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Why Character Trumps Strategy
Welcome back to another Words of Wisdom (WoW) Wednesday. This week, I’ve been reflecting on the fundamental pillars that hold up a great leader. In the fast-paced world of global business, we often spend 90% of our time obsessing over the “how”—the roadmap, the KPIs, and the overarching strategy. While a map is essential, it’s the person holding it that determines if the team actually reaches the destination.
This brings us to a powerful insight from General Norman Schwarzkopf:
“Leadership is a potent combination of strategy and character. But if you must be without one, be without the strategy.”
This is a bold, almost counter-intuitive claim in a corporate culture that prizes “strategic thinkers” above all else. However, Schwarzkopf—a man who managed some of the most complex logistical and human operations in history—understood a fundamental truth: strategy is a commodity, but character is a currency. You can hire a consultant to fix a flawed business plan, and you can pivot a failing product roadmap in a single board meeting. But you cannot “out-pivot” a lack of integrity. When the pressure is on and the stakes are high, a brilliant strategy executed by a leader without character will eventually crumble under the weight of distrust and self-interest. Character is the “true north” that keeps the ship steady when the maps we spent months drawing are suddenly rendered obsolete by reality.
6 Ways Character Defines Modern Leadership
- The Trust Factor: Strategy tells people where you are going, but character tells them why they should follow you. Trust is the lubricant of any organization; without it, every directive is met with skepticism and every change is met with resistance. A leader with character earns “discretionary effort” from their team—the kind of work people do because they believe in the person leading them, not just the paycheck.
- Resilience Under Pressure: Every strategy eventually hits a dead end or a “black-swan” event. In those moments of crisis, the team doesn’t look at the slide deck; they look at the leader’s face. A leader grounded in character provides the emotional stability and moral resolve needed to regroup, whereas a strategy-only leader often panics when the data stops making sense.
- Accountability as a Standard: High-character leaders don’t hide behind a flawed strategy or external market conditions when things go wrong. By publicly owning the outcome—especially the failures—you create a “psychologically safe” environment. This empowers your team to take calculated risks, knowing that their leader values truth and growth over finger-pointing.
- Attracting and Retaining Top Talent: In today’s market, the best talent has options. High-performers are drawn to leaders they respect and stay for leaders they can rely on. You might recruit a “rockstar” employee with a flashy strategic vision, but you will lose them the moment they realize the internal values don’t match the external brand.
- Decision-Making in the “Gray” Areas: Not every business situation has a playbook or a clear ROI. When the data is inconclusive and the strategy is silent, your moral compass is the only tool left in the box. Character-driven leaders make decisions that protect the long-term health of the organization and its people, even if it means sacrificing a short-term strategic win.
- The “Win-Win” Mentality: A strategy can be designed to “win at all costs,” but character ensures those costs aren’t human. True leadership focuses on sustainable success—achieving goals in a way that leaves the team stronger, the culture healthier, and the industry better. It’s the difference between being a “boss” and being a legacy-builder.
Closing Thoughts
As we move through the rest of this week, I challenge you to look at your current “battle plans.” By all means, refine your strategy and sharpen your execution—those are the tools of our trade. But don’t forget to perform a rigorous audit of your character. Are you leading with the kind of transparency and integrity that makes people want to give their best, even when the roadmap gets blurry? Strategy may win the quarter, but character wins the decade. It builds the reputation that precedes you and the legacy that outlasts you. Lead with heart, and the strategy will find its way.
Personal Reflection: Integrity in the Technical Trenches
I recall a time in my career involving a complex restaurant technology rollout. We had a rigid strategy and a clear deadline, but as we got deeper into the integration, I realized we were hitting roadblocks that the original plan hadn’t accounted for. We could have “stuck to the strategy” to save face with stakeholders, but it would have meant delivering a sub-par solution to the operators in the field.
I chose to halt the momentum, admit the strategic gaps, and prioritize the long-term stability of the platform over the “on-time” metric. It was a difficult, high-pressure pivot, but it proved to my team and our partners that my commitment to quality and honesty outweighed my desire to look “strategically perfect.” It taught me that in the world of technology, your word is often the most important piece of infrastructure you have.
Book Recommendation
It Doesn’t Take a Hero by General H. Norman Schwarzkopf. Since we are reflecting on his wisdom today, his autobiography is essential reading. It isn’t just a military history book; it is a masterclass in leadership, ethics, and the heavy burden of command. He speaks candidly about the challenges of leading diverse teams and why personal integrity is the only thing that keeps a leader standing when the world is watching.
