Arn20039 Adp - 6 22 001 Web 0
Arn20039 Adp - 6 22 001 Web 0
Arn20039 Adp - 6 22 001 Web 0
ARMY LEADERSHIP
AND THE PROFESSION
JULY 2019
DISTRIBUTION RESTRICTION:
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
This publication supersedes ADP 6-22 and ADRP 6-22, dated
1 August 2012 and ADRP 1, dated 14 June 2015.
HEADQUARTERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY
This publication is available at the Army Publishing Directorate site
(https://armypubs.army.mil/) and the Central Army Registry site
(https://atiam.train.army.mil/catalog/dashboard).
Change No. 1 Headquarters
Department of the Army
Washington, DC, 25 November 2019
4. File this transmittal sheet in front of the publication for reference purposes.
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*ADP 6-22
Contents
Page
PREFACE..................................................................................................................... v
INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................ vii
Chapter 1 THE ARMY PROFESSION, ETHIC, AND LEADERSHIP ........................................ 1-1
+The Army Profession and Ethic ............................................................................... 1-1
+The Army Profession ............................................................................................... 1-1
+The Army Ethic ........................................................................................................ 1-6
+Expectations for the Army Profession, Based on Our Ethic .................................... 1-8
The Army Values ..................................................................................................... 1-12
Army Leadership ..................................................................................................... 1-13
Army Leadership Requirements Model ................................................................... 1-15
Dynamics of Leadership .......................................................................................... 1-17
Roles of Leadership ................................................................................................. 1-20
Levels of Leadership ............................................................................................... 1-22
ADP 6-22, C1 i
Contents
Figures
+Introductory figure 1. Logic map ......................................................................................................ix
+Figure 1-1. The Army profession .................................................................................................. 1-2
+Figure 1-2. The Army ethic, including Army Values ..................................................................... 1-9
Figure 1-3. The Army leadership requirements model ................................................................. 1-15
Figure 1-4. Navigating leader competencies ................................................................................ 1-16
Figure 1-5. Army leadership levels. .............................................................................................. 1-22
Figure 5-1. General Eisenhower’s D-Day statement...................................................................... 5-6
Tables
Introductory table 1. New Army terms ............................................................................................. viii
+Introductory table 2. Modified Army terms and acronyms............................................................. viii
+Table 1-1. The framework for the Army ethic ............................................................................... 1-7
Table 2-1. Attributes associated with CHARACTER ....................................................................... 2-12
Table 3-1. Attributes associated with PRESENCE ............................................................................ 3-3
Table 4-1. Attributes associated with INTELLECT ............................................................................ 4-5
Table 5-1. The competency LEADS OTHERS ................................................................................... 5-8
Table 5-2. The competency BUILDS TRUST ..................................................................................... 5-9
Table 5-3. The competency EXTENDS INFLUENCE BEYOND THE CHAIN OF COMMAND ...................... 5-11
Table 5-4. The competency LEADS BY EXAMPLE ........................................................................... 5-14
Table 5-5. The competency COMMUNICATES ................................................................................ 5-16
Table 6-1. The competency PREPARES SELF .................................................................................. 6-4
Table 6-2. The competency CREATES A POSITIVE ENVIRONMENT ..................................................... 6-8
Table 6-3. Counseling—Coaching—Mentoring Comparison ....................................................... 6-11
Table 6-4. The competency DEVELOPS OTHERS ........................................................................... 6-14
Table 6-5. The competency STEWARDS THE PROFESSION ............................................................. 6-15
Table 7-1. The competency GETS RESULTS .................................................................................... 7-3
ADP 6-22 contains 10 chapters comprising three parts describing the Army’s approach to leadership:
+Chapter 1 describes the Army profession, and the ways the Army ethic underpins the decisions
and actions of all Army leaders. It discusses the characteristics of the Army profession and
expectations of all Army professionals. Chapter 1 also defines leadership, describes the
foundations of Army leadership, introduces the Army leadership requirements model, and
addresses the various roles of Army leaders and the echelons of leadership.
Part One describes the leader attribute categories of character, presence, and intellect. Chapter 2
discusses the attribute category of character: Army Values and Army ethic, empathy, Warrior
Ethos/Service Ethos, discipline, and humility. Chapter 3 discusses the attribute category of
presence: military and professional bearing, fitness, confidence, and resilience. Chapter 4
discusses the attribute category of intellect: mental agility, sound judgment, innovation,
interpersonal tact, and expertise.
Part Two describes the core leader competencies and their application. Chapter 5 addresses the
competency category of leads: leads others, builds trust, extends influence beyond the chain of
command, leads by example, and communicates. Chapter 6 describes the competency category of
develops: prepares self, creates a positive environment, develops others, and stewards the
profession. Chapter 7 describes the competency category of achieves and the supporting actions
of providing guidance, and managing and monitoring duties and missions. Chapter 8 discusses the
challenges of the operational environment, stress, and change.
Part Three addresses the roles and responsibilities of organizational leaders in chapter 9 and of
strategic leaders in chapter 10.
Changes to terms used in ADP 6-22 are addressed in introductory tables 1 and 2. The logic map for ADP 6-22
is shown in introductory figure 1.
Introductory table 1. New Army terms
Term Remarks
counterproductive leadership New term. ADP 6-22 is the proponent publication.
For more than 240 years, the United States Army has protected the people and interests
of the Nation. The Army is not alone. The Marines Corps, Navy, Air Force, Coast
Guard, government agencies, and local law enforcement and firefighters all perform
similar services to the Nation and its communities. All volunteered. In many cases,
they choose to place themselves in harm’s way based on a conviction that personal
service makes a difference. Leading Soldiers requires an understanding of the Army
profession and ethic that are the basis for a shared professional identity and underpin
all leader decisions and actions. To inspire Soldiers to risk their lives requires
professional leaders capable of providing purpose, direction, and motivation. This
chapter describes the Army profession, describes the Army ethic, and introduces Army
leadership.
…the Soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and bear the
deepest wounds and scars of war.
General of the Army Douglas MacArthur
Thayer Award acceptance speech, 1962
and to cooperate as members with a common purpose higher than individual gratification. A calling or
vocation means that the mission is more important than the individual is, which is the basis of sacrifice.
1-6. Professions self-police and must live by an ethic with both legal and moral foundations. A professional
ethic provides the set of moral principles that guide decisions and actions in professional practice. Traditional
professions include medicine and law, science and engineering, architecture, higher education, ordained
religious practice, and the military.
1-7. Ultimately, society trusts professions and grants them autonomy and discretion with prudent, balanced
oversight or external controls. If a profession violates its ethic and loses the trust of society, it becomes subject
to increased societal regulation and governance.
1-8. The Army profession is a trusted vocation of Soldiers and Army civilians whose collective
expertise is the ethical design, generation, support, and application of landpower; serving under
civilian authority; and entrusted to defend the Constitution and the rights and interests of the
American people. The Army profession includes two complementary communities of practice—the
Profession of Arms and the Army Civilian Corps.
The Profession of Arms comprises the Soldiers of the Regular Army, Army National Guard, and
the Army Reserve.
The Army Civilian Corps is composed of Army civilians serving in the Department of the Army.
1-9. These communities of practice are trusted Army professionals—honorable servants in defense of the
Nation, experts in the performance of their duties, and responsible stewards of the Army profession. The
Army ethic underpins the decision and actions of all Army professionals. (See paragraph 1-44 for more on
the Army ethic.)
Trust
1-11. Trust is the foundation of the Army’s relationship with the American people, who rely on the Army to
ethically, effectively, and efficiently serve the Nation. Within the Army profession, trust is shared confidence
among commanders, subordinates, and partners in that all can be relied on and all are competent in
performing their assigned tasks.
1-12. Trust has a direct relationship on the time and resources required to accomplish the mission.
Subordinates are more willing to exercise initiative when they believe their commander trusts them. They
will also be more willing to exercise initiative if they believe their commander will accept and support the
outcome of their decisions. Likewise, commanders delegate greater authority to subordinates who have
demonstrated tactical and technical competency and whose judgment they trust.
1-13. Trust within the Army profession allows us to rapidly task organize units and build teams where
interpersonal relations are not yet established. In some situations, trust may be based solely on a common
understanding of an approach to operations. This understanding creates a basic level of trust that, until proven
otherwise, adjacent units or new team members will conduct operations to a common standard.
1-14. The Army’s trust with the American people reflects their confidence and faith that the Army will serve
the Nation and accomplish missions ethically. This trust is earned and reinforced as the Army contributes
honorable service, demonstrates military expertise, and exercises responsible stewardship. External trust with
the joint force, interagency partners, allies, and coalition forces is essential for success in operations across
multiple domains.
1-15. The Army profession is successful when it sustains the respect and trust of the American people. This
requires that professionals perform their duty every day in a manner that the American people judge to be
ethical according to the beliefs and values enshrined in the Nation’s founding documents. Trust is lost when
we fail to meet these expectations. Accordingly, Army leaders establish conditions that serve to prevent
misconduct or unethical practices and take corrective action when it occurs.
1-16. Army professionals protect the constitutional rights of every American and the basic human rights of
all people. Any failure to respect these rights diminishes trust with the American people and with the
international community. Such failure can cause great harm to the legitimacy of the Army profession and the
Nation. Important insights for all Army professionals informing why and how they serve include—
The collective rights of the American people to independence and political sovereignty constitute
the moral basis for the Army mission.
Protecting the Nation’s collective rights is the honorable service the Army profession provides for
society.
Army professionals must not violate the rights of others, or they violate their own ethic and erode
the trust and legitimacy built with the American people, allies, and partners.
The Army mission justifies the ethical application of landpower.
The moral justification for the Army mission is the basis for taking the lives of others and placing
the lives of Soldiers at risk.
Honorable Service
1-17. Honorable service is support and defense of the Constitution, the American people, and the national
interest in a manner consistent with the Army ethic. Army professionals serve honorably by obeying the laws
of the Nation and all legal orders. Army forces reject and report illegal, unethical, or immoral orders or
actions.
1-18. Army professionals contribute honorable service as they accomplish the mission, perform their duty,
and live their lives making ethical decisions and taking ethical actions. Living by and upholding the Army
ethic means that its moral principles are woven through all facets Army life. Love of country and family,
preservation of peace, and defense of the American people are values inherent to the ethos—this is why we
serve.
1-19. Army professionals are committed to lifelong learning and set the example for what it means to live
by and uphold the Army ethic. Conversely, misconduct undermines trust and can bring discredit to the Army
profession. Moral failure compromises the Army profession’s bond of trust among its members, with the
American people, and with the international community. It is an Army professional’s duty to prevent
misconduct, enforce the standards of the profession, and take action to stop unethical practices.
1-20. Soldiers in combat operations are responsible for the ethical application of lethal force in honorable
service to the Nation. The law is explicit. Soldiers are bound to obey the legal and moral orders of their
superiors; but they must disobey an unlawful or immoral order. Soldiers are also legally bound to report
violations of the law of war to their chain of command
1-21. Under normal circumstances, Soldiers and Army civilians trust their superior’s orders and execute
them to the best of their ability. However, making an ethical choice and acting on it when faced with an
ethical or moral issue can be difficult. Sometimes it means standing firm and disagreeing with a leader. These
occasions test character. If Army professionals perceive that an order is unlawful or immoral, they seek
situational understanding regarding the order and its original intent. This may include asking for clarification
from the person who issued the order.
1-22. If the question is complex, Soldiers and Army civilians should seek legal counsel. If circumstances do
not permit that, Soldiers make the best judgment possible based on their understanding of the Army ethic and
their conscience, as applied to the immediate situation. There is a risk when disobeying what is perceived to
be an unlawful or immoral order—and it may be the most courageous decision an Army professional ever
makes.
1-23. While none of us can be completely prepared for complex, ambiguous situations, we should reflect on
the Army ethic, study lessons learned, anticipate ethical challenges, and mitigate the risks. It is expected that
Soldiers and Army Civilians, as trusted Army professionals, will do what they believe is right.
Military Expertise
1-24. Military expertise is the ethical design, generation, support, and application of landpower, and the
associated capabilities essential to accomplishing missions in defense of the American people. The Army
profession demonstrates military expertise while conducting operations assigned by civilian authority. The
Army is trusted to accomplish missions ethically, effectively, and efficiently. The Army profession develops
and demonstrates military expertise in four broad fields of knowledge:
Leader and human development.
Moral-ethical.
Geo-cultural and political.
Military-technical.
Moral-Ethical
1-26. The moral-ethical field addresses the application of landpower as informed by the Army ethic and in
compliance with legal and regulatory requirements. This field encompasses ethical reasoning in decisions
and actions at all levels of leadership. Army professionals anticipate and address the implications of present
and future ethical challenges resulting from cultural and social change, advancing technology, and changes
in the cyberspace domain.
1-28. Senior Army leaders have a direct stewardship responsibility to strengthen trust with the American
people through their professional engagement in civil-military relations. Civilian authority over the military
is established and codified in our Constitution and is the mechanism by which the American people, through
their elected and appointed officials, exercise oversight of the military. Army professionals understand this
and appreciate the traditional role that such oversight has played throughout our history.
1-29. Final decisions and responsibility for national strategy and policy, and for the organization and
resourcing of the Army rest with civilian authority. With this understanding, Army professionals have a duty
to provide their unique and vital expertise to the decision making process. It is our responsibility to ensure
that professional military advice is candidly and respectfully presented to civilian leaders.
1-30. The key condition for effective American civil-military relations is mutual respect and trust. With this
understanding, Army professionals strictly adhere to a set of norms established by law and accepted practice:
The Army profession’s principal obligation is to support the democratic institutions and
policymaking processes of our government. Military leaders offer their expertise and advice
candidly to appropriate civilian leadership.
Civilian decision makers seek and consider professional military advice in the context of policy
deliberations. Army professionals properly confine their advisory role to the policy-making
process and do not engage publically in policy advocacy or dissent. Army professionals adhere to
a strict ethic of political nonpartisanship in the execution of their duty.
The legitimacy of the Army profession depends on healthy interaction with the news media.
Within the limits of operations security, Army professionals support and facilitate the media’s
legitimate function to inform the citizenry we honorably serve.
Military-Technical
1-31. The military-technical field includes operations at all levels of the military art and science, from the
tactical to the strategic. Identification, development, and application of advanced technologies and technical
capabilities to conduct operations effectively is the goal. Developing military-technical expertise is the
foundation of competence, which is in turn a significant basis of professional trust within cohesive teams.
Army professionals trust each other to perform their jobs absent evidence to the contrary.
Stewardship
1-32. Stewardship is the responsibility of Soldiers and Army civilians to strengthen the Army as a profession.
It includes caring for the people and resources entrusted to them by the American people, ensuring Army
forces are ready, now and in the future, to accomplish the Army’s missions.
1-33. Stewardship requires that Army professionals understand their duty represents a trust—it is an office.
This responsibility is explicit in the oaths taken by Army officers and Army civilians (and implied in the
Oath of Enlistment). These oaths conclude with the language: “I will well and faithfully discharge the duties
of the office upon which I am about to enter.”
1-34. The office that Army professionals enter upon taking their oath is a moral responsibility. Army
professionals are stewards of a special bond of trust and confidence with the American people. The Army
must always be trusted to fight and win ethically, effectively and efficiently. Members of the Army profession
provide stewardship at strategic, organizational, and individual levels.
1-35. Stewardship starts at the top of a profession. Strategic stewardship includes establishing the directives,
policies, programs, and systems that provide for the purposeful development of people, resource
management, and preparation for the future—while preserving the customs, courtesies, and traditions of the
Army.
1-36. Organizational stewardship includes establishing a professional climate that fosters living by the Army
ethic, strengthens mutual trust, and fosters cohesive teamwork. Organizations must be equipped, trained, and
certified for current and future missions.
1-37. Individual stewardship is the responsibility to strive continuously for excellence in the performance of
duty, to pursue lifelong learning, and to accomplish every mission.
Esprit de Corps
1-38. Esprit de corps denotes the Army’s winning spirit—a collective ethos of camaraderie, mutual trust,
and cohesive teamwork. Successfully accomplishing missions requires spirited and dedicated Soldiers and
Army civilians who strive for standards of excellence. Army forces embrace shared intent and situational
understanding, accept prudent risk, and exercise disciplined initiative. These guiding principles, in harmony
with the Army ethic, strengthen the Army’s identity, resilience, and courage—a never-quit resolve—enabling
Army forces to persevere and accomplish the mission in the presence of risk, uncertainty, and fear.
1-39. Soldiers and Army civilians are led, trained, and equipped to accomplish a variety of missions.
However, these preparations alone are not enough. The challenges of warfare wear on the morale of even the
most experienced leaders. To persevere and prevail in these conditions require both commitment and
resilience. Esprit de corps reflects the Army’s collective perseverance to accomplish the toughest missions,
ethically, as a team of teams.
1-40. Esprit de corps is embedded in the Army culture, professional organizational climates, and shared
identity. Esprit de corps is reflected in the customs, courtesies, and traditions of the Army. Discipline and
standards are intrinsic to the Army profession. Armed forces conduct operations with the discipline required
by military art and science. Discipline allows Army professionals to choose the harder right over the easier
wrong in the face of temptation, obstacles, and adversity. Standards establish acceptable levels of
performance and achievement; Army professionals strive for excellence in performance of duty.
1-41. For Soldiers and Army civilians, esprit de corps is reflected in—
Shared understanding of their professional identity, reasons why they serve, and ways they serve
the American people.
Motivation, discipline, striving for excellence, and good morale.
A sense of accomplishment: “Duty Well-Performed!”
Pride in honorable service defending the American people.
Belonging to a cause greater than oneself: love of country, the Army Family, and preserving the
peace.
Living by the Army ethic.
1-45. The Army ethic is the basis of the Army’s shared professional identity of trusted Army professionals.
