Leadership Economics
Aaron and Spencer explore LTC (R) Josh Richardson's experiences and leadership lessons within the Leadership Economics framework, from the pace of trust to knowing when to stay the course or pivot, and why great is just good over time. Episode three of Leadership Economics, and our first guest. Retired Army Lieutenant Colonel Josh Richardson is a West Point graduate, a Ranger, and a 75th Ranger Regiment veteran who now directs the General Wayne A. Downing Scholarship Program and helps build cultures of safety in American plants and factories with DEKRA. He joins Aaron and Spencer to put the playbook to work on a real career, from pickup basketball as a market to the pace of trust, the explore-versus-exploit problem of when to stay the course or pivot, and his closing philosophy that great is just good over time. What we cover * Pickup basketball as a market: coordination, reading people, and being the role player who makes the team better * The pace of trust: why trust between strangers cannot be rushed, and why it is built in drips and lost in buckets * Trust and lived experience: the Antonio story, and why "trust the system" is a harder hurdle for some than for others * West Point as a pressure cooker: preparation as the muscle to keep going, and why time and experience make the leader * Explore versus exploit: when to stay the course and when to pivot, a problem with no clean mathematical answer, and the place of free will * Rules of the game: why leaders should expect people to test the rules, Douglas North, and the 1982 Ewing goaltending call * Tactical patience at scale: why large organizations struggle to mentor person to person, and the tension between moving fast and pacing yourself * A different lens on leadership: building a culture of safety so everyone goes home, and why great is good over time Mentioned * Jonathan Haidt, The Coddling of the American Mind * Douglas North, on institutions and the rules of the game * Kevin Plank (Under Armour), "trust is built in drips and lost in buckets" * The 1982 NCAA championship, Patrick Ewing's goaltending and Michael Jordan's game-winner * The General Wayne A. Downing Scholarship Program * DEKRA Strategic Consulting Featured guest: * Josh Richardson — Josh retired in 2023 after 23 years of Army service including assignments leading units in the 75th Ranger Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, and NATO Allied Rapid Reaction Corps based out of Innsworth, England. He currently divides his time between two ventures: he is a Principal Consultant with DEKRA Strategic Consulting where he develops leaders to drive success through a culture of safety excellence; he also serves as the Director (Operations) for the General Wayne A. Downing Scholarship Program where he deploys a non-profit investment to build leaders to serve at the highest level of U.S. national security and defense. (DEKRA Organizational Safety and Reliability [https://www.dekra.us/en/organizational-safety-reliability/overview/], General Wayne A. Downing Scholarship Program [https://ctc.westpoint.edu/education/downing-scholars-program/], Madison Policy Forum [https://madisonpolicy.org/], Combating Terrorism Center at West Point [https://ctc.westpoint.edu/], CTC Sentinel [https://ctc.westpoint.edu/ctc-sentinel/]) Subscribe to the newsletter — one short essay every other Tuesday: leadershipeconomics.com [https://leadershipeconomics.com/]
4 episodios
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