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The Ultimate Command
In the high-stakes world of modern leadership—where digital transformation, shifting markets, and global connectivity move at breakneck speed—we often look outward to find the source of our challenges. We look at the competition, the tech stack, or the quarterly reports. However, the most profound wisdom often comes from looking inward.
The Roman Stoic philosopher Seneca once wrote:
“Command of oneself is the greatest command of all.”
This isn’t just a philosophical mantra; it is the bedrock of effective leadership. Before you can steer a global organization, mentor a rising star, or navigate a pivot in strategy, you must first master the person in the mirror. To lead others is a privilege; to lead oneself is a prerequisite. In an era where “leadership” is often confused with “authority,” Seneca reminds us that true power is not found in the title we hold, but in the discipline we maintain. If we cannot govern our own impulses, our own time, and our own reactions, we are merely passengers in our own careers. Leadership is not about controlling the wind; it is about commanding the person at the helm.
The Architecture of Self-Command
To understand why Seneca’s words remain the “gold standard” for leadership, we must look at how internal discipline translates into external results. A leader’s internal state creates a “ripple effect” throughout the entire organization. If the center is unstable, the perimeter will eventually collapse. Mastering your environment is impossible if you have not yet mastered your own mind.
Here are five critical ways that mastering yourself directly translates to mastering your environment:
- Emotional Regulation in the “War Room” When a crisis hits—a system outage, a missed target, or a sudden market shift—the team instinctively looks to the leader’s face before they look at the data. If the leader panics, the team panics. Self-command allows you to process the stress internally, creating a “buffer zone” where you can remain an analytical, calming presence. By commanding your fight-or-flight response, you give your team the psychological safety they need to solve the problem rather than fearing the fallout.
- The Discipline of Strategic Focus In an age of “shiny object syndrome,” the loudest voice in the room is often the most distracting. The ability to say “no” to enticing but off-brand distractions is a pure act of self-command. Leaders who master their own curiosity and ego can keep their teams aligned on the North Star. This internal gatekeeping ensures that the organization’s energy is harvested and focused rather than scattered across twenty different “priorities” that lead nowhere.
- Integrity Under High Pressure It is easy to maintain your values when the sun is shining and the numbers are up. It is significantly harder when a shortcut promises a quick, desperate win. Self-command serves as the “moral brakes” that keep a leader’s integrity intact when the temptation to compromise arises. It is the quiet, internal voice that chooses the difficult right over the easy wrong, ensuring the brand’s reputation remains untarnished for the long haul.
- Radical Accountability and Ego Management The hardest person to be honest with is ourselves. A leader who commands their own ego does not look for scapegoats when things go sideways. They possess the self-awareness to stand up and say, “This was my call, and I missed it.” This transparency doesn’t weaken a leader; it strengthens the culture. By mastering the urge to protect your image, you empower your team to be honest about their own mistakes, fostering a culture of rapid learning and collective growth.
- Sustainable Energy Management Leadership is a marathon, not a series of disconnected sprints. Self-command includes the discipline to rest, to learn, and to occasionally disconnect. You cannot pour from an empty cup; commanding yourself means knowing when to recharge so you can show up at 100% for your people. It’s the discipline to recognize that “busy” is not the same as “productive,” and that your mental and physical health are professional assets that must be managed with as much rigor as a P&L statement.
Ultimately, these five pillars demonstrate that leadership is an “inside-out” job. When we focus on the external—the KPIs, the budgets, the headcounts—without managing the internal, we are building on sand. Mastery of the self provides the solid rock upon which every other leadership skill is built.
Reflection: A Personal Point of View
As I reflect on my own journey through the hospitality and technology sectors, I’ve realized that my “best” days as a leader weren’t necessarily the days with the biggest wins or the loudest applause. They were the days where, despite the chaos, I remained the master of my own reactions.
In the heat of a difficult negotiation or a complex rollout, the temptation to let frustration take the wheel is real. But there is a quiet, profound strength in choosing your response rather than just reacting to the stimulus. We often think of power as something we exert over others, but Seneca reminds us that true power is the autonomy we have over our own minds. If you can control your temper, your ego, and your focus, you have already won the most important battle of the day. The world will always provide the chaos; our job is to provide the “command.”
Remember, your team will eventually forget the specific words you said, but they will never forget the person you were when everything was falling apart.
