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Clyde Dildine
Editor
Leadership Development in the U.S. Marine Corps
Is being an excellent leader something you are born
with or can leadership be developed? If an organization could be
found that has a proven track record of successfully transforming
“regular” people into effective leaders, that question could be put
to rest. And, if we could understand the processes that that
organization uses to build leadership capability we can transfer
that knowledge to other organizations. That was the quest of John
H. Zenger & Joseph Folkman, authors of The Extraordinary Leader,
Turning Good Managers into Great Leaders. In a study conducted
by McKinsey & Company and The Conference Board, Zenger and Folkman
found that, “the best leadership development process in the world is
at the U.S. Marine Corps.” Having served as a Marine in a past life
this caught my attention but brought about no surprise. I fully
believe that the Corps was a huge factor in my leadership
development. So what follows are some insights into how the Marine
Corps goes about developing leadership skills
The Talent
Base
There are two
distinct groups of Marine leaders – officers and enlisted,
non-commissioned officers known as “NCO’s”. NCO’s generally come
from the rank and file of those young men and women the Marines
recruit. Nine out of ten applicants are rejected; no high school
drop outs need apply. However, seldom is the recruit the student
body president. Many have had minor convictions; a large percentage
comes from troubled homes. Female recruits have often been subject
to some form of abuse. The authors note that all the usual
predictors of success are generally not present in this group of
recruits and yet many are transformed into effective leaders in two
to three years time. It can be done. Leaders can be made.
Officers tend to be
college graduates and attend Officer Candidate School at Quantico,
Virginia. Their training roughly parallels that of the enlisted
recruits with additional emphasis on leadership skills. Their
training is equally demanding physically and they have to qualify
with a rifle just like any other Marine. The percentage of
successful candidates and the short time frame required to develop
them far eclipses any private sector organization.
What do the Marine
Corps teach its leaders?
Core Values
From the moment
recruits place their feet on those yellow footprints painted on the
ground that teach them how to stand perfectly at attention they
become dipped in the Corps values. These emphasize a strict code of
character, honor, honesty and faithfulness. Semper Fidelis, or
Semper Fi, means Always Faithful in Latin and guides the actions of
every Marine. Leaders ask nothing of others that they are not
willing to do themselves. The entire training process emphasizes
tenacity and persistence in the face of obstacles.
Personal Capability
The development
process builds overall organizational knowledge as well as technical
knowledge. It teaches a rigor in problem-solving and analyzing
thorny issues. Through planning multiple missions in a short time
span, leaders learn to sharpen their problem solving skills. A
feedback rich environment provides leaders the information they need
to improve. Innovation is encouraged through a culture that does
not punish failure or tell people exactly how to do things.
Focus on Results
Marines learn a
proven process for accomplishing strategic objectives. It begins
with defining the mission and the desired end state, creating
alternatives, selecting one to pursue, analyzing strengths and
weaknesses of the team that will execute the mission, identifying
what must not occur, preparing a detailed implementation plan and
executing it.
Interpersonal
skills
As mentioned
earlier the Marines emphasize courageous and frank dialogue. This
can only be accomplished through an atmosphere of trust and mutual
respect. Honest but civil dialogue is encouraged. There is a
strong emphasis on teamwork and extensive communication within the
team.
How Does the Marine
Corps Develop Leaders?
Leadership is a
Team Effort
The Marines pair a
highly seasoned NCO with a newly appointed lieutenant for several
months. The new officer has a sounding board which leads to fewer
mistakes. Tom Clancy in his book, Marine, writes “As a Staff
Sergeant you will probably be assigned that most dreaded of duties,
a new 2nd Lieutenant to watch over and hopefully make
into a useful officer.” Officers learn to rely heavily on their
NCO’s.
In the Marine
culture officers are taught that they do not have to be the only one
who devises strategy and makes decisions. Enlisted and officers
alike are expected to express ideas, alternatives and concerns about
questionable decision or orders.
The Marines also
practice what we call “shared leadership”. Leadership is a verb,
not a noun. It is function or set of behaviors that often gets
passed around in a team. Part of Marine training involves planning
a complex mission and then shortly before executing it everyone
switches roles. The patrol leader becomes the medic and a new
patrol leader comes into the group.
People Development
Requires Significant Commitment of Time
The Marines invest
enormous amounts of time and organizational resources in their
leadership development effort. In contrast in private-sector
companies there is a trend towards reducing the amount of time
people are away from the “real work”. Organizations are striving to
cut weeks and hours devoted to development to hours and even to
20-minute snippets of learning. Many organizations provide no
formal development to newly appointed supervisors and managers. In
contrast, the Marines send officer candidates through a 10-week
stint of development.
