has to actively push against those defaults * A seven-step decision framework built for the shop floor and the boardroom and how to scale the rigor up or down based on the stakes of the call Whether you are a senior leader watching capable supervisors escalate decisions that should have been handled three layers down or a supervisor trying to think through the calls you have never been taught to make, this conversation hands you an operating system for leading under pressure. Resources Mentioned: Enabling Empowerment by Christopher Seifert Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman Visit our Website: operationlead.com [http://operationlead.com]Download The Leader’s Preflight Checklist: operationlead.com/checklist [http://operationlead.com/checklist]Learn Our System & Process: operationlead.kit.com/requestcall [http://operationlead.kit.com/requestcall] Connect with Chris: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/christopherseifert/ [http://linkedin.com/in/christopherseifert/] Connect with Us: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/operation-lead [http://linkedin.com/company/operation-lead]Craig’s LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle [http://linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle] About the show: The Frontline Leadership Podcast helps frontline leaders become professional leaders by building systematic development infrastructure that activates your workforce. New episodes weekly.

16. Juni 202638 min
Episode Why Your Frontline Supervisors Are Busier Than Ever But Getting Less Done Cover

Why Your Frontline Supervisors Are Busier Than Ever But Getting Less Done

A frontline leader can work a full, exhausting shift — answering questions, putting out fires, touching every problem on the floor — and never once do the work that only their seat can do. Not because they aren't trying. Not because they don't care. Because no one ever helped them define what that work actually is. In Episode 22 of The Frontline Leadership Podcast, Craig revisits the first of the four foundational flight skills inside the Lead Like a Pilot framework: Aviate. The principle sounds simple — master your craft, focus your effort on what only your position can do. Living it out on a real Tuesday, in a real operation, when the floor is moving in every direction at once, is something else entirely. In this episode, you'll discover: * The question most frontline leaders have never been asked and why the undefined space underneath it is the root of more dysfunction than most leaders realize * Where the work only a leader can do actually lives and why that single quadrant is the one that never calls, never emails, and quietly goes undone shift after shift * The specific, predictable cost of the aviate failure mode at two levels — what it does to the leader over time and what it does to the organization when the pattern compounds * Why delegation done wrong breeds resentment and frustration and why delegation done right is one of the most powerful development acts a leader can perform * Three tools I’ve used — prioritize, time block, delegate the right way — that can help any leader shift from hardworking assistant to grounded, people-focused leader Whether you're a senior leader watching supervisors stay relentlessly busy without producing the outcomes the operation needs or a frontline leader tired of executing all day and never feeling like the work is finished, this episode names the trap hiding underneath the busyness and hands you the tools to step out of it. Resources mentioned: The Eisenhower Matrix Visit our Website: operationlead.com [http://operationlead.com] https://operationlead.comDownload The Leader's Preflight Checklist: operationlead.com/checklist [http://operationlead.com/checklist] https://operationlead.com/checklistLearn Our System & Process: operationlead.kit.com/requestcall [http://operationlead.kit.com/requestcall] Connect with Us: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/operation-lead [http://linkedin.com/company/operation-lead] https://linkedin.com/company/operation-leadCraig's LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle [http://linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle] About the show: The Frontline Leadership Podcast helps frontline leaders become professional leaders by building systematic development infrastructure that activates your workforce. New episodes weekly.

9. Juni 202618 min
Episode Why Most Frontline Teams Are Drowning in Meetings That Don't Actually Work Cover

Why Most Frontline Teams Are Drowning in Meetings That Don't Actually Work

How do your people actually view meetings? A necessary evil? Or the thing they go out of their way to avoid? If you're being honest, the answer is one of those two — and they didn't arrive at that opinion randomly. The skepticism is earned. Most people's lived experience of recurring meetings is some version of the same thing: no clear agenda, one person dominating the conversation, status flowing one direction, two hours gone, no decisions made. But the problem was never the meetings themselves. The problem is what most meetings were actually built to do — and who they were built to serve. And that mismatch is showing up in your operation in ways most senior leaders have never connected to the meeting cadence at all. In Episode 21 of The Frontline Leadership Podcast, Craig builds on Episode 20's mission-nesting foundation and goes after the next layer of the Preflight Operating System: the recurring meeting cadence that keeps the mission alive every single day. In this episode, you'll discover: * Where your senior leadership meeting cadence actually stops in most organizations — and why the gap below it is one of the most expensive blind spots in your operation * The three default patterns frontline supervisors fall into when nobody hands them a meeting model * Why most recurring meetings are built to serve the leader's need for information — and why that model breaks completely at the frontline * The crew brief model from aviation — what it actually is, what it's built to do, and how to translate it onto the production floor * The four questions that turn a recurring frontline meeting from extraction to equipment * Why scaling leadership isn't a talent or hard work problem. It's an architecture problem. Whether you're a senior leader watching information bottleneck before it reaches the floor or a supervisor who inherited a meeting nobody can remember the original purpose of, this episode hands you a model worth running. Because meeting fatigue isn't a workforce problem. It's a design problem. And the design has been wrong for a long time. Visit our Website: operationlead.com [http://operationlead.com] https://operationlead.comDownload The Leader's Preflight Checklist: operationlead.com/checklist [http://operationlead.com/checklist] https://operationlead.com/checklistLearn Our System & Process: operationlead.kit.com/requestcall [http://operationlead.kit.com/requestcall] Connect with Us: Website: operationlead.com [http://operationlead.com] https://operationlead.comLinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/operation-lead [http://linkedin.com/company/operation-lead] https://linkedin.com/company/operation-leadCraig's LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle [http://linkedin.com/in/craig-coyle] About the show: The Frontline Leadership Podcast helps frontline leaders become professional leaders by building systematic development infrastructure that activates your workforce. New episodes weekly.

2. Juni 202617 min