This identity expresses how Army professionals view their profession and why they serve. Love of country
and family, preservation of the peace, and defense of the American people and the Army Values are inherent
to the Army ethic. The ethical, effective, and efficient accomplishment of the mission is the core of this ethic.
Soldiers and Army civilians are bound in common moral purpose to support and defend the Constitution and
the American people.
1-46. The Army ethic guides institutional policy and practice in the ethical design, generation, support and
application of landpower, under civilian authority, on behalf of the American people. The relationship
between the Army profession and the American people depends on mutual trust, continuously reinforced
through the performance of honorable service, military expertise, and stewardship.
1-47. The Army ethic has its origins in the philosophical heritage, theological and cultural traditions, and the
historical legacy that frame our Nation. Army professionals swear to uphold the principles codified in the
Constitution, which include establishing justice, ensuring domestic tranquility, providing for the common
defense, promoting the general welfare, and securing the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity.
These principles are affirmed in oaths of service, and reflected in the Army motto—This We’ll Defend.
1-48. Soldiers and Army civilians join the Army profession with personal values developed in childhood and
nurtured through years of experience. Diverse backgrounds and perspectives reflect American society and
are a great strength of the Army. The oath to support and defend the Constitution unites all Army
professionals. In so doing, they agree to live by and uphold the Army ethic. The framework for the Army
ethic (see table 1-1) illustrates the historic sources that inform its content.
+Table 1-1. The framework for the Army ethic
The Army ethic, our professional ethic, is the set of enduring moral principles, values, beliefs, and
applicable laws embedded within the Army culture of trust that motivates and guides the Army
profession and trusted Army professionals in conduct of the mission, performance of duty, and all
aspects of life.
1-49. The legal foundations of the Army ethic are the Constitution of the United States, United States Code,
the Uniformed Code of Military Justice, and other orders and directives. Army professionals adhere to these
mandates as the minimum standards for ethical conduct.
1-50. In addition to the legal foundations, the Army ethic encompasses moral foundations to include the
Army Values and Just War Tradition. While the moral foundations of the Army ethic are not legally binding,
they provide the inspiration to strive for excellence in contribution of honorable service to the Nation.
1-51. In situations of uncertainty, where the rules do not provide clear, courses of action, Army professionals
base their decisions and actions on the moral principles of the Army ethic. In this way, Army professionals
live by and uphold the moral foundation of the Army ethic, sustaining trust within the profession and with
the American people.
1-52. Rapid changes in the nature of armed conflict present ethical challenges in accomplishing the mission.
These include uncertainty and complexity, particularly within the human dimension and cyberspace domain.
We must anticipate the ethical challenges associated with these conditions and be guided by the Army ethic,
including Army Values (see figure 1-2).
LOYALTY–DUTY–RESPECT–SERVICE–HONOR–INTEGRITY–COURAGE
+Figure 1-2. The Army ethic, including Army Values
1-58. Living by and upholding the Army ethic is a lifelong commitment. Reinforcing trust requires
continuous professional development. This quest is a duty consistent with the Army’s shared identity. The
Army ethic informs, motivates, and inspires Army professionals to—
Contribute honorable service in accomplishing the mission, performing their duty, and in all
aspects of life.
Be expert in the disciplined performance of duty.
Serve as responsible stewards of the Army profession by preventing misconduct and taking action
to stop unethical practices.
Army professionals serve honorably—according to the Army ethic—under civilian authority while
obeying the laws of the Nation and all legal orders; they reject and report illegal, unethical, or immoral
orders or actions.
1-59. Army professionals volunteer and take a solemn oath to bear true faith and allegiance to the
Constitution and to protect the freedoms it defines. The Army Value of loyalty clearly reflects this fact.
Allegiance means willing obedience to the lawful orders of elected and appointed leaders. Army professionals
demonstrate true faith in leading by example, doing their duty in taking action to uphold the moral principles
of the Army ethic, and rejecting orders in violation of law. This is the meaning of honorable service.
Army professionals take pride in honorably serving the Nation with integrity, demonstrating character
in all aspects of their lives.
1-60. The Army profession contributes honorable service to the American people, defending the freedoms
and rights as expressed in the Constitution. It accomplishes missions ethically, in accordance with the
Nation’s values. American values affect every aspect of how U.S. forces fight and win. This is non-
negotiable. Army professionals demonstrate the Army Value of integrity as they make decisions and take
actions that are consistent with the moral principles of the Army ethic. To violate the Army ethic is to break
the sacred bond of trust internally between the members of the profession, as well as externally between
Army professionals and the American people. Failure to live by and uphold the Army ethic brings discredit
on the Army and may have strategic implications for the mission.
Army professionals recognize the intrinsic dignity and worth of all people and treat them with respect.
1-61. Army professionals treat all people with respect—an Army Value—and demonstrate proper
consideration for all. Even those who threaten the rights of others are entitled to just treatment according to
law, regulations, and rules of engagement. They lead by example and do what is ethical to prevent abusive
treatment of others. They protect those who are threatened or suffer disregard for their human dignity and
worth. They do not tolerate mistreatment of people or their property.
Army professionals lead by example and demonstrate courage by doing what is ethical despite risk,
uncertainty, and fear; they candidly express their professional judgment to subordinates, peers, and
superiors.
1-62. Leadership demands courage, a character attribute and an Army Value. The mission, duty, and life
itself require Army professionals to reject cowardice—they accept risk and overcome adversity and their
fears. They realize that they risk personal harm in performing their duty and accomplishing missions. The
harm may be physical, emotional, or spiritual. Nonetheless, Army professionals communicate with candor
and tact, seek shared understanding, and demonstrate courage by doing what is ethical, effective, and efficient
despite risk, uncertainty, and fear.
1-63. Some situations exist where leaders may have multiple options that are ethical, but they create tension
with one another in terms of efficiency and effectiveness. It is professional judgment gained by experience
that helps inform the best decision among choices that are all ethical.
Army professionals perform their duty, leading and following with discipline, striving for excellence,
putting the needs of others above their own, and accomplishing the mission as a team.
1-64. The Army Values of duty and service require Army professionals to contribute their best efforts to
accomplish the mission as members of a team. They consider the welfare and needs of others above their
own and in performing their duty. They make ethical, effective, and efficient decisions and take appropriate
actions to the best of their ability in all aspects of life. This does not mean that they will always succeed or
avoid all mistakes. Setbacks and errors will occur in any human endeavor. Army professionals learn from
experience—both good and bad—develop good judgment and leadership, and strive for continuous
improvement.
Army professionals accomplish the mission and understand it may demand courageously risking their
lives and justly taking the lives of others.
1-65. The Army mission to “fight and win our Nation’s wars” requires Army forces equipped, trained, and
ready to engage in operations across multiple domains and the range of military operations. They defend the
basic human rights of Americans. The right to life includes the National responsibility of self-defense. Army
forces protect the legitimate interests of the American people when threatened or attacked. Army operations
may require the use of armed force against legitimate threats, consistent with the Army ethic and the law of
armed conflict. Employing force puts one’s self and others at risk. In the fog of war, uncertainty compromises
situational understanding. Regardless, to the best of their ability, they must make decisions and take actions
that are ethical, effective, and efficient. They understand there may be unanticipated, unintended
consequences affecting the lives of noncombatants. They do all they can to avoid these effects. They accept
prudent risk and with courage—an Army Value—accomplish the mission ethically.
Army professionals continuously advance the expertise of their chosen profession through lifelong
learning, professional development and our certifications.
1-66. Progressive development and certification in character, competence, and commitment for Soldiers and
Army civilians is a continuous, lifelong duty. Knowledge, discipline, and leadership require training,
education, experience, coaching, counseling, and mentoring. Situational understanding requires individual
and collective wisdom and judgment, often under demanding, chaotic circumstances, to discern what is
actually so—the truth. With shared understanding and intent, Army professionals evaluate their options,
decide the best course of action, and demonstrate the Army Value of service at all times.
Army professionals embrace and uphold the Army Values and standards of the profession, always
accountable to each other and the American people for their decisions and actions.
1-67. Every Soldier and Army civilian has the duty to be a leader, follower, and steward of the Army
profession. They are accountable to the American people to make decisions and accomplish the mission in
accordance with the Army ethic. They hold themselves and others accountable to achieve standards and strive
for excellence. They exemplify a life-long commitment to defend the American people and secure the
national interest. In demonstrating the Army Values of honor and integrity, Army professionals uphold the
Army ethic and conduct themselves in a manner worthy of their professional status.
Army professionals wisely use the resources entrusted to them, ensuring the Army is well-led and well-
prepared, while caring for Soldiers, Army civilians, and families.
1-68. Soldiers and civilians are diligent and faithful guardians of the people, the resources, and the profession
entrusted to their care. The privilege to lead includes the duty to professionally develop their subordinates.
They teach, coach, counsel, and mentor, and willingly accept such guidance from others. They develop
people and organizations—ensuring they are properly equipped, trained, and led. They are ready for the
mission today and anticipate the challenges that lie ahead. They make disciplined use of materiel, facilities,
and funds. In demonstrating the Army Value of service, they safeguard the health and welfare of their
Soldiers, Army civilians, and families.
Army professionals continuously strengthen the essential characteristics of the Army profession,
reinforcing the bond of trust with each other and the American people.
1-69. While the senior leader is responsible for what the team does or fails to do, success as a profession
demands that all its members perform duty with discipline and to standard. They accomplish the mission
with mutual trust as a cohesive team of Soldiers and Army civilians, collectively demonstrating the
characteristics of their profession and earning the trust of their fellow citizens. Within the Army, leaders set
the example, reinforce the culture of trust, establish professional organizational climates, and inspire their
identity as trusted Army professionals. With character, competence, and commitment they demonstrate the
Army Values of honor and integrity. As responsible stewards of the Army profession, they ensure the
readiness of the Army, now and for the future.
1-72. All members aspire to achieve the Army Values professionally and personally. The Army Values are
a compass needle, always pointing toward what the Nation demands of its Army. Often, the Army is the face
of the Nation abroad. During conflict, the Army employs lethal violence in accordance with the law of armed
conflict and rules of engagement under the most demanding conditions. This is an enormous responsibility
and the people of the United States require the Army to adhere to its values and represent its interests across
the range of military operations and the competition continuum. See chapter 2 for a detailed discussion of the
Army Values.
Army Oaths
Oath of Enlistment
I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the
United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and
allegiance to the same; and that I will obey the orders of the President of the United
States and the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to regulations and
the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So help me God.
ARMY LEADERSHIP
1-73. The Army experience over more than two centuries is that most people have leadership potential and
can learn to be effective leaders. The ability to influence others is a central component of leadership. As a
result, leader development has long been an Army priority (see FM 6-22 for more information regarding
leader development). This development begins with education, training, and experience, and requires
understanding about what Army leaders do and why
1-74. Leadership is the activity of influencing people by providing purpose, direction, and motivation
to accomplish the mission and improve the organization. Leadership as an element of combat power,
coupled with information, unifies the warfighting functions (movement and maneuver, intelligence, fires,
sustainment, protection and command and control). Leadership focuses and synchronizes organizations.
Leaders inspire people to become energized and motivated to achieve desired outcomes. An Army leader is
anyone who by virtue of assumed role or assigned responsibility inspires and influences people by
providing purpose, direction, and motivation to accomplish the mission and improve the organization.
INFLUENCING
1-75. Influencing is persuading people do what is necessary. Influencing entails more than simply passing
along orders. Through words and personal example, leaders inspire purpose, provide direction, and when
required motivation.
PURPOSE
1-76. Leaders provide clear purpose for their subordinates. Purpose gives subordinates a reason to achieve a
desired outcome. Leaders convey purpose through direct means such as requests, directives, or orders.
Leaders inspire subordinates to do their best by instilling a higher purpose that rises above self-interest. They
explain why something should or must be done and provide context whenever possible. Subordinates who
understand why they are doing something difficult and discern the higher purpose are more likely to do the
right thing when leaders are not present to direct their every action.
DIRECTION
1-77. Direction is telling others what to do. Providing effective direction requires that leaders communicate
the desired end state for the direction they provide. To accomplish a mission, leaders prioritize tasks, assign
responsibility, supervise, and ensure subordinates perform to standard. They ensure subordinates clearly
understand their guidance, while allowing subordinates the opportunity to demonstrate initiative within the
overall commander's intent. Providing clear direction allows subordinate initiative to adapt their tasks within
the commander’s intent when circumstances change.
1-78. The Army requires leaders who provide direction and subordinates who can execute without the need
for continuous guidance. The Army needs leaders who understand, train, and employ mission command
during the course of their duties. Mission command is the Army’s approach to command and control that
empowers subordinate decision making and decentralized execution appropriate to the situation (ADP 6-0).
Mission command recognizes that no single person in an organization or unit can make every important
decision at every critical moment, nor can a single person keep up with the number of simultaneous decisions
organizations require during combat or other time-constrained environments. See ADP 6-0 for further
discussion about mission command.
MOTIVATION
1-79. Motivation is the will and initiative to do what is necessary to accomplish a mission. While motivation
comes from within, others’ actions and words affect it. A leader’s role in motivation is at times to understand
others’ needs and desires, to align and elevate individual desires into team goals, and to inspire others to
accomplish those larger goals, even if it means risking their lives. At other times, such as time constrained or
dangerous situations, the leader gets subordinates to do things quickly and explain the reasons why later.
1-80. Indirect approaches to motivation can be as successful as direct approaches. Setting a personal example
can sustain the drive in others. This becomes apparent when leaders share hardship and risk with
subordinates. Leaders who personally share hardship and risk demonstrate to subordinates that they are
invested in the outcome and willing and able to do what they ask subordinates to do. Indirect approaches
such as these build confidence about the judgment, commitment, and attitude of the leader.
1-81. How leaders motivate others matters. There are practices that are always positive, while others are
good or bad depending on the context of the situation. There are those who can inspire others to act because
they respect the leader’s judgment, respect that the leader earned. Earning this type of personal respect takes
time, so leaders may need to motivate others initially based upon the authorities and respect inherent in their
duty position. In either case, leaders should be judicious about using pressure or threat of punishment when
motivating others, because doing so too often or when unnecessary breeds resentment and low morale.
Aspiring leaders observe many different methods others use to motivate subordinates, and should remember
and practice those that were most effective while avoiding those that negatively affected an organization.
DYNAMICS OF LEADERSHIP
1-89. The most effective leaders adapt their approach to the mission, the organization, and the situation. A
division commander addressing brigade commanders before conducting large-scale combat operations leads
and communicates differently than a drill sergeant training new recruits in basic training. Constant change
affects peacetime and combat operations. Personnel change out. Timelines move. Anticipated resources do
not materialize. Adversaries do what was least expected. Weather keeps CAS assets grounded. Commanders,
leaders, and staffs plan for possible changes and continually monitor progress to engage as needed. Leaders
account for the important factors affecting the dynamics of leadership. Three consistent factors are—
The leader.
The led.
The situation.
THE LEADER
1-90. An Army leader influences others to accomplish missions. A leader has the opportunity to lead when
assigned responsibility, assuming a role, or being an informal leader within a team. Leaders motivate people
both inside and outside the chain of command toward action or to change their thinking when appropriate.
Formally or informally, regardless of position or rank, all Army members can find themselves in situations
to lead and influence others. Leaders who adapt their actions based on the dynamics of a situation achieve
the best possible outcomes. Leaders take into account the level of their experience or skill, and their authority.
1-91. Everyone has an identity or a way they see themselves. Leaders internalize the roles, responsibilities,
and actions that they understand of a leader to be, know, and do. Leaders who are unsure of themselves filling
the role of a leader will be limited until they have confidence. Without a clear leader identity, others will
question the type of leader they are, what they stand for, and the way they conduct themselves. What a leader
believes about their role as a leader serves as a constant guide to behave as a leader of good character. Practice
identifying as a leader—doing the right things in the right way—becomes habitual and helps junior personnel
along the path to becoming seasoned, effective leaders.
1-92. Self-awareness is fundamental to understanding one’s abilities. Leaders should know their strengths
and weaknesses: what they do or do not know, what they are or are not skilled at, and what is in their span of
control. Even though they should be self-aware, not all leaders are. Leaders vary in their proficiency levels
in attributes and competencies and their preparation for each situation. Leaders require self-awareness if they
are to accurately assess their own experience and competence as well as earn the trust of those they influence.
Being self-aware means seeing one’s self as viewed by others and understanding the levels of influence one
is likely to have with followers. For instance, a newly assigned company commander understands that
participating with Soldiers on a 12-mile ruck-march builds subordinates’ respect for the leader and builds the
leader’s credibility with them. Awareness allows one to adjust one's leadership actions in the moment and
know what areas to improve for the future.
1-93. Leaders have different responsibilities and authorities that can vary with duty positions and missions.
Authority to lead is either formally derived from rank or position or is informal, such as when influencing
peers or coalition partners. Formal authority allows use of commitment and compliance through the methods
of influence (see chapter 5). Informal authority primarily relies on obtaining commitment from others.
Formal Leadership
1-94. Formal leadership authority is granted to individuals by virtue of assignment to positions of
responsibility, according to their rank and experience. The Uniform Code of Military Justice supports military
leaders in positions of legitimate authority. Formal leaders exercise their authority over subordinates through
lawful orders and directives. An Army leader operates with clear expectations regarding conduct so that
indiscipline does not jeopardize mission success. Leaders, through formally assigned authorities and clearly
communicated standards, are responsible for ensuring adherence to standards, policies, and codes. Team
leaders, squad leaders, platoon leaders, staff officers, commanders, and civilian supervisors are all examples
of leaders in positions with formal designations of authority.