Leaders Find Their
Natural Strengths
The Marines
understand that there are many effective leadership patterns and do
not try to force fit all leaders into a similar style or process.
Some leaders are powerful team builders. Some excel in
organizational skills. Still others are extraordinary in seeing the
potential in people and bringing it out. Those responsible for
leadership development observe the natural strengths and encourage
the leader to amplify that quality. Their emphasis is on helping
potential officers find their own voice and magnify their natural
tendencies.
Leadership Is
Developed with Engaging Learning Methods
Nearly everything
the Marines do in leadership development is highly involving and
experiential, not merely academic. For instance, aspiring leaders
are given the challenge of getting a wounded comrade across a small
river, reported to be mined, with only a few boards and some rope.
This exercise may sound somewhat familiar to past participants in
our programs.
Other assignments
are more cerebral. A challenging mission is defined and leaders
must come up with three detailed courses of action and choose the
best option in six hours. At the conclusion the group engages in an
“after action review” that focuses on what went well and how it
could have been improved. In this process, everyone involved comes
together and psychologically takes off their stripes, and conducts a
totally open, candid conversation. These detailed reviews provide
an extremely valuable learning process and emphasize the democratic
nature of the organization.
Teaching Leadership
with Personal Stories
The Marines have
senior officers tell stories of how they personally handled a
challenging situation. One officer related how he was given the
assignment to secure a merchant ship at sea from deserting South
Vietnamese soldiers who were seizing ships and killing the crews
after the fall of Saigon. This riveting story provided a powerful
opportunity to explain the thought process that went into planning
the mission and its execution. Nearly 300 hours over a six month
period are dedicated to having instructors relate their personal
stories to aspiring leaders.
Leadership
Versatility Is Developed by Cross Training
Lawyers are
assigned infantry units to command, while infantry commanders are
transferred to head up a supply unit. While there is clearly some
sacrifice of short-term productivity, there is an enormous long-term
gain in having a cadre of leaders exposed to other areas, and who
can move from one venue to another with no serious lapse in
performance.
Leadership
Development Includes Everyone
In contrast to most
businesses, which allocate the bulk of their developmental resources
to a limited number of “high potentials”, the Marines train everyone
to lead. They don’t build a gulf between followers and leaders, but
assume instead that everyone should be trained to lead. This
practice goes a long way towards building commitment and loyalty to
the organization.
Who Is Responsible for
Leadership Development?
Everyone Assumes
Responsibility
Non-commissioned
officers are responsible for developing new lieutenants. Gunnery
sergeants take on the development of the sergeants that report to
them. This is not an afterthought. Marines believe everyone must
be taught to lead, because one never knows when the appointed leader
may be killed or wounded, and the mission must go on.
Senior Members of
Management Make the Best Trainers
In most
corporations trainers are junior people, hired specifically for that
role, with little line experience. Some organizations enlist line
managers to serve as trainers, and research shows that such trainers
produce superior results to those whose role is just training. The
Marines choose their drill instructors from the top 25% of
non-commissioned officers and it takes eight to twelve years
of line duty to become an NCO. When recruits first arrive at the
Marines infamous boot camp they meet the three drill instructors
that will, in a very short time span, transform them from a raw
civilian into a Marine. In the beginning you hate that trio with
all your heart. But on graduation day, the first day you are
allowed to call yourself a Marine, you realize that the impact they
have had on your development is incalculable. Thank you, Sergeant
Barefoot.
What are the benefits
of broad-scale leadership development?
Employee commitment
soars when everyone realizes that the organization really cares
about them and is willing to invest in their development.
-
Retention rates
increase because people recognize they have opportunities to
grow and advance.
-
Bench strength
increases. The organization can now reach everywhere and find
people to fill important leadership roles. If a leader wins the
lottery and retires to Maui the organization doesn’t miss a
beat.
-
Overlooked
talent is discovered. Some extremely successful leaders have
been overlooked in the typical leadership selection processes
found in many organizations.
-
The culture is
reinforced through exposure to senior officers of the
organization.
-
The
organization can be flatter. The Marines have 9 enlisted
personnel per officer, in contrast to the Air Force’s 4 per
officer and the Army’s 5 to each officer.
The Marine
Corps’ success in developing leaders serves as an extremely valuable
model for corporations to study. While it may not be advisable to
adopt their ways “lock, stock, and barrel,’ it appears that any
organization that is serious about developing people can learn a
great deal from the U.S. Marines. They prove leaders can be
developed.