Initiative and responsibility
Merry Christmas
Inordinately fortunate
I was inordinately fortunate during my early professional career. I worked for some truly awful leaders. And some remarkable ones also.
Thus during the subsequent free time that life sometimes provides, I always had a full wagonload of professional grist waiting to grind. The important questions were always the same. Why had my bosses acted without apparent thought? Why didn’t my supervisors understand the effects their actions had on people?
Why had our team always done everything the hard way? For the answers to these and other penetrating leadership questions, read Rear Admiral Dave Oliver, Jr.’s book, LEAD ON! A Practical Approach to Leadership
My signed copy is available for loan. Shoot me an e-mail.
Admiral Ernest J. King advocated for more communication and sound leadership
unWritten Rule 14 – Strive for brevity and clarity
It takes longer to write cleanly and crisply. It shows respect for the time of others when you do (write cleanly).
William H. Swanson
18th Anniversary of my failure to screen for command – while in command!
Advice from Steve Jobs
The Importance Of Letter Writing – Captain Laurance Safford: Father of Naval Cryptology
Navy Captain Laurance Safford is often referred to as the “father of U.S. naval cryptology”. His contributions during WW II were numerous and significant.Much of what we know about Captain Safford’s contributions to naval cryptology come from his own writing. As Admiral Stavridis is so fond of saying: “Think, read, write and publish.” If you don’t tell your story – who will know it?
Conduct as officers
“Unless and until officers conduct themselves at all times as officers, it is useless to demand and hopeless to expect any improvement in the enlisted ranks.
Matters of correct attitude, personal conduct, and awareness of moral obligations do not lend themselves to control by a set of rules or to scientific analysis…Many methods of instruction and different approaches to teaching them will present themselves. Each naval officer must consider himself an instructor in these matters and the future tone of the naval service will depend on the sincerity which he brings to this task.”
Admiral T. C. Kinkaid
United States Navy
1947