1-95. Command is the authority that a commander in the armed forces lawfully exercises over subordinates
by virtue of rank or assignment (JP 1). Command includes the authority and responsibility for effectively
using available resources and for planning the employment of, organizing, directing, coordinating, and
controlling military forces for the accomplishment of assigned missions. Command also includes
responsibility for health, welfare, morale, and discipline of assigned personnel.
1-96. In Army organizations, commanders establish standards and policies for achieving and rewarding
exemplary performance, as well as for punishing misconduct. Military commanders enforce lawful orders
under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Consequently, commanders' personalities profoundly affect
organizations. The Army expects leaders selected for command to lead beyond mere exercise of formal
authority. They lead by example and serve as role models. Their personal example and actions carry
tremendous weight.
1-97. Command is personal. In Army regulations and doctrine, an individual, not an institution or group, is
given the authority to command. The legal and ethical responsibilities of a commander exceed those of any
other leader of similar rank serving in a staff position or as a civilian manager. The relationships among
commanders and subordinate officers, noncommissioned officers, enlisted Soldiers, and DA Civilians is
distinct. Those not in command must understand that the commander alone is responsible for what their
command does or fails to do. Subordinates have the responsibility to support the commander’s intent for their
command, unit, or organization.
Informal Leadership
1-98. Informal leadership exists throughout organizations and plays an important role in mission
accomplishment. Informal leadership is not exercised based on rank or position in the organization. It stems
from personal initiative, special knowledge, unique experiences, or technical expertise specific to an
individual or team. Informal leadership occurs when someone takes the initiative to assume responsibility for
action in a situation, takes charge when no formal leader is present, or to make formal leaders aware of
something they need to know. Informal leaders contribute to team success.
1-99. Informal networks arise both inside and outside organizations. These informal networks include the
noncommissioned officer (NCO) support channel. To build cohesive teams, leaders interact with both formal
and informal teams, including the traditional chain of command and technical channels combining
commanders and staff officers. The collaboration of first sergeants within a battalion is also an example of
an informal network. Informal networks that operate in support of organizational goals are a force multiplier.
Conversely, informal networks that operate at cross-purposes to the chain of command are destructive to an
organization and intolerable.
THE LED
1-100. The led are an important factor in leadership. Leaders, who consider their strengths along with
subordinates’ capabilities and the situational demands of missions, create the best chance at accomplishing
tasks and missions. Inexperienced subordinates and those with limited competence require greater oversight
and control. Seasoned, competent subordinates require less oversight and control.
1-101. Experience, competence, and commitment of those led vary with the mission and situation. For
example, people with significant combat experience may be overly capable to perform a mission, but their
commitment may lag if they do not consider the mission worth risking life or limb. Commitment varies with
trust in the leader directing the mission. Trust between the leader and the led can vary across situations. A
leader applies greater control over some subordinates than others. Generally, when subordinates have greater
levels of expertise and commitment, leaders trust and empower them.
1-102. Every Army leader is a subordinate to someone, so all leaders are also followers. Each Soldier and
DA Civilian begins service by swearing an oath of service that subordinates him or her to the Nation’s civilian
leadership (see page 1-3). This obligation remains throughout a career regardless of position or rank attained.
Effective Army organizations depend on the willingness of their leaders and their subordinates to serve
faithfully and competently in both leadership and followership roles.
1-103. Followers respond to the authority of a leader and specific direction. Following is more than just
doing what one is told to do. Motivation is an aspect of following. Effective followership requires an ability
to take the initiative to get things done when necessary. Effective leaders learn to be trusted followers.
Teaching weapons maintenance provides an example. New Soldiers clean their rifles how and when
instructed to do so. Experienced Soldiers routinely clean their weapon without being told so that it will
function when needed. This simple discipline of doing the right thing when no one is looking is fundamental
to following.
1-104. There is a tendency to think of people as either a leader or subordinate, but leading and following
are simultaneous responsibilities. This is particularly true in a hierarchical organization like the Army.
Everyone charged with leading others has a responsibility to follow their superior in the chain of command.
Being an effective follower requires the same attributes and competencies required to be an effective leader,
although application is different. When following, Army leaders respond to their superiors’ authority and
guidance. The principles of mission command capture this: leaders empower followers, by fostering mutual
trust and creating shared understanding, to take initiative based on the commander’s intent. The subordinate
leader transitions from follower to leader as they take action and direct their followers.
THE SITUATION
1-105. The situation affects which actions leaders take. Leaders consider the unique characteristics of the
task or mission at hand, the abilities of their subordinates, their familiarity with similar situations, and amount
of time available. High-risk or urgent situations often require immediate and decisive actions, particularly in
combat. Low-risk or slowly developing situations allow leaders to spend more time with deliberate and
collaborative approaches, coaching, and teaching subordinates as they go along. This fosters a higher level
of commitment, develops subordinates, and creates the organizational cohesion essential for leading
successfully in challenging situations.
1-106. Leaders learn to adapt to the situation by disciplining themselves to practice different approaches.
This prepares leaders to adapt to new, urgent, stressful, or high-risk situations. In general, leaders should
strive to improve all of the leader attributes and core leadership competencies, adapt their leadership
techniques to each situation, and become lifelong learners. This requires leaders to—
Know how to assess tasks and conditions.
Know how to assess their own capabilities and those of their followers.
Know how to adjust their leadership techniques.
Know those they lead.
Understand how to employ the mission command approach to the situation.
Develop themselves and the competence of subordinates.
Establish and maintain positive leadership climates.
ROLES OF LEADERSHIP
1-107. Every individual in the Army is a member of a team, as a leader or a follower. Each leadership role
and responsibility is unique, yet leaders interact in common ways. The Army is comprised of Soldiers and
DA Civilians. Soldiers are officers, NCOs, and enlisted. The Department of the Army employs DA Civilians
and, like Soldiers, are members of the executive branch of the federal government. The Army charges all
members to support and defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic. They all take
oaths to the Constitution that commit them to follow the laws of the Nation and orders of those appointed
over them. Army professionals who embrace and live the Army Values are role models and standard-bearers
for the organization. Army leaders come from three different categories—
Officers.
Noncommissioned officers.
DA Civilians.
OFFICERS
1-108. Officers command units, establish policy, and manage resources while balancing risks and caring
for their people and families. They integrate collective, leader, and Soldier training to accomplish the Army's
missions. They serve at all levels, from leading tactical unit operations to leading change at strategic levels.
Command makes officers responsible and accountable for everything their command does or fails to do.
1-109. The technical characteristic that distinguishes officers (including warrant officers) the most is that
they hold their grade and office under a commission or appointment issued by the authority of the President
of the United States or the Secretary of the Army. They receive commissions based upon the basis of special
trust and confidence placed in the officer's patriotism, valor, fidelity, and abilities. An officer's commission
grants authority to direct subordinates and subsequently, an obligation to obey superiors.
1-110. Serving as an officer differs from other forms of Army leadership by the measure of responsibility
attached, and in the magnitude of the consequences of inaction or ineffectiveness. An enlisted leader swears
an oath of obedience to lawful orders, while an officer promises to, "well and faithfully discharge the duties
of the office” (see page 1-2). Officers maintain the momentum of operations. While officers depend on the
counsel, technical skill, maturity, and experience of subordinates to translate their orders into action, they are
ultimately responsible for mission success.
1-111. Warrant officers possess a high degree of specialization in a particular field in contrast to the more
general assignment pattern of other officers. Warrant officers may command aircraft, maritime vessels, and
special units. Warrant officers provide expert tactical and technical advice, knowledge, counsel, and solutions
to support their unit or organization. They maintain, administer, and manage the Army's equipment, support
activities, and technical systems. Their extensive professional experience and technical knowledge qualifies
warrant officers as invaluable role models and mentors for officers and NCOs.
1-112. While warrant officer positions are usually functionally oriented, warrant officers may lead and
direct Soldiers. Senior warrant officers provide the commander with the benefit of years of tactical and
technical experience. Warrant officers functioning at senior levels become systems experts rather than
equipment experts. They must understand the conditions and know how to integrate the systems they manage
into complex operational environments.
NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICERS
1-113. Noncommissioned officers are the backbone of the Army and are responsible for maintaining Army
standards and discipline. NCOs are critical to training, educating, and developing individuals, crews, and
small teams. NCOs are accountable for the care of their Soldiers and setting examples for them.
1-114. The Army relies on NCOs capable of conducting daily operations, executing small unit tactical
operations, and making commander’s intent-driven decisions. Subordinates look to NCOs for solutions,
guidance, and inspiration. Soldiers count on NCOs they trust and admire. They expect them to convey
information and provide day-to-day guidance to accomplish tactical and technical tasks. All Soldiers look to
NCOs to train them to cope, prepare, and perform courageously regardless of the situation.
1-115. While preparing Soldiers for missions, NCOs stress fieldcraft and physical and mental rigor. NCOs
understand that improved warfighting technology will not reduce the need for mentally and physically fit
Soldiers. Soldiers will continue to carry heavy loads, and engage enemy forces in close combat. Tactical
success relates directly to the Soldiers' level of tactical and technical training, as well as their fitness and
resiliency. Soldier care includes preparing them for future challenges and adversity. ATP 6-22.5 contains
material related to Soldier care.
1-116. NCOs are trainers, mentors, communicators, and advisors. NCOs advise and assist in the
development of officers by sharing their experience and professional judgment. They form professional and
personal bonds with officers based on mutual trust and common goals. Commanders at all levels have senior
enlisted advisors who provide advice and serve as an important source of knowledge about enlisted matters,
as well as experts about tactical and technical questions. At the highest level, the Sergeant Major of the Army
is the Army Chief of Staff's personal advisor who recommends policy to support Soldiers throughout the
Army.
LEVELS OF LEADERSHIP
1-121. The Army acknowledges three levels of leadership—
Direct.
Organizational.
Strategic.
1-122. The leader attributes and competencies apply across all leadership levels. The concept of
subordination helps members understand the expectations the Army has for them across a career. Foundations
include understanding oaths, dignity and respect for all people, the Army Values, leadership, command,
authority, Army operations, military discipline, and similar basics (see figure 1-5). Leaders gain a firmer
understanding of the enduring requirements and add specialized knowledge as they move through the levels.
1-123. Factors determining a leadership level include the leader’s relationship to a subordinate, number of
subordinates, scope of responsibility, and time horizons of missions. Regardless of which level they serve in,
a leader is always a direct leader. Direct leaders are task oriented. Organizational leaders are both task and
mission oriented and lead through subordinate leaders. Army organizations execute missions and tasks.
Strategic leaders apply a global, regional, national, and societal perspective to the organizations they lead.
Organizational and strategic leaders lead through others. Rank does not generally determine the difference
between organizational and strategic leaders, positions do. The Sergeant Major of the Army is a sergeant
major. A battalion sergeant major is also a sergeant major. While there are significant differences in seniority
and responsibilities, they are both sergeant majors. Junior leaders and some DA Civilians serve at the direct
leadership level. NCOs and officers that direct other leaders to accomplish tasks are organizational leaders.
Generally, senior grade and general officers and equivalent senior executive service DA Civilians and their
sergeants major serve at the organizational or strategic leadership levels.
DIRECT LEADERSHIP
1-124. Direct leadership is face-to-face or first-line leadership that generally occurs in organizations where
subordinates see their leaders all the time such as teams, squads, sections, platoons, departments, companies,
batteries, and troops. The direct leader's span of influence may range from a few to dozens of people. The
leader's day-to-day involvement is important for successful unit performance. Direct level leadership covers
the same type of functions, such as those performed by an infantry squad or a graves registration unit.
1-125. Direct leaders develop others through coaching, counseling, mentoring, and setting the example. For
instance, company grade officers and NCOs are close enough to Soldiers to exert direct influence when
observing training or interacting with subordinates during other functions.
1-126. Direct leaders generally experience more certainty and less complexity than organizational and
strategic leaders because of their close physical proximity to their subordinates. They direct actions, assign
tasks, teach, coach, encourage, give guidance, and ensure successful completion of tasks or missions. They
must be close enough to the action to determine or address problems. Examples of direct leadership tasks are
vehicle maintenance, supervision of creating of fighting positions, and performance counseling.
1-127. Direct leaders understand the mission of their higher headquarters two levels up and when applicable
the tasks assigned one level down. This provides them with the context in which they perform their duties.
ORGANIZATIONAL LEADERSHIP
1-128. Organizational leaders exercise leadership through subordinate leaders responsible for leading the
various organizations that make up the larger organization. Organizational leaders establish a climate that
supports their subordinate leaders. Subordinate units and organizations do not depend on daily guidance from
their higher-level leaders to be successful. Organizational leaders, particularly commanders, are responsible
for communicating intent two echelons down and understanding intent two echelons up. Organizational
leaders operate within commanders’ intent and communicate that intent to subordinates as a means of
providing room for subordinate initiative and decreasing the number of decisions they must personally make
to keep the organization operating effectively. Organizational leadership includes responsibility over multiple
functions, such as leading and synchronizing combined arms operations.
1-129. Organizational leaders regularly and personally interact with their subordinates. They make time to
verify that reports and briefings match their own perceptions of the organization's progress toward mission
accomplishment. Organizational leaders use personal observation and visits by designated personnel to assess
how well subordinates understand the commander's intent and to determine if they need to reinforce or
reassess the organization's priorities.
STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
1-130. Strategic leaders include military and civilian leaders at the major command through DOD levels.
Strategic leadership guides and integrates multiple organizational level units that perform a wide range of
functions. It influences several thousand to hundreds of thousands of people. These leaders allocate resources,
communicate strategic vision, and prepare their commands and the Army itself for future missions. Strategic
leaders shape Army culture by ensuring their directives, policies, programs, and systems are ethical, effective,
and efficient.
1-131. Strategic leaders apply all core leader competencies they acquired as direct and organizational
leaders, while further adapting them to the complex realities of their strategic conditions. Strategic leader
decisions must consider congressional hearings, Army budgetary constraints, new systems acquisition,
civilian programs, research, development, and inter-service cooperation. Every strategic leader decision has
the potential of affecting the entire Army.
1-132. Strategic leaders are important catalysts for change and transformation. Because they follow a long-
term approach to planning, preparing, executing, and assessing, they often do not see their ideas come to
fruition during their tenure. Army modernization is an example where long-range strategic planning is
necessary. Relying on many subordinate leader teams, the Army depends on organizational leaders to endorse
the long-term strategic vision and ensure it reaches all of the Army. Because they exert influence primarily
through their senior staffs and subordinates, strategic leaders must have excellent judgment when selecting
and developing subordinates for critical duty positions.
Chapter 2
Character
ARMY VALUES
Personal values develop over the years from childhood to adulthood. People are free to choose and
hold their own values, but upon taking the oath of service, Soldiers and DA Civilians agree to live and act by
the Army Values. Army Values consist of the principles, standards, and qualities considered essential for
service. The Army Values set expectations for conduct and are fundamental to making the right decision in
any situation. Living, teaching, and reinforcing Army Values is an important leader responsibility.
The Army recognizes seven values that all Soldiers and DA Civilians must internalize. Embracing the
Army Values is the hallmark of being an Army professional. Doing so represents a pact with teammates and
the American people to be trustworthy and accountable. When read in sequence, the first letters of the Army
Values form the acronym LDRSHIP:
Loyalty.
Duty.
Respect.
Selfless service.
Honor.
Integrity.
Personal courage.
LOYALTY: BEAR TRUE FAITH AND ALLEGIANCE TO THE U.S. CONSTITUTION, THE ARMY,
YOUR UNIT AND OTHER SOLDIERS.
The first order of loyalty is to the Constitution and the ideals upon which it is based. One cannot remain
loyal to the Constitution by being loyal to those who violate it. To create strong organizations, superiors,
subordinates, and peers must embrace loyalty. One way that individuals demonstrate loyalty is by upholding
all of the Army values. With those values as a foundation, loyalty is a two-way exchange: leaders earn loyalty
and subordinates expect loyalty in return. Leaders earn subordinates’ loyalty by training them well, treating
them fairly, and living the Army Values. Subordinates demonstrate loyalty by working hard for their leaders
and being as good as they can be at their jobs. Loyalty and trust enable the successful day-to-day operations
of all organizations.
The discipline which makes the soldiers of a free country reliable in battle is not to be
gained by harsh or tyrannical treatment. On the contrary, such treatment is far more likely
to destroy than to make an army. It is possible to impart instruction and to give commands
in such manner and such a tone of voice to inspire in the soldier no feeling but an intense
desire to obey, while the opposite manner and tone of voice cannot fail to excite strong
resentment and a desire to disobey. The one mode or the other of dealing with subordinates
springs from a corresponding spirit in the breast of the commander. He who feels the
respect which is due to others cannot fail to inspire in them regard for himself, while he
who feels, and hence manifests, disrespect toward others, especially his inferiors, cannot
fail to inspire hatred against himself.
Major General John M. Schofield
Address to the United States Corps of Cadets, 11 August 1879
SELFLESS SERVICE: PUT THE WELFARE OF THE NATION, THE ARMY, AND YOUR
SUBORDINATES BEFORE YOUR OWN.
Selfless service means doing what is right for the Nation, the Army, the organization, and subordinates.
While the needs of the Army and the Nation should come first, selfless service does not imply leaders should
neglect their families or themselves. Unselfish, humble leaders set themselves apart as teammates who are
approachable, trustworthy, and open to follower input and advice. Selfless leaders aspire to attain goals for
the greater good, beyond their own interests and benefits.
ETHICAL REASONING
To be an ethical leader requires more than merely knowing the Army Values. Leaders must be able to
live by them to find moral solutions to diverse problems. Ethical reasoning must occur in everything leaders
do—in planning, preparing, executing, and assessing operations.
