The Frontline Leadership Podcast

Your Organization Has a Mission Statement. Your Frontline Has No Idea What It Is.

23 min · 26 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Your Organization Has a Mission Statement. Your Frontline Has No Idea What It Is.

Descripción

Walk through your facility tomorrow morning and ask the first ten frontline supervisors you find a simple question: What's your team's mission? You'll get production targets. You'll get this week's priorities. You'll get a shrug. A few might check the back of their badge. What you almost certainly won't get is a clear, confident answer — one that names what the team is trying to accomplish, what winning looks like, and why it matters to the people they lead. A company where the frontline can't pass that test might be a company with a mission statement, but it’s not a company on a mission. Those are two very different things. In Episode 20 of The Frontline Leadership Podcast, Craig opens the Preflight Operating System arc with the most foundational discipline of all: mission clarity. Borrowed from military doctrine, lost in corporate translation, and quietly costing your operation more than most senior leaders realize. In this episode, you'll discover: * Why "vision," "mission," and "purpose" are not interchangeable — and what fails when one statement tries to do all three jobs at once * The military doctrine of mission nesting — and why every level translates the mission rather than copying it * The two non-negotiable components of every real mission and what collapses when one is missing * The three reasons your strategic mission isn't reaching the floor * What it actually costs when supervisors lead without a mission * The simple formula for a well-formed mission at any level Whether you're a senior leader watching your strategy stall before it reaches the floor, or a supervisor running on a number with no context, this episode draws the line between a laminated statement and an operation actually on a mission. Because mission clarity isn't soft. It's the foundation everything else — meeting cadence, decision-making, daily execution — gets built on. 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.

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24 episodios

episode How to Develop Frontline Leaders Who Make Better Decisions Under Pressure artwork

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 de jun de 202638 min
episode Why Your Frontline Supervisors Are Busier Than Ever But Getting Less Done artwork

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 de jun de 202618 min
episode Why Most Frontline Teams Are Drowning in Meetings That Don't Actually Work artwork

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 de jun de 202617 min
episode Your Organization Has a Mission Statement. Your Frontline Has No Idea What It Is. artwork

Your Organization Has a Mission Statement. Your Frontline Has No Idea What It Is.

Walk through your facility tomorrow morning and ask the first ten frontline supervisors you find a simple question: What's your team's mission? You'll get production targets. You'll get this week's priorities. You'll get a shrug. A few might check the back of their badge. What you almost certainly won't get is a clear, confident answer — one that names what the team is trying to accomplish, what winning looks like, and why it matters to the people they lead. A company where the frontline can't pass that test might be a company with a mission statement, but it’s not a company on a mission. Those are two very different things. In Episode 20 of The Frontline Leadership Podcast, Craig opens the Preflight Operating System arc with the most foundational discipline of all: mission clarity. Borrowed from military doctrine, lost in corporate translation, and quietly costing your operation more than most senior leaders realize. In this episode, you'll discover: * Why "vision," "mission," and "purpose" are not interchangeable — and what fails when one statement tries to do all three jobs at once * The military doctrine of mission nesting — and why every level translates the mission rather than copying it * The two non-negotiable components of every real mission and what collapses when one is missing * The three reasons your strategic mission isn't reaching the floor * What it actually costs when supervisors lead without a mission * The simple formula for a well-formed mission at any level Whether you're a senior leader watching your strategy stall before it reaches the floor, or a supervisor running on a number with no context, this episode draws the line between a laminated statement and an operation actually on a mission. Because mission clarity isn't soft. It's the foundation everything else — meeting cadence, decision-making, daily execution — gets built on. 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.

26 de may de 202623 min
episode How to Develop Frontline Leaders Who Communicate Clearly and Confidently artwork

How to Develop Frontline Leaders Who Communicate Clearly and Confidently

Think about what it actually feels like to work for a leader who communicates only in commands and corrections. Every interaction is transactional. You’re told what to do, when to do it, and what you did wrong. Nobody explains why it matters. Nobody asks what you think. You’re not angry. You’re not looking for another job. You’re just absent — physically present, mentally checked out. In Episode 19 of The Frontline Leadership Podcast, Craig draws a sharp line between two teams every senior leader has worked with: one that complies and one that commits. They look similar on the surface and are nowhere near the same underneath. Compliance gets you production. Commitment gets you performance, ownership, and a team that catches problems before they escalate, brings ideas, and actually cares about the outcome. The variable separating them is communication — not whether a supervisor is talking enough, but whether the way they’re communicating is actually leading their people or just managing their behavior. In this episode, you’ll discover: * Why most supervisors default to a “backwards script” — communicating from their own perspective instead of their team’s — and the quiet cost it carries on the floor every day * What a memoirist-turned-marketing-consultant accidentally discovered about leadership — and why marketing is just leadership applied to a customer * Why people don’t push through confused communication; they disengage from it — and what that costs an operation that thinks it has a “people problem” * The single shift that changes everything: great leaders don’t make themselves the hero of the team’s story; they make every team member the hero of their own * Four practices that translate the shift into daily leadership — know your audience, lead with why, paint a clear picture of success, tell people what to do next Whether you’re a senior leader watching capable teams that never quite reach their potential or a supervisor trying to figure out why your communication isn’t landing, this episode names the pattern and hands you a different way to lead. Resources mentioned: Building a StoryBrand by Donald Miller 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.

19 de may de 202612 min