This Week’s Book Recommendation
“Meditations” by Marcus Aurelius (Gregory Hays Translation)
If Seneca provides the “Words of Wisdom,” Marcus Aurelius provides the raw, practical application. This isn’t a book written for an audience; it is a collection of private journal entries by the most powerful man in the world at the time—the Roman Emperor.
I recommend this specifically because it shows a leader in the trenches, actively practicing the “command of self” that Seneca preached. It is a vulnerable and honest look at how to stay grounded and humble while carrying the weight of massive responsibility. If you want to see what Stoic leadership looks like when the stakes are literally life and death, this is the definitive guide.
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The Silent Warriors of Leadership
In our hyper-connected, “always-on” corporate culture, speed is often mistaken for progress. We celebrate the “fail fast” mentality and the quick pivot, often at the expense of the long game. However, the most enduring leaders—those who build legacies rather than just quarterly hits—understand a deeper truth: haste often hides a lack of clarity. When we rush, we react to the symptoms of a problem rather than curing the cause. Strategic leadership isn’t about being the first to move; it’s about being the one still standing when the dust settles. It requires a temperament that values the foundational over the flashy.
As Leo Tolstoy famously wrote:
“The two most powerful warriors are patience and time.”
In the context of modern leadership, this isn’t a call for passivity or procrastination. Rather, it is an acknowledgment that strategic vision requires the discipline to let a plan mature and the fortitude to outlast the chaos of the moment. To lead with these “warriors” is to recognize that time is not a resource to be exhausted, but a tool to be leveraged. Strategic leadership is less about the sprint and more about the orchestration of time to achieve a compounding effect that competitors simply cannot replicate.
Strategic Leadership: The Disciplined Path to Execution
True strategy is a commitment to a future state that does not yet exist. To bridge the gap between today’s reality and tomorrow’s vision, a leader must master the internal and external forces that dictate the pace of change. Below are five ways the “silent warriors” of patience and time transform a simple plan into a dominant strategic advantage.
1. The Power of Compounding Momentum
Strategic leaders know that true transformation doesn’t happen overnight. Whether you are shifting a company culture or implementing a new global technology stack, the first 10% of the journey often feels the slowest. By respecting time, you allow small, consistent wins to compound. Like interest in a bank account, these marginal gains eventually hit a tipping point where progress becomes exponential and unstoppable.
2. Mastering the Art of “Active Waiting”
Patience in leadership is often “active,” not stagnant. It involves gathering data, observing market fluctuations, and waiting for the precise moment to strike. A strategic leader uses patience to avoid reactive “firefighting” and instead focuses on “fire prevention.” By waiting for the right variables to align, you ensure that when you do move, you do so with maximum impact and minimum waste.
3. Building Relational Capital and Trust
You cannot rush trust. High-performing teams are forged in the crucible of time. Strategic leaders invest in their people with the understanding that professional maturity and psychological safety take years to develop. When you demonstrate patience with a team member’s growth or a department’s evolution, you are actually buying future loyalty and autonomy—the bedrock of any scalable organization.
4. Navigating the “Valley of Despair”
Every major strategic initiative goes through a phase where the initial excitement fades and results haven’t yet surfaced. This is the “Valley of Despair.” Most leaders quit here or pivot too early. The “warrior” of patience allows a leader to stay the course, providing the steady hand the organization needs to bridge the gap between a bold vision and its eventual reality.
5. Cultivating Long-Term Competitive Advantage
Short-term thinking is easy to replicate; long-term strategy is not. By utilizing time as a strategic asset, you can invest in R&D, brand positioning, and infrastructure that competitors—who are beholden to the next 90 days—simply cannot sustain. Patience allows you to play a different game entirely, winning by outlasting the competition rather than just out-speeding them.
The Takeaway: Strategy without patience is just a wish; patience without strategy is just a wait. When combined, they form a defensive wall that protects your vision from the volatility of the market.
Closing Thoughts
Leadership is not just about the “what” and the “how”—it is profoundly about the “when.” To lead with strategic vision is to accept that some of your best work will take time to bear fruit. In an era of instant gratification, the leader who can remain calm while others panic becomes the anchor for the entire organization.
Do not mistake a quiet season for a productive-less one. Often, the most significant growth happens beneath the surface, where roots are deepening and systems are aligning. Trust your strategy, empower your people, and let time do the heavy lifting. Remember: the tallest oaks grew from acorns that stayed grounded long enough to survive the seasons.