Ethical choices may not always be obvious decisions between right and wrong. Leaders use multiple
perspectives to think about ethical concerns, applying them to determine the most ethical choice. One
perspective comes from a view that desirable virtues such as courage, justice, and benevolence define ethical
outcomes. A second perspective comes from a set of agreed-upon values or rules, such as the Army Values
or Constitutional rights. A third perspective bases the consequences of the decision on whatever produces the
greatest good for the greatest number as most favorable. Leaders able to consider all perspectives applicable
to a particular situation are more likely to be ethically astute. When time is available, consulting peers and
seniors is often helpful. Chaplains can provide confidential advice to leaders about difficult personal and
professional ethical issues to encourage moral decisions in accord with personal conscience and the Army
Values.
Leaders should not intentionally issue vague or ambiguous orders or instructions to avoid responsibility
or accountability. Leaders have a responsibility to research relevant orders, rules, and regulations and to
demand clarification of orders that could lead to criminal misinterpretation or abuse. Ultimately, Army
leaders must accept responsibility for the consequences of their actions and the subordinates who execute the
leader’s orders.
ETHICAL ORDERS
Making the right choice and acting when faced with an ethical question can be difficult. Sometimes
the situation requires a leader to stand firm and disagree with a supervisor on ethical grounds. These occasions
test one’s character and moral courage. Situations in which any Army member thinks an order is unlawful
can be the most difficult.
Under typical circumstances, a leader executes a superior leader’s decision with enthusiasm. Unlawful
orders are the exception: a leader has a duty to question such orders and refuse to obey them if clarification
of the order’s intent fails to resolve objections. If a Soldier perceives an order is unlawful, the Soldier should
fully understand the order’s details and original intent. The Soldier should seek immediate clarification from
the person who issued the order before proceeding.
If the question is more complex, seek legal counsel. If an issue requires an immediate decision, as may
happen in the heat of combat, make the best judgment possible based on the Army Values, personal
experience, critical thinking, previous study, and prior reflection. Chances are, when a Soldier disobeys what
may be an unlawful order, it may be the most courageous decision they make. The Soldier’s Rules codify the
law of war and outline ethical and lawful conduct in operations (see AR 350-1). They distill the essence of
the law of war, the Army Values, and inform ethical conduct.
EMPATHY
Army leaders show empathy when they genuinely relate to another person’s situation, motives, or
feelings. Empathy does not mean sympathy for another, but a realization that leads to a deeper understanding.
Empathy allows the leader to anticipate what others are experiencing and feeling and gives insight to how
decisions or actions affect them. Leaders extend empathy to others in both their leader and follower roles.
Leaders with a strong tendency for empathy can apply it to understand people at a deeper level. This applies
to DA Civilians, Soldiers and their Families, local populations, victims of natural disasters, and enemy
combatants. Empathy enhances cultural understanding and enables an Army leader to better interact with
others.
Empathetic leaders are better communicators, help others to understand what is occurring, and inspire
others to meet mission objectives. During operations, Army leaders gain empathy when they share hardships
to gauge Soldier morale and combat readiness. They recognize the need to provide reasonable comforts and
rest periods to maintain morale and accomplish the mission.
Army leaders recognize that empathy includes nurturing a close relationship between the Army and
Army families. Army leaders at all levels should promote healthy families and relate to the challenges they
face. Empathy for families includes providing recovery time from difficult missions, protecting leave periods,
and supporting events that allow information exchange and family team building.
The Warrior Ethos requires unrelenting resolve to do what is right regardless of the mission.
Understanding what is right requires respect for everyone involved in complex missions, such as stability or
defense support of civil authorities operations. Ambiguous situations, such as when to use lethal or nonlethal
force, are a test of the leader’s judgment and discipline. The Warrior Ethos creates a collective commitment
to succeed with honor.
The Warrior Ethos connects Soldiers of today with those whose sacrifices have sustained America’s
existence. The Warrior Ethos is crucial but Soldier commitment may be perishable. Consequently, the Army
must continually affirm, develop, and sustain its Warrior Ethos. The key to the Warrior Ethos is a mindset
developed through purposeful mental preparation. Growth in character, confidence, composure, mental
agility, and resilience are outcomes of internalizing the Warrior Ethos, as well as the service ethos of DA
Civilians.
DISCIPLINE
Discipline is the soul of an army.
George Washington
Commander, Continental Army (1775-81) and President of the United States (1789-97)
Discipline is essential to character, just as it is to an organization. All leaders must demonstrate self-
discipline—the ability to control one’s own behavior—to do the harder right over the easier wrong. Doing
tasks to the established Army standard without deviation reflects discipline.
Individual discipline supports the unit or an organization. At the unit level, leaders maintain discipline
by enforcing standards impartially and consistently. Often this involves attending to mundane details, which
may seem less urgent than an organization's key tasks, but are necessary to ensure success. Examples include
preventive maintenance checks and services, pre-combat checks and inspections, effective Command Supply
Discipline Programs, Organizational Inspection Programs, and training management. When enforcing
standards, Soldiers expect their leaders to do so in an impartial, transparent, just, and consistent manner.
HUMILITY
Humility in its simplest form is the absence of arrogance. It is a sign of a leader being unselfish,
working toward something more important than themselves. A person of high integrity, honesty, and
character embodies the qualities of humility. For humility to apply, a leader must first have competence and
confidence. A leader with the right level of humility is a willing learner, maintains accurate self-awareness,
and seeks out others’ input and feedback. Leaders are seen as humble when they are aware of their limitations
and abilities and apply that understanding in their leadership.
Humility exists on a continuum. Too little humility represents arrogance or hubris, which may lead to
overconfidence. Excess humility is problematic because it is interpreted as shyness, meekness, passivity,
blind obedience, or timidity. Either extreme signals a lack of self-awareness that undermines followers’ trust
and confidence in the leader’s ability to make good decisions, look out for the unit’s welfare, and to achieve
success.
It is difficult to judge our own humility. One’s humility is largely determined by other people. It is a
subjective perception of the leader. Humility is interpreted differently by different genders and cultures.
Individuals need to guard against their biases and assess character based on the whole set of Army Values
and attributes.
FITNESS
3-4. The Army’s approach to holistic fitness reduces the risk of unnecessary harm during operations, while
training, in garrison, and off duty. Holistic fitness recognizes that individual well-being depends on
interdependent areas including physical fitness (see FM 7-22), resilience, training, individual spirituality
(self-identity, beliefs, and life purpose beyond self), social interaction (positive connection with others), and
physical, psychological, and behavioral health. Leaders promote policies and practices to maintain total
fitness for themselves and their subordinates.
3-5. Unit readiness begins with physically fit Soldiers. Operations place physical, mental, and emotional
demands upon the individuals conducting them. Physical fitness, while crucial for success in battle, is
important for all members of the Army team in all environments. Physically fit people feel more competent
and confident, handle stress better, can work longer more effectively, and recover faster from hardship.
Physical fitness is the cornerstone of combat readiness.
3-6. The physical demands of leadership during repeated deployments or continuous operations can erode
how well one thinks and emotional stability, both of which are essential to the effective decision making
required for sound leadership. Poor physical fitness multiples the effects of stress, eventually compromising
mental and emotional fitness. Operations in difficult terrain, extreme climates, or high altitudes require
extensive physical conditioning. Once in the area of operations, leaders must continue efforts to sustain their
own fitness and that of their subordinates.
3-7. Preparedness for operational missions should be the primary focus of the unit’s fitness program. The
forward-looking leader develops a balanced fitness program that enables Soldiers to execute the unit’s most
challenging missions.
3-8. It is a leader’s duty to stay healthy and fit since the leader’s decisions affect the welfare of the entire
organization. Fit and healthy leaders motivate and challenge subordinates to become like them. Staying
healthy and physically fit enables Soldiers to cope with the psychological effects of extended operations. To
maintain peak performance, leaders and Soldiers need exercise, sufficient sleep, nutritional food, and
adequate hydration.
3-9. Health fitness includes having routine physical exams and keeping immunizations current, as well as
practicing dental hygiene, personal grooming, and cleanliness when in the field during training and
operations. Health fitness includes avoiding things that can degrade personal health, such as, substance abuse,
tobacco use, over-eating, as well as overuse of caffeine, energy drinks, and other stimulants (for more
information see FM 7-22).
CONFIDENCE
3-10. Confidence is the faith leaders place in their abilities to make decisions and take appropriate action in
any situation, no matter how stressful or ambiguous. Confidence grows from professional competence and a
realistic appraisal of one’s abilities. A leader’s confidence is contagious and permeates the entire
organization. Confident leaders who help Soldiers control doubt reduce anxiety in a unit. Effective leaders
temper confidence with humility—the understanding that no one is perfect, all knowing, or always correct.
Humility prevents overconfidence and arrogance.
RESILIENCE
3-11. Resilience enables leaders and their organizations to endure and ultimately prevail over hardship.
Resilience and commitment to accomplish the mission is critical to overcoming adversity. Resilient Soldiers
can recover quickly from setbacks, shock, and injuries while maintaining focus on their jobs and the mission.
Resilient leaders learn and grow from experiencing difficult situations. Leaders instill resilience and a
winning spirit in subordinates through personal example and tough, realistic training.
Commanding Presence
For nine months, the commander conducted route clearance patrols with his
subordinate platoons. Nearly every day, his platoons received direct fire as they found
and neutralized hundreds of improvised explosive devices that endangered friendly
forces using the roads. A change of command occurred and the commander went to
brigade staff. The new commander quickly endeared himself to his subordinates as he
patrolled daily, sharing risk and hardship. The new commander and his driver were
killed in action.
The unit, nearing their end of their tour, struggled with the deaths of their teammates.
The former commander spoke to the brigade commander and explained that he was
the best officer available to bring the unit home. The brigade commander supported
him; he resumed command of the company and continued operations.
The former commander could have suggested that the next engineer captain in line
deploy the company home. However, understanding the unit and the situation, he
assessed correctly that the unit had experienced enough turmoil. He returned knowing
that he was placing himself back into harm’s way. All of the Soldiers in the company
knew the risks and their morale improved because they trusted his demonstrated
competence, judgment, and courage.
MENTAL AGILITY
4-4. Mental agility is the ability to think flexibly. Mental agility helps leaders effectively react to change
and adapt to the dynamic situations inherent to military operations. Mental agility keeps leaders from fixating
on the wrong problems or getting stuck on poor solutions. Agility enables thinking when current decisions
or actions are not producing the desired results and a new approach is necessary. Mental agility in leaders
and followers provides organizations with the adaptability necessary for the disciplined initiative essential to
mission command.
4-5. Mental agility relies upon curiosity and the ability to reason critically. Inquisitive or intellectually
curious leaders are eager to understand a broad range of topics and keep an open mind to multiple possibilities
before reaching decisions. Critical thinking is purposeful and helps find facts, challenge assumptions, solve
problems, and make decisions. Critical thinking enables understanding of changing situations, arriving at
justifiable conclusions, making judgments, and learning from experience. Critical and creative thinking
provide the basis for understanding, visualizing, and describing complex, ill-structured problems and
developing approaches to solve them. Critical thinking provides a basis for reflection and continual learning.
Creative thinking involves thinking in innovative ways using imagination, insight, and novel ideas. Critical
and innovative thought are abilities that enable adaptability.
4-6. Critical thinking examines a problem in depth from multiple points of view. The first and most
important step in finding an appropriate solution is to isolate the main problem. A leader’s mental agility to
quickly isolate a problem and identify solutions facilitates seizing initiative and adapting effectively during
operations when many things occur simultaneously and in close succession. Leaders must instill agility and
initiative within subordinates by creating a climate that encourages risk taking within the commander’s intent.
Underwriting risk and accepting honest mistakes in training makes subordinates more likely to develop and
take initiative.
SOUND JUDGMENT
Judgment comes from experience and experience comes from bad judgments.
General of the Army Omar N. Bradley
Address at the U.S. Army War College (1971)
4-7. Judgment requires the capacity to assess situations accurately, draw rational conclusions, and make
decisions. Sound judgment enables leaders to make sensible decisions in a timely manner, a quality critical
to building trust with subordinates and earning their confidence. Experience contributes to the development
of sound judgment when it contributes to learning. Leaders acquire experience through trial and error and by
observing others. Learning from others can occur through mentoring and coaching (see chapter 6).
4-8. Often, leaders must balance facts, question assumptions, and sense intangible factors like morale or
the enemy’s intent. Judgment contributes to the ability to compare possible courses of action and decide what
one to take. There are times, particularly in combat, where there are no good decisions, only the least bad
decision possible in the moment. Sound judgment requires consideration of consequences. It also includes
the ability to assess strengths and weaknesses of subordinates, peers, and the enemy. Like mental agility,
sound judgment is a critical part of problem solving and decision making.
INNOVATION
4-9. Innovation describes the ability to introduce or implement something new. Innovative problem solvers
tend to be inquisitive, looking to understand why something is the way it is or questioning how something
could work better. Being innovative requires creative thinking that uses both adaptive (drawing from
expertise and prior knowledge) and innovative approaches (developing completely new ideas).
4-10. Innovative leaders prevent complacency by finding new ways to challenge subordinates with
alternative approaches and ideas. They recognize that other people have good ideas and they recognize those
who do. To be innovators, leaders rely on intuition, experience, knowledge, and input from subordinates,
peers, and superiors. Innovative leaders reinforce team building by making everybody responsible for—and
stakeholders in—innovation.
INTERPERSONAL TACT
4-11. Effectively interacting with others is a skill that requires self-awareness. Interpersonal tact is a
component of professional behavior. Interpersonal tact relies on understanding the character, reactions, and
motives of oneself and others. It can be distilled down to the idea of honestly stating one’s views about an
idea or another person as diplomatically as possible to ensure it is understood without causing unnecessary
offense. Tact should be balanced by professional candor, in terms of saying what needs to be said or done for
the good of the mission or the unit. Leaders, who understand how subordinates, peers, and superiors view
them, and clearly understand others, have a better idea how to communicate with tact. Candor and tact are
important aspects of personal composure and an element for effectively leading diverse organizations.
RECOGNIZING DIVERSITY
4-12. Personal perspectives vary within every individual human being and societal groups. Understanding
the different backgrounds, qualifications, experiences, and potential of each of the individuals in an
organization is an important part of being an effective leader. It is fundamental to knowing your people and
harnessing their diverse skills and perspectives to build cohesive teams. Good leaders create conditions where
subordinates know they are valued for their individual talents, skills, and perspectives that contribute to
mission accomplishment.
COMPOSURE
4-13. Effective leaders control their emotions. Emotional self-control, balance, and stability enable leaders
to make sound, ethical decisions. Leaders must remain calm under pressure and expend energy on things they
can positively influence rather than those things they cannot affect. An Army leader’s level of self-control
greatly influences how they interact with others, particularly during periods of crisis when things are not
going well. Leaders understand that emotional energy sparks motivation and endurance. Enthusiastic leaders,
who are in control of their emotions, will be able to energize others to rise above difficult conditions.
4-14. A leader’s emotional state influences subordinates’ emotions. Balancing the right level and mix of
emotions for a situation provides confidence. Extreme, rash displays of emotion can threaten subordinate
confidence in a leader’s judgment. Displaying panic or no emotion at all are opposite extremes. A sense of
calm encourages feedback from subordinates, improving communication while contributing to shared
understanding. Self-control in combat is especially important—emotions like rage, panic, or fear can be
contagious. Leaders who lose their composure cannot expect subordinates to maintain theirs. Practicing
composure in garrison and training events provides the experience a leader can draw upon during crisis.
4-15. Effective leaders can read others’ emotional states to employ the right balance of interpersonal tact and
candor in a particular situation. They draw on experience to provide subordinates the proper perspective on
unfolding events. They possess a range of attitudes, from relaxed to intense, from which to choose
appropriately for the circumstances they face. Balanced leaders know how to convey urgency without
throwing the entire organization into chaos.
4-16. Effective leaders are steady, levelheaded when under pressure and tired, and calm when facing danger.
They model the emotions they want their subordinates to display and resist temptation to do or say what
personally feels justified. They remember that venting frustrations publicly may seem to release stress, but
actually tends to increase stress across the organization when not done judiciously for sound reasons.
EXPERTISE
4-17. Expertise is in-depth knowledge and skill developed from experience, training, and education. Leaders
use in-depth knowledge to focus on key aspects of a problem, make effective and ethical decisions, and
achieve a high level of performance. Leaders have a moral obligation to those they lead to improve their
expertise continuously. Leaders themselves should be open and eager to benefit from others’ knowledge to
enhance their own tactical and technical expertise. Military professionals require in-depth knowledge in a
variety of areas. Tactical knowledge relates to accomplishing military objectives during operations. Technical
knowledge consists of specialized information associated with a function or system. Joint knowledge is an
understanding of joint organizations, procedures, and roles in national defense. Cultural and geopolitical
knowledge is awareness of cultural, geographic, and political differences and sensitivities.
TACTICAL KNOWLEDGE
4-18. Army leaders must know the fundamentals of their duty position related to warfighting, tactics,
techniques, and procedures. Their tactical knowledge allows them to employ individuals, teams, and
organizations properly to accomplish missions at least cost in lives and materiel. Competent readiness-
focused leaders seek professional military education opportunities to develop tactical knowledge and demand
realistic operational conditions during training. They do this for themselves and their subordinates.
4-19. Fieldcraft is an essential element of tactical knowledge that leaders must understand, teach, and enforce
during both training and operations. Fieldcraft encompasses all of the techniques associated with operating
and surviving in austere, hostile field conditions, like camouflage, noise and light discipline, and field
sanitation. Leaders set a positive personal example in terms of fieldcraft and ensure subordinates adhere to
prescribed standards in a disciplined manner. Good fieldcraft is an indicator of a well-disciplined and well-
led organization. Leaders gain proficiency in fieldcraft through education and practice during training.
