Table of contents

Child pages

Summary of leadership advice

Have a crystal-clear understanding of the objective(s)

Have a crystal-clear understanding of all of the possible courses of action and their likely effects

Get good subordinates

Help your subordinates improve themselves

Delegate

Solicit ideas from everyone

Assign one or more subordinates to help you verify that your other subordinates are doing what they should be doing

Verify that your subordinates are doing what they should be doing

Books

Turn the Ship Around!

Forward

Introduction

Part I: Starting Over

1. Pain

2. Business as Usual

3. Change of Course

4. Frustration

5. Call to Action

6. "Whatever They Tell Me to Do!"

7. "I Relieve You!"

Part II: Control

8. Change, in a Word

9. "Welcome Aboard Sante Fe!"

10. Under Way on Nuclear Power

11. "I Intend To..."

12. Up Scope!

13. Who's Responsible?

14. "A New Ship"

15. "We Have a Problem"

Part III: Competence

16. "Mistakes Just Happen!"

17. "We Learn"

18. Under Way for San Diego

19. All Present and Accounted For

20. Final Preparations

Part IV: Clarity

21. Under Way for Deployment

22. A Remembrance of War

23. Leadership at Every Level

24. A Dangerous Passage

25. Looking Ahead

26. Combat Effectiveness

27. Homecoming

28. A New Method of Resupplying

29. Ripples

Misc

What I have learned from my different leadership experiences

Playing basketball / indoor soccer

Participated in the WIRED 24-hour play competitions in college

Others' examples of teamwork and leadership

WW2-related

How to organize a mass movement

I have a strong interest in human psychology, and one of the things I've found interesting is the fact that mass movements seem to come into existence again and again through history. I'm interested in having a better understanding of how and why this happens.

Patterns

Examples of mass movements

Related pages