Personal Reflection: Lessons from the Restaurant Tech Trenches
In the world of restaurant technology and hospitality, the pressure to “go live” yesterday is immense. I’ve seen countless projects in restaurant tech—from enterprise POS rollouts to unified commerce integrations—stumble because they were forced through before the operational foundation was ready. We often want to flip a switch and see immediate ROI, but hospitality is a business of human nuances and complex physical logistics.
I’ve found that my greatest mistakes in leadership didn’t come from a lack of effort, but from a lack of timing. It’s tempting to want to force a solution because we want the relief of a “fixed” problem. But in tech, “forced fruit” is never sweet—it usually results in broken workflows and frustrated team members.
When I look back at the digital transformations that truly changed the trajectory of my career or my teams, they were all marathons. They required the grit to stay quiet when I wanted to yell “hurry up,” and the discipline to stay the course when the initial pilot was rocky. True innovation in this space requires the patience to let the technology catch up to the hospitality, ensuring that the “warriors” of time and patience are working for us, not against us.
Book Recommendation: Atomic Habits by James Clear
If Tolstoy’s quote provides the philosophy, James Clear’s Atomic Habits provides the manual. Clear breaks down exactly how “time” becomes your greatest ally through the 1% rule. He argues that we do not rise to the level of our goals, but fall to the level of our systems.
Why it fits:
- The Plateau of Latent Potential: Clear explains why we often don’t see results immediately and why “patience” is scientifically necessary for habit formation. It’s a perfect visual for why long-term leadership strategies often feel like they aren’t working right up until the moment they do.
- Systems over Goals: It shifts the leadership focus from the “end result” to the daily “process,” which is where the warriors of patience and time live.
- Compounding Effect: It illustrates how tiny changes, over time, create a radical difference in performance. This is the ultimate guide for any leader looking to build a sustainable, high-growth organization.
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The Strategic Partner Mindset
This week, let’s reflect on a profound insight from the legendary management guru, Peter Drucker, that beautifully encapsulates an often-misunderstood aspect of professional growth and leadership. Drucker once said:
“The most important thing in a relationship is not what you get, but what you give… The best way to manage up is to make your boss’s job easier.”
At first glance, “managing up” can sound like a political maneuver or even subservience. However, Drucker strips away these misconceptions, revealing it as a fundamental principle of effective partnership and proactive leadership. It’s not about manipulating your manager; it’s about strategically contributing in a way that elevates both your performance and the team’s success.
Putting Theory Into Practice
Understanding the philosophy is one thing, but how do we translate Drucker’s wisdom into daily action? Managing up requires a shift from a reactive mindset—waiting for the next assignment—to a proactive one where you operate as a strategic extension of your leader.
Here are five tangible ways you can apply this principle to elevate your leadership impact:
- Anticipating Needs Before Being Asked: A leader who manages up effectively doesn’t wait for explicit instructions. They anticipate potential roadblocks or information gaps and provide solutions or data proactively. Imagine providing a summary of potential risks and mitigation strategies for a project before your boss even asks for an update.
- Bringing Solutions, Not Just Problems: It’s easy to flag issues. It’s harder, and far more valuable, to present a problem alongside one or more potential solutions. This demonstrates problem-solving skills and a commitment to shared success, rather than simply offloading challenges.
- Mastering Communication Style: Understanding your manager’s preferred “frequency” is key. Do they prefer quick bullet points or detailed reports? Do they need daily check-ins or weekly summaries? Adapting your communication ensures they receive information effectively, saving them time and mental energy.
- Protecting Their Time and Focus: Strategic managing up involves filtering distractions and handling smaller issues independently, only escalating when necessary. This allows your manager to allocate their precious time to critical decision-making and strategic planning.
- Taking Initiative on Feedback Implementation: When given feedback, a leader proactively incorporates it and demonstrates the changes. This reinforces their confidence in your ability to grow and improvement, making their coaching role far more impactful.
The Bottom Line
Ultimately, managing up is about service and synchronization. When you prioritize making your leader more effective, you aren’t just helping them—you are optimizing the entire department’s output and creating a culture of reliability. By being the person who “gets it” before it needs to be explained, you transform yourself from a direct report into a trusted advisor.