TECHNICAL KNOWLEDGE
4-20. Technical knowledge relates to equipment, weapons, systems, and functional areas. Leaders need to
know how the equipment for which they are responsible works and how to use it. Subordinates generally
expect their organizational leaders to be technically competent, and their direct leaders to be technically
expert.
4-21. Leaders ensure their subordinates know how to operate and maintain their equipment, which often
requires setting an example with a hands-on approach. They understand and explain critical equipment
capabilities, strengths, and weaknesses. They provide context for the employment of friendly technical
capabilities to their subordinates, which means leaders must also understand the operational environments in
which they are used.
JOINT KNOWLEDGE
4-22. Leaders acquire joint knowledge through formal training in the joint professional military education
program and experience from assignments in joint organizations. Army leaders must understand how to
integrate Army capabilities with those of the other Services and unified action partners, particularly at the
organizational and strategic levels.
4-26. Cultural understanding is crucial to the success of operations. To operate in a multinational setting,
Army leaders must understand differences in doctrinal terminology and the interpretation of orders and
instructions. They must learn how and why others think and act as they do. Multicultural conditions, such as
exist during multinational operations, require leaders to keep plans and orders as clear and concise as possible
to prevent misunderstandings. Dedicated liaison teams and linguists provide a cultural bridge between
partners to mitigate some differences, but they cannot eliminate them.
Table 4-1. Attributes associated with INTELLECT
Mental resources or tendencies that influence a leader’s conceptual abilities and effectiveness.
Flexibility of mind; the ability to break habitual thought patterns.
Anticipating or adapting to uncertain or changing situations; thinking through outcomes
Mental agility when current decisions or actions are not producing desired effects.
Ability to apply multiple perspectives and approaches.
Capacity to assess situations and draw sound, ethical conclusions.
Sound Tendency to form sound opinions, make sensible decisions, and reliable guesses.
judgment Ability to assess strengths and weaknesses of subordinates, peers, and enemies to
create appropriate solutions and actions.
Ability to introduce new ideas based on opportunities or challenging circumstances.
Innovation
Creativity in producing ideas and objects that are both novel and appropriate.
Being aware of others’ perceptions and capacity to understand interactions with others.
Interpersonal Aware of the character, motives, and reactions of self and others and their effect on
tact interpersonal interactions.
Recognizing diversity and displaying self-control, balance, and stability.
Possessing a high level of domain knowledge and competence in an area, and the
Expertise ability to draw and apply accurate, logical conclusions.
Chapter 5
Leads
The American soldier…demands professional competence in his leaders. In battle, he
wants to know that the job is going to be done right, with no unnecessary casualties. The
noncommissioned officer wearing the chevron is supposed to be the best soldier in the
platoon and he is supposed to know how to perform all the duties expected of him. The
American soldier expects his sergeant to be able to teach him how to do his job. And he
expects even more from his officers.
Omar N. Bradley
General of the Army (1950-1953)
LEADS OTHERS
5-1. Leads consists of five competencies. Leads others includes influencing members in the leader's
organization. Influence is central to leadership. Extends influence beyond the chain of command involves
influencing others when the leader does not have designated authority or when others may not recognize the
leader's authority. Builds trust establishes conditions that lead to mutual confidence among leaders and
subordinates. Leader actions and words comprise the competencies of leads by example and communicates.
Actions can speak louder than words and leaders who embody standards as role models are generally more
effective than those who simply talk about standards. Effective leaders clearly communicate what needs to
be done and why.
5-2. Army leaders draw upon their character, presence, and intellect while leading others. Direct leaders
influence others person-to-person, such as a team leader who instructs, encourages hard work, and recognizes
achievement. Organizational and strategic leaders guide organizations directly through their subordinate
leaders, using both direct and indirect means of influence. A company commander directly leads the platoon
leaders, who in turn know what the battalion commander wants done, because the lieutenants understand the
commander’s intent two levels up. The battalion commander does not communicate to the platoon leaders
directly, but rather depends upon the company commanders to lead their organizations according to the
commander’s intent. Intent links higher and lower echelons.
5-3. All Army leaders are followers; each reports to someone higher in the chain of command, ultimately
up to the Secretary of the Army who answers to the President. Leaders inspire and guide subordinates to
follow; subordinates react to inspiration and follow guidance while performing their duties. Leaders assess
and establish rapport with followers, and followers act in good conscience to follow guidance. Whether
serving in the role of leader or subordinate, all are honor bound to perform their duties to the best of their
abilities.
5-4. Context determines when a Soldier or DA Civilian is a leader or follower. A first sergeant receives
guidance from the company commander as a follower and then as a leader translates that guidance to the
platoon sergeants. As a leader, the first sergeant does not simply parrot the guidance received. The first
sergeant translates the guidance into terms that are appropriate for the company NCOs in the context of other
information received from the battalion command sergeant major and issues instructions that best meet the
commander’s intent. The activity of influencing others depends on the followers’ knowledge, skills, and
commitment level. The principles of mission command in ADP 6-0 inform the level of control leaders employ
in a particular situation.
5-5. Effective leadership depends on the alignment of purpose, direction, and motivation among leaders
and subordinates. Working with a shared understanding of the operational picture and higher intent generates
the unity of purpose, unity of effort, and consistency essential to maintaining a positive leadership climate.
Subordinates who see consistency will sense shared purpose and be less prone to distraction by confusing or
conflicting guidance from different leaders. Those who align their decisions and activities with their peers,
for example during garrison activities and training, may have greater influence than a leader who does not.
This unifying aspect of leadership can—
Ensure attitudes and actions up, down, and across units are aligned around a common vision.
Enable mission command by delegating authority and control appropriate for the situation.
Cultivate mutually beneficial relationships with others inside and outside the organization.
Draw on sources of expertise across a unit.
5-6. Leading others requires that leaders influence others to conduct tasks, make decisions, and perform
their duty in ways consistent with Army standards. It is the duty of leaders to motivate others to accomplish
missions in accordance with the Army Values. Leaders influence others to perform their duties in service of
a higher purpose, not personal gain or advantage. Army leaders can draw on a variety of methods to influence
others and can use one or more methods to fit to the specific context of any situation. Some tasks only require
subordinate compliance for success, such as meeting the requirement for flu shots. Others require building a
high level of commitment on the behalf of subordinates to achieve success, such as a platoon seizing a heavily
fortified enemy position. Compliance is the act of conforming to a requirement or demand. Commitment is
willing dedication or allegiance to a cause or organization. Active opposition to influence denotes resistance.
Methods of Influence
5-9. Influence is the essential activity of leadership and refers to how people affect the intentions, attitudes,
and actions of another person or group of people. Influence depends upon the relationship that develops
between leaders and others. Positive rapport and a sense of mutual trust make subordinates more likely to
respond positively to a leader’s influence. Examples of rapport building include having genuine interest in a
subordinate’s well-being, offering praise for a job well done, and taking time to understand a subordinate’s
position on an issue. Leaders indirectly influence others by demonstrating integrity, empathy, judgment,
expertise, and commitment. Army leaders employ various methods of direct influence based on audience,
intent, and context of the situation. The nine methods listed below represent different ways to influence:
Pressure.
Legitimating.
Exchange.
Personal appeals.
Collaboration.
Rational persuasion.
Apprising.
Inspirational appeals.
Participation.
5-10. Pressure occurs when leaders use explicit demands to achieve compliance, such as establishing
deadlines for the completion of tasks and communicating negative consequences for those not met. This
approach is generally appropriate under two conditions. The first is when emphasis is required to ensure
compliance with previously unmet requirements and subordinates need to reorder their priorities to meet the
higher-level intent to do so. The second is during combat operations, when the pressure the leader applies
explicitly relates to the negative consequences likely to occur should the subordinates fail. Leaders should
use this method infrequently, particularly in garrison, since it tends to create subordinate resentment,
especially if the pressure becomes severe. When subordinates perceive that pressures originate from their
leader’s attempt to please superiors for personal recognition, resentment can quickly undermine an
organization’s morale, cohesion, and quality of performance. Pressure is a suitable choice when the stakes
are high, time is short, or previous attempts to direct action have not been successful.
5-11. Legitimating occurs when leaders establish their authority as the basis for a request when it may not
be obvious. Certain tasks must happen regardless of circumstances when subordinate leaders receive
legitimate orders from higher headquarters. Reference to one’s position suggests to subordinates that there is
potential for adverse action if the request is not completed.
5-12. Exchange is an influence method that leaders use when they offer to provide incentives for gaining a
higher level of compliance with orders or instructions. A four-day pass as reward for excelling during a
maintenance inspection is an example of exchange. The use of rewards should be impartial and as objective
as possible.
5-13. Personal appeals occur when the leader asks for a subordinate’s support based upon their personal or
longstanding professional relationship, generally out of loyalty. This may be useful in a difficult situation
when mutual trust is the key to success. The leader makes a special appeal by highlighting special talents the
subordinate or team have, as well as the unique bonds they all share before taking on a tough mission. An S3
might ask a staff officer to brief a difficult audience at an important conference that makes it clear that the
subordinate is the one best suited and most trusted to give the briefing.
5-14. Collaboration occurs when the leader engages with subordinates or peers to apply influence by
contributing to the outcome. The leader is making commitment more attractive to followers by stepping in
and resolving problems, offering additional resources, or sharing in the work. A collaborative approach works
well in many environments. It can increase mutual understanding and clarify commander’s intent while
giving subordinates the opportunity to share their ideas and perspective.
5-15. Rational persuasion requires providing a broader context, logical argument, or explanations showing
how a request is relevant to the goal and why something should or must be done. This is often the first
approach a leader takes to gain compliance or commitment from subordinates and is more effective when
others recognize the leader as an expert. Leaders draw from their own experience to give reasons why a task
should be accomplished in a particular manner. Rational persuasion is often used in combination with other
approaches, particularly collaboration.
5-16. Apprising happens when the leader explains why an order or request will benefit a subordinate or team,
such as explaining how performing a task a certain way that will save time. In contrast to the exchange
approach, the benefits of apprising are generally beyond the direct control of the leader to provide. A
commander may use the apprising method to inform a newly assigned NCO that serving in a staff position,
before serving as a platoon sergeant, could provide invaluable experience. The commander points out that
additional knowledge may make the NCO a stronger candidate for promotion.
5-17. Inspirational appeals occur when the leader creates enthusiasm for a request by arousing strong
emotions in support of a decision they must make or have already made. Inspirational appeals are best
employed when the stakes are high, and subordinates or peers understand what those stakes are. A leader
may stress to a fellow leader that without help, the safety of the team may be at risk.
5-18. Participation occurs when leaders ask others to join them in determining how best to address a problem
or meet an objective. Active participation leads to an increased sense of worth and recognition among
subordinates that contributes to unit cohesion. Participation increases the commitment of subordinates to
execute whatever is decided and contributes to shared understanding of the commander’s intent. By involving
subordinate leaders during planning, the senior leader is helping to ensure subordinates will later be able to
pursue critical intermediate and long-term objectives on their own initiative.
Application of Influence
5-19. Creating commitment among subordinates requires that they know their leaders are sincere. Committed
subordinates trust their leaders to be doing what is right for the Army, the mission, the team, and each
individual Soldier. Leaders who primarily focus on personal gain or recognition are seen by subordinates as
self-serving, which undermines trust and erodes motivation. Honorable intentions wrongly perceived by
followers as self-serving will yield mere compliance.
5-20. The nature of the mission determines which influence method or combination of methods is
appropriate. When a situation is urgent and greater risk is involved, eliciting follower compliance through
more directive methods may be desirable. Direct-level leaders are often required to coordinate team activities
in an expedient manner, meaning that they focus on explaining themselves before or after the activities, and
not during execution. In comparison, organizational leaders typically use methods that draw out strong
commitment from their subordinate leaders.
5-21. The degree to which a leader uses commitment or compliance depends on the leader, the led, and the
situation. When influencing others, Army leaders understand—
The reasons for influence should align with the Army Values, the Uniform Code of Military
Justice, the Soldier’s Creed, and the Army Civilian Corps Creed.
Commitment emphasizes empowerment and long-lasting trust.
Compliance focuses on quickly meeting task demands.
Resistance
5-22. When leaders experience resistance, the first response is to understand the nature of the relationship
and reasons for opposition or non-compliance. Resistance may stem from a lack of trust, lack of
understanding, or concerns about well-being. Leaders may need to clarify misperceptions or correct false
beliefs. Unfounded rumors can hurt unit cohesiveness and create friction if not confronted at their source.
Gossip and rumors reduce focus while increasing the amount of energy leaders must spend on activities other
than the mission at hand.
5-23. Leaders need to ensure all parties focus on a shared understanding. Overt acknowledgement of
resistance can be the first step in reducing it. Leaders should confront resistance quickly to determine the
reasons why it exists and how to address the causes constructively. This may be enough to change negative
mindsets and build or restore mutual trust within the organization. Leaders can lessen resistance by
acknowledging concerns with their own position or requests. This demonstrates that the leaders recognize
both the positives and negatives of a given request and that they are approaching the issue even-handedly
and fairly.
5-24. Repeated, consistent requests can signal that the leader is intent on overcoming resistance. For instance,
if an Army leader wants local police to participate in patrols, the leader may ask the police to participate a
dozen times on different occasions. Eventually the repeated requests may wear down resistance. Repetition
could have the opposite effect of entrenching the opposition in their original negative position, which would
signal the need for a different method. Embedding the desired outcome into stories can show how the actions
are possible and how all sides can benefit. Regardless of approach taken, leaders must not risk their integrity
nor wander from their mission for the sole purpose of others perceiving them as influential.
they are ready to accept ever increasing delegated responsibilities. Empowering others is a forceful statement
of trust and one of the best ways of developing subordinates as leaders.
5-33. General Eisenhower’s D-Day statement to the Soldiers, sailors, and airmen (see figure 5-1) is an
example of how to provide purpose, direction, and motivation.
UPHOLDING STANDARDS
5-34. Standards provide a mark for performance to assess execution of tasks, as well as compliance with
established policy and law. Standards are formal, detailed instructions—observable, measurable, and
achievable. Standards and discipline are the point of departure for leading Army organizations. Leaders must
enforce Army standards, establish appropriate standards congruent with the Army Ethic where no standards
currently exist, and ensure that subordinates understand and adhere to the standards.
5-35. When upholding standards, leaders must be sensitive to the reality that not everything can be a number
one priority. In practice, leaders establish priorities because it is impossible to accomplish everything at once.
A leader’s ultimate goal is to train to the standards that ensure mission success; all other matters that consume
significant time are of secondary importance. To be successful, leaders use the Army training management
process to prepare the organization to meet standards by setting appropriate training goals and to plan,
resource, execute, and evaluate training accordingly.
Instilling Discipline
5-37. Leaders who consistently enforce standards instill discipline that will payoff in critical situations. True
discipline demands habitual and reasoned obedience. An effective leader instills discipline by training to
standard, using rewards and corrective actions judiciously, instilling confidence, building trust among team
members, and ensuring they have the necessary technical and tactical expertise to perform their job. Some
may associate discipline only with regulations and the consequences for errors in judgment and conduct.
However, it is important to understand that discipline is fundamentally about the manner in which leaders
practice their profession. Discipline is the means by which leaders advance the standards that are the hallmark
of good Army units and organizations.
5-42. The Army regulates order and discipline through enforcement of statutes (such as the Uniform Code
of Military Justice) and policy. Misconduct represents a conscious decision to accept both the risk associated
with a prohibited activity (such as riding a motorcycle without a helmet) and the risk of being caught while
violating the standard (the Army’s helmet policy).
5-43. A commander’s primary responsibility is to ensure the readiness, health, morale, welfare, and
discipline of the unit. Every leader and follower has a role in supporting that responsibility. Leaders must
identify at-risk subordinates and intervene to help them. Table 5-1 summarizes the competency leads others.
Table 5-1. The competency LEADS OTHERS
Leaders motivate, inspire, and influence others to take initiative, work toward a common purpose, accomplish
critical tasks, and achieve organizational objectives. Influence focuses on compelling others to go beyond their
individual interests and to work for the common good.
Uses appropriate Uses methods ranging from compliance to commitment
methods of Applies influence methods to adapt to the followers at a given point in time under the
influence to conditions of the situation
motivate others
Inspires, encourages, and guides others toward mission accomplishment.
Emphasizes the importance of organizational goals.
Provides Determines the course of action to reach objectives and fulfill mission requirements.
purpose, Communicates instructions, orders, and directives to followers.
motivation and
inspiration Ensures subordinates understand and accept direction.
Empowers and delegates authority to subordinates.
Focuses on the most important aspects of a situation.
Reinforces the importance and role of standards.
Enforces Performs individual and collective tasks to standard.
standards Recognizes and takes responsibility for poor performance; addresses it
appropriately.
Assesses and routinely monitors effects of mission fulfillment on mental, physical,
Balances and emotional attributes of subordinates.
mission and Monitors morale, physical condition, and safety of subordinates.
welfare of
followers Provides appropriate relief when conditions jeopardize success of the mission or
present overwhelming risk to personnel.
BUILDS TRUST
5-44. Trust enables the ability of leaders to influence subordinates and effective command and control. Trust
encompasses reliance upon others, confidence in their abilities, and consistency in behavior. People naturally
accept the influence of people they trust. When high levels of trust exist among members of an organization,
its members are more likely to influence each other up and down the chain of command and laterally with
other organizations. Trust increases readiness and is essential for developing the shared understanding of
intent that facilitates initiative by everyone within the organization. Trust builds over time through mutual
respect, shared understanding, and common experiences. Communication contributes to trust by keeping
others informed, establishing expectations, providing feedback, and developing commitment. Sustaining trust
depends on meeting expectations and commitments. Leaders and subordinates all contribute to the level of
trust that occurs in a unit. Leaders and subordinates earn or lose trust through everyday actions and attitudes.
