Extreme Ownership Book Summary
Extreme Ownership Book Summary
Extreme Ownership Book Summary
SUMMARY
Extreme Ownership is written by Jocko Willink, a SEAL leader who explains how the
lessons he learnt in combat are relevant to leaders in any role. The importance of
team is emphasised, you are only as good as the men or woman behind you. This
book provides fundamental leadership lessons through Willinks insightful combat
experiences and stories. Willink examines a number of leadership concepts that
have been proven as effective in both combat and business scenarios.
For leaders, the humility to admit and own mistakes and develop a plan to
overcome them is essential to success. The best leaders are not driven by ego or
personal agendas. They are simply focused on the mission and how best to
accomplish it.
The leader is truly and ultimately responsible for everything. That is Extreme
Ownership, the fundamental core of what constitutes an effective leader in the
SEAL Teams or in any leadership endeavour.
On any team, in any organization, all responsibility for success and failure rests
with the leader. The leader must own everything in his or her world. There is no one
else to blame. The leader must acknowledge mistakes and admit failures, take
ownership of them, and develop a plan to win.
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When subordinates arent doing what they should, leaders that exercise Extreme
Ownership cannot blame the subordinates. They must first look in the mirror at
themselves. The leader bears full responsibility for explaining the strategic mission,
developing the tactics, and securing the training and resources to enable the team
to properly and successfully execute.
If an individual on the team is not performing at the level required for the team to
succeed, the leader must train and mentor that underperformer. But if the
underperformer continually fails to meet standards, then a leader who exercises
Extreme Ownership must be loyal to the team and the mission above any individual.
If underperformers cannot improve, the leader must make the tough call to
terminate them and hire others who can get the job done. It is all on the leader.
Total responsibility for failure is a difficult thing to accept, and taking ownership
when things go wrong requires extraordinary humility and courage. But doing just
that is an absolute necessity to learning, growing as a leader.
Once a culture of Extreme Ownership is built into the team at every level, the entire
team performs well, and performance continues to improve, even when a strong
leader is temporarily removed from the team.
The recognition that there are no bad teams, only bad leaders facilitates Extreme
Ownership and enables leaders to build high-performance teams that dominate on
any battlefield, literal or figurative.
Be a Believer
In order to convince and inspire others to follow and accomplish a mission, a leader
must be a true believer in the mission.
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If a leader does not believe, he or she will not take the risks required to overcome
the inevitable challenges necessary to win. And they will not be able to convince
others
In many cases, the leader must align his thoughts and vision to that of the mission.
Once a leader believes in the mission, that belief shines through to those below
and above in the chain of command.
Cover and Move: it is the most fundamental tactic, perhaps the only tactic. Put
simply, Cover and Move means teamwork. All elements within the greater team are
crucial and must work together to accomplish the mission, mutually supporting
one another for that singular purpose.
Simple
Simplifying as much as possible is crucial to success. When plans and orders are
too complicated, people may not understand them. And when things go wrong, and
they inevitably do go wrong, complexity compounds issues that can spiral out of
control into total disaster. Plans and orders must be communicated in a manner
that is simple, clear, and concise.
If your team doesnt get it, you have not kept things simple and you have failed. You
must brief to ensure the lowest common denominator on the team understands.
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On the battlefield, countless problems compound in a snowball effect, every
challenge complex in its own right, each demanding attention. But a leader must
remain calm and make the best decisions possible.
Even the most competent of leaders can be overwhelmed if they try to tackle
multiple problems or a number of tasks simultaneously. The team will likely fail at
each of those tasks. Instead, leaders must determine the highest priority task and
execute. When overwhelmed, fall back upon this principle: Prioritize and Execute.
Decentralize Command
Human beings are generally not capable of managing more than six to ten people,
particularly when things go sideways and inevitable contingencies arise. Teams
must be broken down into manageable elements of four to five operators, with a
clearly designated leader. Those leaders must understand the overall mission, and
the ultimate goal of that mission.
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PART III: SUSTAINING VICTORY
Whats the mission? Planning begins with mission analysis. Leaders must identify
clear directives for the team. Once they themselves understand the mission, they
can impart this knowledge to their key leaders and frontline troops tasked with
executing the mission. A broad and ambiguous mission results in lack of focus,
ineffective execution, and mission creep. To prevent this, the mission must be
carefully refined and simplified so that it is explicitly clear and specifically focused
to achieve the greater strategic vision for which that mission is a part. The mission
must explain the overall purpose and desired result, or end state, of the
operation.
The test for a successful brief is simple: Do the team and the supporting elements
understand it?
The best teams employ constant analysis of their tactics and measure their
effectiveness so that they can adapt their methods and implement lessons learned
for future missions. Often business teams claim there isnt time for such analysis.
But one must make time.
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Conduct post-operational debrief after execution. Analyze lessons learned
and implement them in future planning.
This information does not automatically translate to subordinate leaders and the
frontline troops. Junior members of the teamthe tactical level operators are
rightly focused on their specific jobs. They must be in order to accomplish the
tactical mission. They do not need the full knowledge and insight of their senior
leaders, nor do the senior leaders need the intricate understanding of the tactical
level operators jobs. Still, it is critical that each have an understanding of the
others role. And it is paramount that senior leaders explain to their junior leaders
and troops executing the mission how their role contributes to big picture success.
As a leader employing Extreme Ownership, if your team isnt doing what you need
them to do, you first have to look at yourself. Rather than blame them for not seeing
the strategic picture, you must figure out a way to better communicate it to them in
terms that are simple, clear, and concise, so that they understand. This is what
leading down the chain of command is all about.
Leading up the chain of command requires tactful engagement with the immediate
boss (or in military terms, higher headquarters) to obtain the decisions and support
necessary to enable your team to accomplish its mission and ultimately win. To do
this, a leader must push situational awareness up the chain of command.
Leading up the chain takes much more savvy and skill than leading down the chain.
Leading up, the leader cannot fall back on his or her positional authority. Instead,
the subordinate leader must use influence, experience, knowledge,
communication, and maintain the highest professionalism.
The major factors to be aware of when leading up and down the chain of command
are these:
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Decisiveness and Uncertainty
Intelligence gathering and research are important, but they must be employed with
realistic expectations and must not impede swift decision making that is often the
difference between victory and defeat. Waiting for the 100 percent right and certain
solution leads to delay, indecision, and an inability to execute.