The Scoreboard: Collective Results Over Individual Ego
In the final installment of the Team Dynamics series, Charles and Bruce bring the full architecture of team health to its culminating challenge: inattention to results. This episode addresses the tendency of team members to prioritize individual results than the collective outcome the team exists to produce.
The episode opens with the St. Jude's Rule — the principle that individual brilliance directed at the wrong scoreboard is not an asset but a liability, and that a leader with genuine conviction benches the star whose personal performance is costing the team the game. From there, Charles and Bruce trace the two primary forms ego takes on a leadership team: team status, the satisfaction of being associated with a significant organization regardless of whether it is actually achieving its mission, and individual status, the pull of personal career advancement and reputation management at the expense of collective results.
The hosts then introduce Larry Osborne's Unity Factor as the foundational framework for understanding why collective result-orientation does not emerge naturally from a group of talented people sharing a mission statement. Disunity, Osborne argues, is the default setting of any group. Unity is a priority that must be proactively built and continuously maintained — across doctrinal, relational, and philosophical dimensions. Charles and Bruce provide specific diagnostic questions leaders can use to assess whether their team has genuine philosophical unity or is operating with divergent, privately held definitions of success.
The middle section of the episode uses the DecisionTech case study to give the dysfunction a concrete face — tracing how three high-performing individuals, each talented in their domain, each invested in their personal scoreboard, collectively produced a leadership team that was fracturing under the weight of managed self-interest. The hosts draw out the specific leader behaviors — confronting the laptop rule, addressing ego-driven dynamics directly, and ultimately removing a talent who would not subordinate personal status to the collective mission — that turned the team around.
From there, the episode moves into the practical architecture of a collective scoreboard — what it looks like in a ministry context, the specific disciplines that make it functional rather than decorative, and the way it transforms accountability from a leader-managed activity into a team-owned standard.
The episode and series close with the leader's mandate: to be the most results-oriented person in the room, to model the vulnerability and collective orientation they are requiring of others, and to make the difficult decisions — including strategic removal — when individual ego is permitted to persist at the cost of team health.
Key Concepts Covered: The fifth dysfunction, inattention to results, team status vs. individual status, the Unity Factor, philosophical unity, the DecisionTech case study, the St. Jude's Rule, the collective scoreboard, cascading messaging, the leader's mandate, and strategic removal.
Best for: Senior pastors, executive pastors, ministry directors, church staff teams, nonprofit leadership teams, and any leader completing the Team Dynamics framework and ready to build a culture of collective result-orientation.