5-45. Importantly, leaders should promote a culture and climate of trust. Teams develop trust through
cooperation, identification with other members, and contribution to the team effort. Leaders build trust with
their followers and those outside the organization by practicing the leadership competencies and
demonstrating character, presence, and intellect. Leaders need to be competent, of good character, and fair
and reliable to generate trust.
5-46. Leaders who commit to coaching, counseling, and mentoring subordinates build relationships that
foster trust. These relationships built on trust enable leaders to empower subordinates, encourage initiative,
reinforce accountability, and allow for open communication. Further, these relationships establish
predictability and cohesion within the team.
5-47. Failure to cultivate a climate of trust or a willingness to tolerate discrimination or harassment on any
basis erodes unit cohesion and breaks the trust subordinates have for their leaders. Counterproductive
leadership such as favoritism, personal biases, unethical behavior, and poor communication often creates
suspicion, doubt, and distrust. Restoring broken trust is not a simple process, requiring situational awareness
and significant effort on the part of all affected. Table 5-2 summarizes the competency builds trust.
Table 5-2. The competency BUILDS TRUST
Leaders build trust to mediate relationships and encourage commitment among followers. Trust starts from
respect among people and grows from common experiences and shared understanding. Leaders and
followers share in building trust.
Sets personal example Is firm, fair, and respectful to gain trust.
for trust Assesses degree of own trustworthiness.
Fosters positive relationship with others.
Takes direct actions to Identifies areas of commonality (understanding, goals, and experiences).
build trust Engages other members in activities and objectives.
Corrects team members who undermine trust with their attitudes or actions.
Assesses factors or conditions that promote or hinder trust.
Sustains a climate of
Keeps people informed of goals, actions, and results.
trust
Follows through on actions related to expectations of others.
Breakthrough at Chipyong-ni
Korea—February 1951
The 23d Infantry Combat Team, 2d Infantry Division, with attached French and Dutch
units, was moving forward to attack in advance of the Eighth Army. They were cut off
and surrounded by overwhelming forces of Chinese Reds at Chipyong-ni in a narrow
Korean valley. The Reds occupied the commanding ridges, while the American
commander, isolated far in advance of the general battle line, used a ring of lower hills
within the valley itself for his defensive perimeter. For more than three days in near-
freezing weather, the defenders held their positions. On the fourth day, an American
armored unit broke through from the south. The 23d Infantry Combat Team smashed
out of the perimeter at the lower end of the valley to break the encirclement and
rejoined the Eighth Army with its units and most equipment intact.
General Matthew B. Ridgway, in his official report to a Joint Session of Congress,
stated, "These American fighting men with their French comrades in arms measured
up in every way to the battle conduct of the finest troops America or France has
produced throughout their national existence."
5-58. Leaders often must use negotiation skills to obtain the cooperation and support necessary to accomplish
a mission beyond the traditional chain of command. During complex operations, different unified action
partners might operate under constraints of their national or organizational chains. This can result in
important negotiations and conflict resolution versus a simpler process of issuing binding orders.
5-59. Successful negotiation, employing a joint problem-solving approach, involves building effective
relationships, establishing two-way communication, understanding positions to clarify interests, creating
possible solutions, using fair standards, and creating a sensible choice from firm, clear commitments, and
realistic alternatives. Credible negotiators test their assumptions, measure success appropriately for a given
situation, systematically prepare, make deliberate process-oriented decisions in conducting negotiations, and
thoroughly review interactions.
5-60. Not all partnerships are enduring. Some are intended only for a limited time. Others are expected to
last until a specific end state has been achieved. Leaders look ahead, anticipating future scenarios and the
conditions under which a partnership will or should dissolve. They help define roles and responsibilities for
elements of a post-alliance state to ensure a smooth transition process and set conditions so the desired end
state persists after the partnership has ended.
5-61. Successful negotiations involve several activities. Leaders should—
Understand and be willing to challenge assumptions about all parties involved, the desired
outcome, the situation, and the negotiation itself.
Consider the measures of success for negotiation and choose the correct one for the situation.
Prepare thoroughly in a manner that supports the desired outcome and process for negotiation.
Build effective working relationships based on genuine rapport, respect, and reputation. Separate
relationship issues from substantive issues and address both on their own merits.
Use meaningful communication among involved parties to inquire, acknowledge, and advocate
by demonstrating active listening and understanding while shaping perceptions and emotions of
all parties.
Generate many options or creative solutions that meet the interests of all parties as well as possible.
Creating options should be separate from evaluating and deciding.
Use objective, balanced, and fair criteria, standards, and merit to evaluate options. Apply a
reciprocity test: would one party find this aspect fair if they proposed it?
Determine alternatives to a negotiated agreement. Alternatives are ways that each party can meet
their interests without creating an agreement in the current negotiation. What is the best alternative
to a negotiated agreement for each party?
Commit to an agreement only if it is better than alternatives, is the best option, and meets interests
based on fair criteria. A commitment should be clearly defined, well planned, and reasonable to
implement. Leaders must not promise what they cannot or will not deliver just to reach an
agreement.
Review each negotiation systematically and use lessons to learn from one interaction to the next.
Table 5-3. The competency EXTENDS INFLUENCE BEYOND THE CHAIN OF COMMAND
Leaders need to influence beyond their direct lines of authority and beyond chains of command to include
unified action partners. In these situations, leaders use indirect means of influence: diplomacy, negotiation,
mediation, arbitration, partnering, conflict resolution, consensus building, and coordination.
Understands sphere, Assesses situations, missions, and assignments to determine the parties
means, and limits of involved in decision making, decision support, and possible interference or
influence resistance.
Builds effective working relationships.
Uses two-way, meaningful communication.
Negotiates, builds Identifies individual and group interests.
consensus, and
resolves conflict Identifies roles and resources.
Generates and facilitates generation of possible solutions.
Applies fair standards to assess options.
LEADS BY EXAMPLE
Example whether it be good or bad has a powerful influence…
George Washington
Commander, Continental Army (1775-81) and President of the United States (1789-97)
DISPLAYING CHARACTER
5-62. Leaders are a product of their experiences. What leaders see others do forms their expectations for
decisions and actions. Leaders who intentionally live by the Army Values and the Warrior Ethos will
consistently display the character and actions that set a positive example. They put the organization and
subordinates above personal self-interest, career, and comfort. For the Army leader, it requires putting the
lives of others above a personal desire for self-preservation.
Displaying Courage
5-66. Projecting confidence in combat and other dangerous situations requires physical and moral courage.
While physical courage allows Soldiers to face mortal risks to life and limb, moral courage empowers leaders
to stand firm on values, principles, and convictions. Leaders who take responsibility for their decisions and
actions display moral courage. Morally courageous leaders critically look at themselves, consider new ideas,
and implement change when needed.
5-67. Moral courage in daily operations is as important as physical courage in combat. Consider a DA
Civilian test board director who has the responsibility to determine whether a new piece of military equipment
performs to established specifications. Knowing that a failed test may cause the possibility of personal
pressure and command resistance from the program management office, a morally courageous tester will be
prepared to endure that pressure and remain objective and fair in test procedures and conclusions. Moral
courage is fundamental to living the Army Values of integrity and honor, for all civilian or military members.
DEMONSTRATING COMPETENCE
5-68. Having the appropriate levels of expertise is vital to competent leaders who display confidence through
their attitudes, actions, and words. Subordinates become suspicious of leaders who act confident but do not
demonstrate the competence to justify their confidence.
Demonstrates Performs duty with discipline and to standards, while striving for excellence.
technical and Displays appropriate knowledge of equipment, procedures, and methods; recognizes
tactical and generates innovative solutions.
competence Uses knowledgeable sources and subject matter experts.
Displays comfort working in open systems.
Understands
the importance Makes logical assumptions in the absence of facts.
of conceptual Identifies critical issues to guide decision making and taking advantage of
skills and opportunities.
models them
Relates and compares information from different sources to identify possible cause-
to others
and-effect relationships.
Encourages honest communications among staff and decision makers.
Seeks diverse Explores alternative explanations and approaches for accompanying tasks.
ideas and Reinforces new ideas; demonstrates willingness to consider alternative perspectives to
points of view resolve difficult problems.
Discourages individuals from seeking favor through tacit agreement.
COMMUNICATES
5-70. Competent leadership requires good communication. Communication as a competency ensures more
than the simple transmission of information. Communication generates shared understanding and situational
awareness. Succinctly communicating information in a clear manner is an important skill for both leaders
and subordinates to learn. Leaders cannot lead, supervise, counsel, coach, mentor, or build teams without
communication. Table 5-5 summarizes the competency communicates (see page 5-16).
LISTENING ACTIVELY
5-71. An important part of effective two-way communication is active listening. Although the most
important purpose of listening is to comprehend the sender’s message, listeners should provide an occasional
indication to the speaker that they are attentive, such as a head nod when face-to-face or stating “roger” when
using radio or telephonic communication. Active listening involves avoiding interruption and keeping mental
or written notes (when possible) of important points or items for clarification. Good listeners will understand
the message being sent in terms of its content, urgency, and the emotion with which it is communicated.
5-72. Leaders should remain aware of barriers to listening that prevent hearing and absorbing what speakers
say. Avoid formulating a response before hearing what the person says. Avoid distraction by anger,
disagreement with the speaker, or other things that impede focusing on the message itself.
5-76. Any means other than face-to-face communication present some risk for misunderstanding due to the
lack of verbal and non-verbal cues. Building rapport and trust is an ongoing, long-term effort that occurs
during unit formation, individual unit reception, day-to-day garrison operations, and training exercises. It
continues during operational missions. Learning what key leaders and staff mean when they say or write
something is key to creating a basis for shared understanding. Taking adequate time to communicate when
forming relationships is important to setting the right conditions, as are brief backs to confirm intent.
Speaking candidly and asking for clarification when necessary are important steps in creating shared
understanding. Email, websites, and social media have increased the volume and speed of available
information. However, they minimize verbal cues and lack the non-verbal cues that are vital to clear
communications and shared understanding between people. Leaders need to guard against over-reliance upon
electronic means to communicate with each other and with subordinates. Leaders should use face-to-face
communications with subordinates as much as possible to ensure understanding and to observe the feedback
cues given by listeners.
5-77. Communication also flows from bottom to top. Leaders find out what their people are thinking, saying,
and doing by listening. Effective leaders observe their organizations by circulating among their followers to
coach, listen, and clarify. They pass relevant observations to enable planning and decision-making.
5-78. To lead an organization effectively, leaders must determine how to reach their superiors when
necessary and to build relationships of mutual trust upward. Leaders assess how their direct leader
communicates and prefers to receive information. Some use direct and personal contact while others may be
more comfortable with weekly meetings, email, or memoranda. Knowing the leader’s intent, priorities, and
thought processes improves the likelihood of effective communication. A leader who communicates well
minimizes friction and improves the overall organizational climate.
5-79. To prepare organizations for inevitable communication challenges, leaders may create situations that
train subordinates to act with minimal guidance or only the commander’s intent. Leaders provide formal or
informal feedback to highlight things subordinates did well, what they could have done better, and what they
should do differently next time to improve information sharing and processing.
5-80. Open communication does more than share information. It shows leaders care about those they work
with on a daily basis. Competent and confident leaders encourage open dialogue, listen actively to all
perspectives, and ensure others can voice honest opinions without fearing negative consequences.
Table 5-5. The competency COMMUNICATES
Leaders communicate effectively by clearly expressing ideas and actively listening to others. By
understanding the nature and importance of communication and practicing effective communication
techniques, leaders will relate better to others and be able to translate goals into actions. Followers share
information candidly. Communication is essential to all other leadership competencies.
Listens and watches attentively.
Makes appropriate notes.
Tunes in to content, emotion, and urgency.
Listens actively
Uses verbal and nonverbal means to inform the speaker that they are paying
attention.
Reflects on new information before expressing views.
Shares necessary information with others and subordinates.
Protects confidential information.
Coordinates plans with higher, lower, and adjacent organizations.
Creates shared
Keeps higher and lower headquarters, superiors, and subordinates informed.
understanding
Expresses thoughts and ideas clearly to individuals and groups.
Recognizes potential miscommunication and takes corrective action.
Uses appropriate means for communicating a message.
States goals to energize others to adopt and act on them.
Uses logic and relevant facts in dialogue; expresses well-organized ideas.
Employs engaging Speaks enthusiastically and maintains listeners’ interest and involvement.
communication Makes appropriate eye contact when speaking.
techniques Uses appropriate gestures.
Uses visual aids as needed.
Determines, recognizes, and resolves misunderstandings.
Is sensitive to Maintains awareness of communication customs, expressions, actions, or
cultural factors in behaviors.
communication Demonstrates respect for others.
DEVELOPS LEADERS
6-1. Military leadership is unique because the armed forces develop and select their own leaders. The
responsibilities of Army members change as they assume new leadership positions. To ensure the quality of
our leaders and future leaders does not diminish, all Army Soldiers and DA civilians have a responsibility to
develop themselves and their subordinates. In Army leadership, there are four competencies in the category
of develops that leaders consider while preparing themselves and their subordinates. A leader—
Prepares self to encourage improvement in leading and other areas of leader responsibility.
Creates a positive environment and inspires an organization’s climate and culture.
Develop others to assume greater responsibility or achieve higher expertise.
Stewards the profession to maintain professional standards and effective capabilities for the future.
6-2. Leaders develop their own leadership proficiency through deliberate study, feedback, and practice.
Fundamentally, leadership develops when an individual desires to improve and invests effort, their superior
supports development, and the organizational climate values learning. Learning to be a leader requires
knowledge of leadership, experience using this knowledge, and feedback from one’s seniors, peers, and
subordinates. It also requires opportunities to practice leading others as often as possible. Formal systems
such as evaluation reports, academic evaluation reports, and 360 assessments offer learning opportunities,
but the individual must embrace the opportunity and internalize the information. The fastest learning occurs
when multiple challenging and interesting opportunities to practice leadership with meaningful and honest
feedback are present. These elements contribute to self-development, developing others, and setting a climate
conducive to learning.
6-3. Leader development of others involves recruiting, accessing, developing, assigning, promoting, and
retaining the leaders with the potential for levels of greater responsibility. Leaders develop subordinates when
they prepare and then challenge them with greater responsibility, authority, and accountability. It is the
individual professional responsibility of all leaders to develop their subordinates as leaders.
6-4. Successful leader development is based on five tenets (see FM 6-22):
Strong commitment by the Army, superiors, and individuals to leader development.
Clear purpose for what, when, and how to develop leadership.
Supportive relationships and culture of learning.
Three mutually supportive domains (institutional, operational, and self-development) that enable
education, training, and experience.
Providing, accepting, and acting upon candid assessment and feedback.
6-5. Committed leaders continuously improve their organization, leaving it better than they found it. They
expect other leaders to do the same. Leaders look ahead and prepare subordinates with potential to assume
positions with greater leadership responsibility; in turn, subordinates develop themselves to prepare for future
leadership assignments. Leaders ensure subordinates know that those who are best prepared for increased
responsibility are those they are most likely to select for higher leadership positions.
6-6. Army leaders set priorities and weigh competing demands to balance individual and unit goals over
various timeframes. They carefully steer their organizations’ efforts to develop toward both short- and long-
term goals, while continuing to meet immediate requirements. Competing demands that vie for an
organization’s resources complicate a leader’s work. Guidance from higher headquarters may help, but
leaders have to make the tough calls to maintain a healthy balance.
PREPARES SELF
6-7. Leader preparation begins with self-awareness about one’s strengths and limitations, followed by
focused self-development. Leaders maintain self-discipline, physical fitness, and mental well-being. They
continue to improve their technical, tactical, and leadership expertise. Acquiring the necessary leadership
skills to be successful is challenging and critical. In no other profession is the cost of being unprepared to
lead so unforgiving in terms of mission failure and loss of life.
6-8. Self-development is continuous and begins with the motivated individual, supplemented by a concerted
team effort. Part of that team effort is quality feedback from multiple sources, including peers, subordinates,
and superiors to establish self-development goals and self-improvement courses of action. These improve
performance by enhancing previously acquired skills, knowledge, behaviors, and experience. Mentorship can
focus self-development efforts to achieve professional objectives. Table 6-1 summarizes the competency
prepares self (see page 6-4).
EXPANDING KNOWLEDGE
6-12. Leaders read about, write about, and practice their profession. They prepare themselves for leadership
positions through lifelong learning and broadening experiences relevant to their career paths. Lifelong
learning involves study to acquire new knowledge, reflection, and understanding about how to apply it when
needed. Broadening consists of those education and training opportunities, assignments, and experiences that
provide exposure outside the leader’s narrow branch or functional area competencies. Broadening should be
complementary to a leader’s experience, and should provide wider perspectives that prepare the leader for
greater levels of responsibility.
6-13. Some are fast learners; others must work harder to learn. Becoming a better learner involves—
Having a plan.
Focusing on achievable goals.
Making time to study.
Absorbing new information.
Applying what one has learned.
DEVELOPING SELF-AWARENESS
6-14. As a critical element of adaptability, self-awareness enables leaders to recognize their strengths and
weaknesses across a range of conditions and progressively employ strengths to correct weaknesses.
Awareness of weaknesses also helps leaders rely on others who possess strengths the leader may lack. To be
self-aware, leaders must be able to formulate accurate self-perceptions, gather feedback from others, and
change their self-concept as appropriate. Being self-aware ultimately requires leaders to develop a clear,
honest picture of their capabilities and limitations.
6-15. Leaders develop self-awareness though self-critique and self-regulation. Self-aware leaders are open
to feedback from others and actively seek it. They possess the humility to ask themselves hard questions
about their performance, decisions, and judgment. They are serious about examining their own behavior to
determine how to be a better, more effective leader. Self-aware leaders are reflective, hold themselves to
higher standards than their subordinates, and look to themselves first when subordinates are unsuccessful.
