Elevate Your Call To Service

How To Create Consistent Leadership Standards Across Every Rank

31 min · 16. juni 2026
episode How To Create Consistent Leadership Standards Across Every Rank cover

Beskrivelse

Leadership standards shouldn't change based on rank, assignment, or personality—but in many organizations, they do. In this episode of Elevate Your Call to Service, Mike and Cathy McIntosh explore how consistent leadership standards create stronger organizational culture, improve trust, and develop future leaders across every rank. Why do employees have vastly different experiences depending on who supervises them? What's the difference between leadership standards and organizational policy? And how can executives, commanders, supervisors, and future leaders create alignment throughout an organization? Mike shares lessons from nearly four decades in law enforcement leadership and explains why organizations often struggle with consistency—not because they lack values, but because they lack alignment. In this conversation, you'll learn: • What leadership standards are and why they matter • The difference between leadership standards and organizational policy • Why inconsistent leadership creates confusion and weakens culture • How accountability reinforces organizational expectations • The role mentorship plays in leadership development • How leaders create alignment across ranks and divisions • What executives can do to strengthen leadership consistency • Practical steps to build a stronger leadership culture Whether you serve as a first-line supervisor, commander, executive leader, or aspiring leader, this episode will help you create clearer expectations, stronger trust, and a more consistent leadership experience throughout your organization. Because leadership style may vary. Leadership standards cannot. View our show notes at https://www.leleaders.com/elevate/leadership-standards-across-ranks

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61 Episoder

episode How To Create Consistent Leadership Standards Across Every Rank cover

How To Create Consistent Leadership Standards Across Every Rank

Leadership standards shouldn't change based on rank, assignment, or personality—but in many organizations, they do. In this episode of Elevate Your Call to Service, Mike and Cathy McIntosh explore how consistent leadership standards create stronger organizational culture, improve trust, and develop future leaders across every rank. Why do employees have vastly different experiences depending on who supervises them? What's the difference between leadership standards and organizational policy? And how can executives, commanders, supervisors, and future leaders create alignment throughout an organization? Mike shares lessons from nearly four decades in law enforcement leadership and explains why organizations often struggle with consistency—not because they lack values, but because they lack alignment. In this conversation, you'll learn: • What leadership standards are and why they matter • The difference between leadership standards and organizational policy • Why inconsistent leadership creates confusion and weakens culture • How accountability reinforces organizational expectations • The role mentorship plays in leadership development • How leaders create alignment across ranks and divisions • What executives can do to strengthen leadership consistency • Practical steps to build a stronger leadership culture Whether you serve as a first-line supervisor, commander, executive leader, or aspiring leader, this episode will help you create clearer expectations, stronger trust, and a more consistent leadership experience throughout your organization. Because leadership style may vary. Leadership standards cannot. View our show notes at https://www.leleaders.com/elevate/leadership-standards-across-ranks

16. juni 202631 min
episode How Great Leaders Build Resilience and Confidence Before Promotion cover

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How Great Leaders Build Resilience and Confidence Before Promotion Confidence and resilience are not leadership traits that magically appear after promotion. Yet many organizations promote people into leadership positions and hope future leaders will figure it out once the pressure arrives. In this episode of the Elevate Your Call to Service Podcast, Michael and Cathy McIntosh explore how leaders can intentionally build resilience and confidence before promotion. They discuss why confidence is not personality or ego, why resilience is more than simply "toughing it out," and how mentorship helps future leaders process adversity before pressure begins defining their leadership. Michael shares practical insights from nearly four decades in law enforcement leadership, explaining why confidence is built through preparation and experience, how resilience grows through reflection and recovery, and why future leaders need opportunities to face controlled pressure before they are responsible for leading others through it. In This Episode What leadership confidence really is The difference between confidence and resilience Why pressure exposes preparation gaps How mentorship builds resilient leaders The role of organizational culture in leader development Practical ways to prepare future leaders before promotion Future leaders don't need less pressure. They need better preparation for pressure. View our show notes at https://www.leleaders.com/elevate/leadership-resilience-confidence-before-promotion

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episode Why Mentoring Is Important in Leadership: Building Readiness Before Promotion cover