My Personal Point of View
I’ve always viewed this quote as a powerful reminder that true leadership isn’t confined to formal titles. It’s about demonstrating initiative even when you aren’t the one setting the ultimate agenda. By proactively clearing obstacles for those above you, you free them up to focus on higher-level strategic initiatives, which ultimately benefits the entire organization. This approach cultivates a level of trust that effectively turns a “boss-subordinate” dynamic into a high-functioning partnership.
Book Recommendation: “Crucial Conversations”
By Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan, and Al Switzler
Why I recommend it: While not strictly about “managing up,” this book provides the essential toolkit for high-stakes communication. Effectively making your boss’s job easier often requires having difficult or nuanced conversations. This book teaches you how to speak persuasively without being abrasive, ensuring your proactive contributions are heard and valued.
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The Mechanics of Momentum
In our hyper-connected, data-driven world, we are often obsessed with the “what.” What are the quarterly numbers? What is the growth percentage? What is the final NPS score? We treat these outcomes like the destination on a GPS, often forgetting that the GPS only works if we actually put the car in gear and drive. We tend to focus so intensely on the finish line that we trip over the hurdles right in front of us.
This week, I want to explore a quote from Mike Hawkins that serves as a vital gut-check for every leader:
“You don’t get results by focusing on results. You get results by focusing on the actions that produce results.” — Mike Hawkins
The Logic of the Lead Measure
In leadership, results are “lag measures.” They tell you what has already happened—they are the scoreboard at the end of the game. By the time you see a missed target or a stalled project, the time to influence it has already passed. You cannot “manage” a lag measure; you can only acknowledge it.
True leadership happens in the “lead measures.” These are the specific, high-leverage, and controllable actions that predict the result. Lead measures are often harder to track than results because they require discipline and visibility into the daily “grind,” but they are the only levers a leader can actually pull. When you stop obsessing over the outcome and start obsessing over the input, you move from a reactive state to a proactive one.
Five Practices for Growth-Minded Teams
To put this into practice, we must redefine what we are measuring. Here are five ways to shift the focus from the scoreboard to the play:
- From “Hit the Sales Goal” to “Master the Discovery”: A leader who only asks “Where is the revenue?” creates anxiety. A leader who asks “How are we refining our discovery calls to better understand client pain points?” creates a strategy. By focusing on the quality of the interaction, the revenue becomes a natural byproduct.
- From “Improve Retention” to “Invest in One-on-Ones”: If you want to keep your best talent, don’t just look at turnover stats. Focus on the action: the weekly, intentional check-in where you ask your team what they need to thrive.
- From “Launch the Product” to “Pressure-Test the API”: Especially in tech and unified commerce, the result is a successful launch. But that only happens if the leadership focus remains on the iterative actions—testing, feedback loops, and strategic pivots—rather than just the deadline on the calendar.
- From “Achieving Innovation” to “Rewarding Intelligent Failure”: You don’t get innovation by demanding it; you get it by creating the action of experimentation. When leaders focus on the action of sharing “lessons learned” from trials rather than just the final success, they build a pipeline of breakthrough ideas.
- From “Building a Vision” to “Consistent Transparency”: A vision is just a result of clear communication. Instead of focusing on whether everyone “gets it,” focus on the action of radical transparency. By sharing the “why” behind every “what” consistently, you produce the result of a highly aligned, autonomous team.
Personal Reflection: Moving the Needle
When I reflect on my own journey, particularly during high-stakes projects or career transitions, I’ve found that focusing on the “big result” can actually be paralyzing. It’s easy to feel overwhelmed by the scale of a goal.
I’ve learned that the most effective way to manage that pressure is to shrink the focus. I ask myself: What is the one action I can take today that makes this result more likely? This shift from “winning” to “operating” changes the energy of the room. It moves the team from a state of worry to a state of agency. It reminds me that while I cannot always control the outcome, I have absolute authority over the effort and the excellence I bring to the actions.
Don’t let the weight of your goals distract you from the work required to achieve them. This week, take your eyes off the scoreboard for a moment and look at the play. Are your actions aligned with your ambitions? If the results aren’t appearing, don’t just stare at the numbers—change the actions.
Book Recommendation
“Atomic Habits” by James Clear I recommend this because it is the definitive manual for the Hawkins philosophy. Clear demonstrates how small, almost imperceptible actions (the “atoms”) build the systems that eventually lead to massive results. It’s a must-read for any leader who wants to stop chasing outcomes and start building the habits that guarantee them.
Keep focusing on the work that matters.