Self-aware leaders use others’ strengths to offset their professional shortcomings and are willing to learn
from others. Being self-aware ultimately requires leaders to develop a clear, honest picture of their own
capabilities and limitations.
6-16. Self-aware leaders understand they are a component of a larger organization that demands both
adaptability and humility. They understand the importance of flexibility because conditions continuously
change. They also understand that the focus is on the mission, not them. Subordinates see leaders who lack
self-awareness as arrogant or disconnected. They may be technically competent but lack awareness as to how
others see them. This may obstruct their readiness to learn and ability to adapt. Lacking awareness can keep
them from creating a positive, learning work climate. Self-aware leaders sense how others react to their
actions, decisions, and example.
6-17. Competent and confident leaders make sense of their experience and use it to learn more about
themselves. Journals and after action reviews (AARs) are valuable tools in gaining an understanding of one’s
experiences and reactions to changes in conditions. Self-critique can be as simple as posing questions about
one’s own behavior, knowledge, or feelings or as formal as using a structured set of questions about an event.
Critical questions include—
What happened?
How did I react?
How did others react and why?
What did I learn about myself based on what I did and how I felt?
How will I apply what I learned?
6-18. In rapidly changing conditions, self-awareness is a critical factor in making accurate assessments of
changes and a leader’s personal capabilities and limitations to operate in those conditions. Self-awareness
allows leaders to translate prior training to new conditions and seek the information they need to adapt. Self-
aware leaders are more responsive to situational and interpersonal cues regarding actions to take. They are
better informed and able to determine what assistance to seek to handle a given situation.
6-19. Adjusting one’s thoughts, feelings, and actions without prompting from others is self-regulation.
Soldiers and DA Civilians self-regulate when they realize that their actions fall short of the standards they
have for themselves and take the initiative to close the gap. Leaders who self-regulate have an advantage
over those who do not.
connecting current operations to the unit's traditions and history. Army leaders are approachable when they
encourage open, candid communications and observations. Approachable leaders show respect for others'
opinions, even if contrary or non-doctrinal. To be approachable, leaders remain objective when receiving bad
news and encourage subordinates to be open and candid in their communication.
6-21. Culture and climate describe the conditions in which a leader leads. Leaders have direct and indirect
effects on culture and climate. Culture refers to the environment of the Army as an institution and of major
elements or communities within it. All leaders affect the climate at their respective echelon, which may
eventually affect the Army’s culture.
6-22. Culture is a longer lasting and more complex set of shared expectations than climate. Culture consists
of shared attitudes, values, goals, and practices that characterize the larger institution over time. The Army’s
culture is deeply rooted in tradition. Leaders refer to Army’s culture to impress on Army personnel that they
are part of something bigger than themselves. Soldiers and DA Civilians uphold the Army’s culture to honor
those who have gone before and those who will come after.
6-23. Climate is a shorter-term experience than culture and reflects how people think and feel about their
organization. Climate depends upon a network of personalities within a unit that changes as Army personnel
come and go. A unit’s climate, based on shared perceptions and attitudes, affects mutual trust, cohesion, and
commitment to the mission. A positive climate ensures Soldiers and DA Civilians are engaged and energized
by their duties, work together as teams, and show respect for each other.
6-24. A healthy Army culture and organizational climate will exhibit six overarching characteristics (see
AR 600-100 ):
The Army culture and unit climate foster unity, cohesion, and trust.
The culture promotes and rewards mental agility, the ability to break from established paradigms,
recognize new patterns or circumstances, and adopt new solutions to problems.
The Army supports the selection of leaders and rewards members who demonstrate the ability to
sense and understand the environment quickly to exploit fleeting opportunities or counter
unexpected threats.
The Army requires and rewards delegation of authority on the part of leaders, and the
understanding and prompt, thorough execution of leader’s intent (two levels up) by subordinates.
The Army selects and rewards leaders who provide clear priorities and focus their unit’s time and
organizational energy on their mission.
The Army culture is one of inclusion that demands diversity of knowledge and perspectives to
accomplish missions ethically, effectively, and efficiently.
values that individuals bring into the Army. Strong commitment to the Army Values, Army Ethic, and
Warrior Ethos by the commander fosters a unit’s ethical climate.
6-28. Leaders need to continually assess the organizational climate, realize the importance of development,
and work to limit any zero-defect mentality. Recognizing the importance of long-term sustainability and
sharing and encouraging feedback (both positive and negative) should be a priority for all team members.
Leaders create positive climates by treating all fairly, maintaining open and candid communications between
other leaders and subordinates, and creating and supporting learning environments.
ASSESSING ENVIRONMENT
6-29. Leader behavior signals to every member of the organization what is and is not tolerated. The
members’ collective sense of the group—its organizational climate—is influenced by the leader’s values,
skills, and actions. Leaders must continuously assess the state of their organizational climates. Feedback from
climate assessments (see AR 600-20 and AR 600-100) assist leaders in this effort.
6-30. To accurately assess organizational climates, leaders can develop a focused plan of action as follows—
Assess the unit. Observe those in the unit, gather feedback, and conduct focus group sessions of
the workplace. Chaplains may assist with ethical climate assessment through informal means or
by use of ethical climate assessment surveys (see GTA 22-06-001).
Analyze gathered information to identify what needs improvement. After identifying what needs
improvement, begin developing courses of action for improvements.
Select a plan of action to correct identified weaknesses. Gather important information, assess
limitations and risks associated with the various courses, identify available key personnel and
resources, and verify facts and assumptions. Attempt to predict outcomes for each possible course
of action. Based on predictions, select several leader actions to address target issues.
Execute the plan of action by educating, training, or counseling subordinates; instituting new
policies or procedures; and revising or enforcing proper systems of rewards and punishment.
Periodically reassess the chosen actions.
ENCOURAGING INITIATIVE
6-35. Encouraging subordinates to exercise initiative can be a significant challenge. Those who are not in
leadership positions are sometimes reluctant to recognize when a situation calls for them to accept
responsibility and step forward. Climate largely shapes the degree to which unit members feel comfortable
exhibiting initiative and providing input. Leaders create the conditions for initiative by guiding others in
thinking through problems for themselves.
Encourages open Displays a positive attitude to encourage others and improve morale.
and candid Reinforces expression of contrary and minority viewpoints.
communications Displays appropriate reactions to new or conflicting information or opinions.
Guards against groupthink.
Uses effective assessment and training methods.
Encourages leaders and their subordinates to reach their full potential.
Motivates others to develop themselves.
Expresses the value of interacting with others and seeking counsel.
Creates a learning
environment Stimulates innovative and critical thinking in others.
Seeks new approaches to problems.
Communicates differences between professional standards and a zero-defects
mentality.
Emphasizes learning from one’s mistakes.
Involves others in decisions and informs them of consequences.
Encourages Allocates responsibility for performance.
subordinates to
exercise initiative, Guides subordinate leaders in thinking through problems for themselves.
accept Allocates decision making to the lowest appropriate level.
responsibility, and
Acts to expand and enhance subordinate’s competence and self-confidence.
take ownership
Rewards initiative.
Encourages subordinates and peers to express candid opinions.
Demonstrates care Addresses subordinates’ and families’ needs (health, welfare, and development).
for follower well-
being Stands up for subordinates.
Routinely monitors morale and encourages honest feedback.
Anticipates people’s Recognizes and monitors subordinate’s needs and reactions.
on-duty needs Shows concern for how tasks and missions affect subordinate morale.
DEVELOPS OTHERS
6-43. Army leaders, as stewards of the profession, place the needs of the Army as a whole above
organizational or personal needs. They have an obligation to be competent in their jobs and train subordinates
to be competent in their jobs. Effective leaders balance the long-term needs of the Army, the near-term and
career needs of their subordinates, and the immediate needs of their unit’s mission. All Army leaders have a
duty to prepare subordinates for responsibilities at the next level.
6-44. The Army develops leaders through three complementary domains. The institutional domain includes
Army centers and schools that provide functional and professional military education such as Airborne school
and the Army Management Staff College. The basic knowledge gleaned in the institutional Army develops
further through the operational domain. The operational domain encompasses all activities that allow leaders
to learn through experiences. Optimizing leader development in the operational domain requires a deliberate
approach to leader progression in the context of training events and operational deployments, where leaders
apply what they learned from schools to a wide variety of situations and environments. The self-development
domain encompasses what individuals do to pursue personal and professional development goals.
6-45. FM 6-22 provides techniques about how to create a leader development program and enhance leader
development. Effective leader development programs instill in all Soldiers and DA Civilians the desire and
drive to improve their professional knowledge and competencies. This approach prepares current and future
Army leaders for the challenges they face ahead.
EMPOWERING LEARNING
6-46. A leader has the responsibility to foster subordinates’ learning. Leaders explain the importance of a
particular topic or subject by providing context—how it will improve individual and organizational
performance. For instance, leaders discuss the significance of effective counseling with subordinates to help
them understand its impact in developing future leaders, achieving goals, managing expectations, and
improving organizations.
6-47. Learning from experience is not always possible—leaders cannot have every experience in training.
Taking advantage of what others have learned provides benefits without having the personal experience.
Leaders should share their experiences with subordinates through counseling, coaching, and mentoring
sessions; for example, combat veterans can share experiences with Soldiers who have not been in combat.
Leaders should also take the opportunity to write about their experiences, sharing their insights with others
in professional journals or books.
6-51. Leader development doctrine furnishes detailed information on assessing individual capabilities and
expanding them through feedback, study, and practice. FM 6-22 provides learning activities for all leader
attributes and competencies. This information is useful whether a leader is developing self or others.
Counseling
6-53. Counseling is central to leader development. Counseling is the process used by leaders to guide
subordinates to improve performance and develop their potential. Subordinates are active participants in the
counseling process. During counseling, leaders help subordinates to identify strengths and weaknesses and
create plans of action. To make the plans work, leaders actively support their subordinates throughout the
implementation and assessment processes. Subordinates invest themselves in the process by being forthright
in their willingness to improve and being candid in their assessment and goal setting. Counseling is an integral
part of a comprehensive program to develop subordinates. With effective counseling, no evaluation report—
positive or negative—should be a surprise. A counseling program includes all subordinates, not just those
thought to have the most potential. See ATP 6-22.1 for more information on the counseling process.
Coaching
6-54. Coaching relies primarily on teaching and guiding to bring out and enhance capabilities already
present. Coaching is a development technique used for a skill, task, or specific behaviors. The coach helps
them understand their current level of performance and guides them to reach the next level of development.
Coaches should possess considerable knowledge in the area in which they coach others.
6-55. Coaches use all or some of the following approaches depending on the subordinate and situation:
Focus Goals: This requires the coach to identify the specific purpose of the coaching session. Both
the person being coached and the coach need to discuss expectations. The coach communicates to
the individual the developmental tasks for the coaching session, which can incorporate results of
the individual’s 360-degree assessment and feedback report.
Clarify the Leader’s Self-Awareness: The coach works directly with the individual to define both
strengths and developmental needs. During this session, the coach and the individual communicate
perceived strengths, developmental needs, and focus areas to improve performance. Both the
coach and the individual agree on areas of developmental needs.
Uncover Potential: The coach facilitates self-awareness of the individual’s potential and
developmental needs by guiding the discussion with questions. The coach actively listens to how
the individual perceives potential. The aim is to encourage the free flow of ideas. The coach also
assesses the individual’s readiness to change and incorporates this into the session.
Eliminate Developmental Barriers: The coach identifies developmental needs with the individual
and areas that may hinder self-development. The coach helps the individual determine how to
overcome barriers to development and implement an effective plan to improve performance. The
coach helps identify potential sources of support for implementing an action plan.
Develop Action Plans: The coach and the individual develop an action plan defining actions that
can improve performance within a given period. The coach uses a developmental action guide to
communicate those self-directed activities the individual can accomplish to improve performance
in a particular competency.
Follow-Up: After the initial session, the coach should conduct a follow-up as part of a larger
transition. Additionally, participants should provide feedback concerning the effectiveness of the
assessment, the usefulness of the information received, and progress made. Coaches provide
frequent informal feedback and timely, proactive, formal counseling to regularly inspire and
improve subordinates.
Mentoring
6-56. Mentorship is the voluntary developmental relationship that exists between a person of greater
experience and a person of lesser experience that is characterized by mutual trust and respect (AR 600-100).
The following generally characterize mentorship:
Mentoring takes place when the mentor provides a less experienced leader with advice and counsel
over time to aid professional and personal growth.
The developing leader often initiates the relationship and seeks counsel from the mentor. The
mentor takes initiative to check on the well-being and development of the leader.
Mentorship affects personal development (maturity, interpersonal and communication skills) as
well as professional development (technical, tactical, and career path knowledge).
Mentorship empowers the Army to maintain a highly competent set of leaders.
The strength of a mentoring relationship relies on mutual trust and respect. Protégés carefully
consider assessment, feedback, and guidance; these become valuable for growth to occur.
6-57. Mentoring relationships exist outside the superiorsubordinate relationship. Supportive mentoring
occurs when a mentor does not outrank the person mentored, but has extensive knowledge and experience to
share. Mentoring relationships may occur between peers and between senior NCOs and junior officers; thus,
mentoring can occur across many levels of rank. Civilian leaders and senior civilian subordinates can provide
a substantial mentorship resource for training and integration of military and civilian personnel. Often, this
relationship extends past the time where one party has left the other’s chain of command.
6-58. While many associate mentoring with improving duty-related performance and growth, mentoring may
include a spiritual dimension. A chaplain or other spiritually trained individual may play a significant role in
advising individuals regarding spiritual issues to help clarify and develop personal and professional identity,
purpose, motivation, and resiliency in adversity.
Table 6-3. Counseling—Coaching—Mentoring Comparison
Counseling Coaching Mentoring
Review past or current
Provide guidance focused on
performance to sustain and Guide learning or
Purpose professional or personal
improve current or future improvement skills.
growth.
performance.
Assigned coach or trainer Those with greater
Source Rater, chain of command.
with special knowledge. experience.
During practice or
As a formal or informal performance between a
Conversation on a personal
Interaction conversation between superior coach/trainer and the
level.
and subordinate. individual, observation,
guidance.
The counselor identifies the
The coach demonstrates The mentor applies
need, prepares for the session,
a skill, observes experience to guide the
conducts counseling to
How it works performance, and protégé, shares knowledge,
encourage subordinate’s active
provides guidance and provides challenges, and
participation, sets goals, and
feedback. addresses questions.
checks on progress.
Formal (Individual Development Behaviors identified for Personal commitment to
Outcome Plan) or informal goals for improvement, higher career choices, intent to
sustainment and improvement. performance level. improve, or better knowledge.
Required—develop and
Requirement Required or voluntary. Voluntary, mutual agreement.
counsel all subordinates.
Prescribed times IAW
performance evaluation or upon Training or performance
Occurrence Initiated by either party.
event when rater determines a events.
need.
OPERATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
6-59. Working in real settings—solving real problems with actual team members—provides challenges and
conditions where leaders see the significance of leadership and practice their craft. Good leaders encourage
subordinates to develop in every aspect of daily activities and should seek to learn every day themselves. The
operational domain includes the three factors of leader, led, and situation and provides real tasks with
feedback. This combination provides ideal conditions for development. Planning that includes identification
and creation of learning opportunities for leaders promotes development. FM 6-22 provides techniques for
how to plan and ensure a mindset to develop leaders. Integrating leader development into the organization
creates a positive, learning climate, builds an expectation that leader development is a priority, and produces
improved individual and unit readiness.
6-60. Good leaders seek ways to define duties to prepare subordinates for responsibilities in their current
position or next assignment. Assigning a leader to set up and control a firing range is an opportunity to coach
them on working with sister units and ways to train Soldiers. The DA Civilian intern program is another
example where duty performance is used for development. Leaders can rotate into special duty assignments
to give them broad leadership experiences and be given stretch assignments or tasks to accelerate their
development.
6-61. Leaders are responsible for ensuring subordinates receive the appropriate education, training, and
experiences at the proper time for promotion as well as increasing their potential in current and future
assignments. Self-development can occur anywhere, so it is also an important aspect of development in
organizations. Individuals must be active participants in their developmental process. They must not wait for
a leader or mentor to choose them but have the responsibility to be proactive in their own development. Every
Army officer, NCO, Soldier, and DA Civilian should identify personal strengths and areas for improvement.
Each individual should then determine a developmental plan. Some strategies to use in planning development
are—
Ask questions and pay attention to experts.
Read and study.
Observe those in leadership positions.
Find educational opportunities (civilian, military, and correspondence).
Seek and engage in new and varied opportunities.
DEVELOPING TEAMS
6-62. A team is any collection of people that functions together to perform a mission or collective task.
Teams that work well have an advantage of increasing motivation and accountability among members.
Developing close teams takes hard work, patience, and interpersonal skill on the part of the leader (see
ATP 6-22.6). Because high-functioning teams complete missions on time with given resources and a
minimum of wasted effort, they are a worthwhile investment. In war and peace, cohesive teams, operating
with mutual trust, accomplish the missions more effectively than those lacking trust and cohesion. Hallmarks
of cohesive teams include—
Trusting each other and being able to predict what each will do.
Working together to accomplish the mission.
Executing tasks thoroughly and quickly.
Meeting and exceeding standards.
Adapting to demanding challenges.
Learning from their experiences and developing pride in accomplishments.
6-63. Leaders must guide teams through three developmental stages: formation, enrichment, and
sustainment. Leaders remain sensitive to the fact that teams develop differently and the boundaries between
stages are not absolute. The results can determine what to expect of the team and what improves its
capabilities. Understanding the perspectives of team members is important. Leaders understand that the
national cause, mission, purpose, and many other concerns may not be relevant to the Soldier’s perspective.