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In this episode of the Elevate Your Call to Service Podcast, Michael and Cathy McIntosh unpack why mentoring is important in leadership and how structured leadership mentoring helps agencies prepare future leaders before promotion. Good leadership ideas matter. Training, books, conferences, and leadership development programs all play an important role. But leadership knowledge alone does not automatically prepare someone to lead when the pressure becomes real. That’s where leadership readiness comes in. Michael and Cathy explore the difference between leadership development and leadership readiness, why strong performers are not always prepared for the next role, and how mentoring leaders through real situations helps bridge the gap between theory and real-world leadership. This episode also breaks down why mentorship needs structure. Casual coffee conversations and career stories may build relationships, but structured mentorship helps future leaders practice judgment, communication, accountability, conflict management, and decision-making before the responsibility fully belongs to them. You’ll also hear: • Why Great Performers Aren’t Always Ready Leaders • The Gap Between Knowing and Leading • What Leadership Readiness Actually Means • The Promotion Process Reveals the Gap • How Leadership Mentoring Builds Readiness • Why Mentorship Needs Structure • Why Mid-Level Leaders Matter Most • Leadership Challenge: Start Mentoring With Purpose • Why Mentorship Protects Leadership Standards Whether you are an executive leader building a leadership pipeline, a supervisor mentoring future leaders, or an aspiring leader preparing for the next role, this conversation will help you think differently about leadership development, readiness, and mentorship. Key Topics Leadership mentoring Leadership readiness Mentoring leaders Leadership development Law enforcement leadership Police leadership Leadership growth Leadership pipeline development Structured mentorship Leadership preparation Succession planning First responder leadership Supervisor development Organizational culture Future leader development 👉 Schedule a leadership coaching conversation: www.leleaders.com View our show notes at https://leleaders.com/elevate//why-mentoring-is-important-in-leadership-readiness

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Most law enforcement leaders believe they’re listening to their teams—but what if your officers don’t feel heard? In this episode of the Elevate Your Call to Service Podcast, we break down one of the most common and costly leadership blind spots in policing: the gap between listening and actually understanding what your team needs. If you’re in command staff, executive leadership, or preparing for your next promotion, this conversation will challenge how you approach communication, trust, and influence. Because in law enforcement leadership, intent doesn’t build trust—action does. Inside this episode, you’ll learn: Why officers stop speaking up to leadership The difference between hearing and effective leadership listening How unmet expectations create frustration, disengagement, and low morale The subtle signs your team doesn’t feel heard Practical ways to build trust through intentional communication Many agencies struggle with leadership development—not because they don’t care, but because urgent demands push it aside. The result? Leaders are often promoted based on availability, not readiness. This episode addresses that gap directly. If you want to lead a team that trusts you, communicates openly, and performs at a higher level—this is where it starts. Who This Episode Is For Police leaders, supervisors, and command staff Aspiring sergeants and lieutenants preparing for promotion Agencies committed to developing strong, mission-driven leaders Ready to Strengthen Your Leadership? If this episode resonates, it’s likely not just a communication issue—it’s a leadership development opportunity. We work with law enforcement leaders through 1:1 coaching and mentor-based leadership development to help you: Build trust with your team Lead with clarity and confidence Prepare for promotion with intention Develop leadership skills that actually translate in the field 👉 Schedule a leadership coaching conversation: www.leleaders.com View our show notes at https://leleaders.com/elevate/law-enforcement-leadership-listening-vs-being-heard

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episode You're Not Leading, You're Just Busy: The Trap Killing Your Law Enforcement Impact cover

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Are you leading your team—or just staying busy? Most leaders don’t fail because of lack of effort. They fail because they stay in the weeds and lose focus on what actually drives results. In this episode of the Elevate Your Call to Service Podcast, we break down the leadership trap of busyness vs effectiveness and what it really means to lead at higher levels. At some point in every leadership career, something shifts. The skills that made you successful early on—jumping in, solving problems, being the go-to—can quietly start to hold you back. This episode is about making that shift.  From doing the work → to leading the mission  From reacting to everything → to prioritizing what matters  From being busy → to being effective You’ll learn how to recognize when you’re stuck in the weeds, how that impacts your team, and how to step back into your role with clarity and purpose. In this episode: Why busyness hides poor prioritization The difference between being busy and being effective How leaders unintentionally erode trust The impact of stepping back into the work A practical way to refocus and lead more effectively Who this is for: Law enforcement leaders, command staff, and anyone responsible for leading teams, making decisions under pressure, and improving performance. Tags: Leadership, Law Enforcement Leadership, Leadership Development, Decision Making, Prioritization, Team Performance, Command Presence, Organizational Leadership View our show notes at https://www.leleaders.com/elevate//leadership-busy-vs-effective-leading-above-the-noise

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