Regardless of larger issues, Soldiers perform for others on the team, for the Soldier on their right or left. A
fundamental truth is that Soldiers accomplish tasks because they do not want to let each other down.
Developing close teams takes hard work, patience, and interpersonal skill on the part of the leader (see
ATP 6-22.6).
Formation Stage
6-64. Although Army leaders generally do not select most of their team members, they have the
responsibility to ensure their teams are high performing units. Teams work best when new members quickly
feel a part of the team. There are two critical steps of the formation stage: reception and orientation.
Reception
6-65. Reception is the leader’s welcome to new members of the organization. Time permitting, reception
should include a personal introduction. Initially, all new team members will be concerned about fitting in and
belonging. As teams receive new personnel, they try to diminish the uncertainty for the new team member.
This is a team responsibility, not just a leader’s responsibility.
Orientation
6-66. Orientation begins with meeting other team members, learning the layout and schedule of the
workplace, and generally understanding conditions. In combat, leaders may not have much time to orient
new team members. Leaders pair new arrivals with more experienced Soldiers to help orient them.
6-67. Leaders play a pivotal role in how a team forms and works together. During team formation, leaders
assess skills and expertise present on the team and determine how to best apply them. Leaders provide
direction and reinforce the norms within the teams, and communicate performance standards.
Enrichment Stage
6-68. During the enrichment stage, teams strengthen relationships between members and focus on team
objectives. Members become accountable to and for the team. New members gradually move from
questioning everything to trusting themselves, their peers, and their leaders. Trusted team members are more
willing to resolve differences of opinion and fact, suspend doubt, and concentrate on duties and missions.
Leaders learn to trust by listening, establishing clear lines of authority, and enforcing standards. Leaders
should understand indicators of distrust such as persistent defense of personal opinion, conflict avoidance,
suspicion about others’ motivation, and ignoring the importance of team membership. Leaders improve trust
and build morale by getting to know members, communicating truthfully, treating them fairly, and
recognizing good work and teamwork.
6-69. Cohesion is the bond of relationships and motivational factors that help a team stay together. A
cohesive team puts aside its differences and chooses to work together. Cohesive teams achieve greater
success, feeding a sense of greater team competence, commitment, and confidence. These factors increase
cohesion and contribute to the willingness to undertake new challenges and overcome hardship.
Sustainment Stage
6-70. During this stage, members identify as a “team.” They own it, have pride in it, and want team success.
There is pride in knowing that individuals are part of a recognized organization: best squad, best tank crew,
or best dining facility. Recognition elevates the professional status of the team members. While not all teams
can achieve this level of recognition, the team’s attitude about its capabilities elevates motivation and the
desire to meet new challenges.
6-71. Teams may encounter difficulties in the sustainment stage. Leaders watch for signs of complacency
and intervene by reinforcing good interaction practices and holding the team to standard. Changes for which
the team is not prepared can be another challenge for the leader. Shared experiences and regular training
allow teams to address unexpected changes in situations. Empowering the team to improve coordination and
standing operating procedures can strengthen its ability to handle change.
6-72. Key responsibilities of the team leader in all stages of team building and teamwork include trust,
cooperation, task commitment, accountability, and the work to be completed. When any of these erodes—
trust is broken, conflict arises, commitments are disregarded, members are not accountable, or work goes
undone—the leader must step in and guide the team back on track.
6-73. Table 6-4 summarizes the competency develops others.
Table 6-4. The competency DEVELOPS OTHERS
Leaders encourage and support others to grow as individuals and teams. They facilitate the achievement of
organizational goals through developing others. They prepare others to assume new positions elsewhere in
the organization, making the organization more versatile and productive.
Determines strengths and weaknesses of subordinates under different conditions.
Evaluates subordinates in a fair and consistent manner.
Assesses
Assesses tasks and subordinate motivation to consider ways to improve work
developmental assignments, cross-train on tasks, and accomplish missions.
needs of
others Designs ways to challenge subordinates to improve weaknesses and sustain
strengths.
Encourages subordinates to improve processes.
GETS RESULTS
7-1. Gets results is the single achieves competency and relates to actions of leading to accomplish tasks and
missions on time and to standard. Getting results requires the right integration of tasks, roles, resources, and
priorities. Getting results focuses tasks, priorities, people, and other resources to achieve the desired
outcomes. Leaders are ready to take action all the time to achieve outcomes and make necessary adjustments
for success. Leaders also work to sustain or improve the organization’s performance by assessing and giving
feedback as they execute and make adjustments. Table 7-1 summarizes the competency gets results (see
page 7-3).
PURPOSE
7-2. A leader’s primary purpose is to accomplish the mission. Leadership builds and guides the effective
organizations necessary to do so. Leaders require a focus on the future that views building and maintaining
effective organizations as critical to mission accomplishment. Building effective Army organizations serves
the larger purpose of mission accomplishment. Mission accomplishment takes priority over everything else,
especially in combat where their unit may be at risk of destruction.
7-3. Achieves embraces all actions to accomplish tasks on time and to standard by—
Providing direction, guidance, and priorities.
Assessing, adjusting, and continuing mission.
to know where to place effort or what not to do. Leaders monitor their subordinates to ensure they are
handling the stress that a task or mission places on them. Even in the most mundane or dangerous situations,
there are opportunities to restore or build morale.
7-7. All leaders have a responsibility to ensure resources are available and used wisely. Managing resources
requires different approaches and different skills. Resources can take the form of money, materiel, personnel,
or time. Getting resources can be a relatively straightforward process, such as putting in an ammunition
request through established support channels for an upcoming range. Other times, a leader may need to be
more creative and resourceful in securing resources for a complex task.
7-8. Ultimately, a leader must decide how to best allocate resources to accomplish the mission. Leaders
need to deal openly and honestly with their allocation decisions and be prepared to handle reactions from
those who feel the leader handled their requests unfairly or ineffectively.
7-9. When teams stress over high workloads, leaders should intervene to prioritize tasks and mitigate the
causes or symptoms of seemingly insurmountable workloads. As a preventive step, planning aids even
distribution of tasks—mission prioritization allows followers to know where to place effort or what to delay
or suspend. Other measures require leaders to shield or protect subordinates from excessive taskings when
possible and to ensure appropriate resources are available. A long-term measure is to develop individuals and
train teams through cross training to be capable of assuming high workload levels. Effective communications
allows members to prepare themselves to handle greater levels of workload or handle the effects of stress
that the workload places on them. Morale-building activities, wellness and resilience steps, and granting
breaks from operational rigors when possible, can also help address stress. Successful organizations have
leaders who understand workload levels and are proactive in mitigating stress or stressors.
7-10. Many leaders struggle with delegation, from the newly promoted to the most experienced who simply
take on too much. Moving from an individual contributor to overseeing the efforts of others can be
challenging. It requires leaders to spend their time differently and develop different skill sets this includes
balancing workloads and avoiding overtasking subordinates. Some leaders may experience the opposite
situation by delegating too much. Some basic guidelines apply to all leaders:
Delegating improperly, or failing to delegate at all, leads to organizational failure.
A leader’s role is to ensure the task is accomplished, not to complete the task personally.
While completing daily, weekly, and monthly planning and reflection, leaders ask, “What am I
doing that I should delegate?" “What do I delegate that I should not?”
Leaders cannot develop subordinates without delegating to them.
Leaders cannot adjust and expand their unit’s capabilities without delegating.
Identifies and Considers duty positions, capabilities, and developmental needs when
accounts for assigning tasks.
capabilities and Conducts initial assessments to assume a new task or position.
commitment to task Keeps followers focused on vision, intent, directive, and plan.
Establishes and employs procedures for monitoring, coordinating, and
Designates, clarifies, regulating subordinate’s actions and activities.
and deconflicts roles
Mediates peer conflicts and disagreements.
Tracks people and equipment.
Allocates adequate time for task completion.
Identifies, contends Allocates time to prepare and conduct rehearsals.
for, allocates, and
manages resources Continually seeks improvement in operating efficiency, resource conservation,
and fiscal responsibility.
Attracts, recognizes, and retains talent.
Protects organization from unnecessary taskings and distractions.
Removes work
Recognizes and resolves scheduling conflicts.
barriers
Overcomes obstacles preventing accomplishment of the mission.
have to overcome—fear, danger, and physical and moral adversity while caring for those they lead and
protecting the organization entrusted to them.
8-4. Taking the initiative to make something happen requires more personal courage rather than standing
by or withdrawing and hoping events will turn out well. Leaders require personal courage in many conditions:
confronting problems of discipline or disorderly conduct, leading Soldiers in harm's way, needing innovation
or adaptation to do something never done before, being candid with a superior about a risky or improper
course of action, deferring to a more technically competent subordinate, or freeing units and personnel to
solve problems. Leaders must have the courage to make tough calls, to discipline or demand better when
required. Consistent and fair leaders will earn the respect of their followers.
Remagen Bridgehead
Remagen, Germany—7 March 1945
On the Ludendorf Bridge crossing the Rhine, Combat Command B, 9th Armored
Division—headed by the 27th Armored Infantry Battalion—with "superb skill, daring,
and esprit de corps" successfully effected the first bridgehead across Germany's
formidable river barrier and contributed decisively to the enemy’s defeat. The 27th
Battalion reached Remagen and found the bridge intact but mined for demolition.
Although its destruction was imminent, without hesitation and in face of heavy fire,
infantrymen rushed across the structure and seized the surrounding high ground with
energy and skill. The entire episode illustrates a high degree of initiative, leadership,
and gallantry toward which all armies strive but too rarely attain, and won the
Distinguished Unit Citation.
8-5. A self-aware leader will learn from each decision and action; with guidance from superiors, the leader
will grow in confidence. Resilient and fit leaders have the psychological and physical capacity to bounce
back from life's stressors to thrive in an era of persistent conflict.
ADAPTABILITY
8-8. Adaptable leaders are comfortable with ambiguity. They are flexible and innovative—ready to face
the challenges with available resources Adaptability has two key components:
Ability to identify essential elements critical for performance in each new situation.
Ability to change practices or the unit to meet the requirement for change.
8-9. Experienced leaders recognize when conditions change. As conditions change, leaders apply their
experiences to determine a way forward. Leaders exhibit this quality through critical thinking, creative
thinking, willingness to accept risk, displaying comfort with ambiguity, and the ability to adjust rapidly while
continuously assessing the situation.
8-10. Highly adaptable leaders have the proper frame of mind for operating under mission orders. Adaptable
leaders can quickly assess the situation and determine skills needed to address it. If skills learned in the past
are not sufficient for success under new conditions, adaptable leaders seek to apply new or modified skills.
8-11. Adaptive leadership includes being an agent of change. This means encouraging others to recognize
conditions are changing and build consensus as change occurs. As consensus builds, adaptive leaders
influence the course of the organization. Depending on the immediacy of the problem, adaptive leaders may
use several different methods for influencing their organization.
8-12. Adaptability takes effort to develop. To become adaptable, leaders must challenge their previously
held ideas and assumptions by seeking out novel and unfamiliar situations. Leaders who remain safely inside
their comfort zone (current level of education, training, and experience) are less likely to recognize change
or understand inevitable changes in conditions. Mindsets affect adaptability. Developing a few systematic
ways of thinking encourages adaptability. These include open-mindedness, ability to consider multiple
perspectives, not jumping to conclusions about what a situation is or means, willingness to take risks, and
being able to overcome setbacks. To become more adaptable, leaders should—
Embrace opportunities to adapt. Leaders must go beyond what they are comfortable with and
experience the unfamiliar through diverse and dynamic challenges. For example, the Army’s best
training uses thinking like an enemy (red teaming) to enable leaders to recognize and accept that
no plan survives contact. Training to improve adaptability should include changing conditions and
scenarios so that training does not become routine.
Seek challenges. Leaders must seek out and engage in assignments that involve major changes in
the environment. Leaders can be specialists, but their base of experience should still be broad. As
the breadth of experience accumulates, so does the capacity to adapt. Leaders exposed to different
types of thinking, different people and cultural norms, everyday changes in execution, and new
challenges will learn the value of adaptation. They carry forward the skills to develop adaptable
Soldiers, DA Civilians, units, and organizations.
VERSATILITY
8-13. Experiences form the basis of how people react to certain situations. A broader experience base offers
greater opportunity to be a versatile leader. Versatile leaders seek opportunities to expand their experiences.
They also understand the need to develop these same characteristics and qualities in their subordinates and
teams. To promote a climate that promotes versatility, leaders maintain standards and accept constructive
feedback without threat of repercussion or blame. Instead, they challenge subordinates to think in new ways
and build a broader set of trained and practiced responses.
8-14. Leaders lacking adaptability and versatility enter every situation in the same manner and often expect
their experience in one position to carry them to the next. Consequently, they may use ill-fitting or outdated
approaches that may result in poor performance in new conditions or outright failure. Determining when and
how to adapt is important. Adaptability and versatility do not produce certainty that change will improve
results. Sometimes, persistence on a given course of action may have merit over change.
EVOLVING THREATS
8-17. Agility and adaptability at all levels of Army organizations are important to address unanticipated
situations. The Army must adapt to constantly evolving threats while taking advantage of the latest
technological innovations and adjusting to societal changes. The uncertain nature of the threat will always
have major effects on Army leadership.
MEDIA
8-18. The media can be both an asset and impediment to leadership. Embedded media can tell the story from
the Soldier’s perspective to an anxious nation at home. The media can provide real-time information,
sometimes unfiltered and raw, which the enemy could exploit as a means to change the international political
climate. Leaders must understand the speed and scrutiny of continuous news coverage and that the enemy
does not bear the same responsibility for telling the truth. Leaders must be wary of propaganda and critically
assess the accuracy of media reports and seek information from reliable sources.
8-19. The media not only report the situation, but also affect the situation. Leaders must train subordinate
leaders and Soldiers to work with the media, understand the effects of pervasive media, and understand the
long-term effects of stories and images. Commanders synchronize actions and messages to inform domestic
audiences and influence selected foreign audiences (see FM 3-13).
GEOPOLITICAL SITUATION
8-22. Though technology and economic ties interconnect the world, the world remains diverse in terms of
religions, cultures, living conditions, education, and health. Within the political sphere, maintaining presence
in foreign countries through a careful mix of diplomatic and military arrangements remains an important
challenge. Leaders must be aware that the balance between diplomacy and military power is fragile. Army
leaders must consistently consider the effect on local civilians, as well as on cultural and religious treasures,
before committing forces.
8-23. Leaders can expect to operate under many different conditions worldwide. While most Soldiers speak
English as their first language, continued deployments and global interaction require an understanding of
other languages and cultures. Leaders will need to become multilingual and study the cultures and histories
of other regions of interest. Technology provides a vehicle for gaining geopolitical knowledge.
TECHNOLOGY
8-24. While the stresses of combat have been constant for centuries, another aspect of the human dimension
has assumed increasing importance—the effect of rapid technological advances on organizations and people.
Technological changes and the speed at which they occur force the Army and its leaders to adapt and respond.
8-25. Army leaders must stay abreast of technological advances and their applications, advantages, and
requirements. Together with technical specialists, leaders can make technology work for the Soldier. Properly
integrated technology can increase operational effectiveness, survivability, and lethality.
8-26. Technological challenges facing Army leaders include—
Learning the strengths and vulnerabilities of different technologies that support the organization
and its mission.
Considering the ethical implications of advanced technologies.
Thinking through how the organization will operate with other less or more technologically
complex organizations, such as operating with unified action partners.
Considering technological effect on the time available to analyze problems, decide, and act. Events
happen faster today and the stress encountered as an Army leader is correspondingly greater.
Using technology to influence dispersed teams given the increasing availability and necessity to
use reachback and split-based operations.
8-27. Technology can lead to operational issues. A growing reliance on 'Global Positioning System (GPS)
navigation technology since the Desert Storm era decreased emphasis on manual land navigation skills in
training, rendering forces vulnerable if the technology fails. Leaders determined how to exploit GPS
technology while guarding against its weaknesses through improved training. This included reintroducing
essential land navigation training and detailed instructions on the maintenance and operation of GPS
equipment.
8-28. Technology changes leadership conditions in many aspects, especially with how much information is
available for decision makers. Although advances allow the modern leader to handle large amounts of
information more effectively than before, enhanced technology can still cause information overload. Leaders
must be able to sift through provided information then analyze, synthesize, and forward only important data
up the chain of command. Senior leaders rely on subordinates to process information, isolating critical
information to expedite decisions. Leaders owe their subordinates information gathering and reporting
procedures that streamline work for already stretched staffs and units.
8-29. Army leaders and staffs have always needed to determine mission-critical information, prioritize
incoming reports, and process them quickly. The volume of information provided by current technology
makes this ability critical. The answer lies in the agile, adaptable human mind. Sometimes a nontechnological
approach can divert the flood of information into channels the leader and staff can manage. For example,
understanding the commander’s intent and commander’s critical information requirements can free leaders
from nonessential information overload. The Army concept of command and control is critical in conditions
of information overload. Mission command delegates most decisions to lower echelons to free higher
echelons for critical decisions only they can make. Army leaders should continue to resist the lure of
centralized decision making although they have more information available to them.
SYSTEMS
8-30. Army leaders require increased technical and tactical knowledge and understanding of systems.
Leaders must understand the fine line between a healthy questioning of new systems’ capabilities and an
unreasonable hostility that rejects the advantages technology offers. The adaptable leader remains aware of
the capabilities and shortcomings of advanced technology and ensures subordinates do as well.
8-31. Leaders must consider systems within their organizations—how they work together, how using one
affects others, and how to get the best performance from the whole. They must think beyond their own
organization and consider how the actions of their organization influence other organizations as a whole.
8-32. Technology changes battlefield dispersal and the speed of operations. Instant global communications
are accelerating the pace of military actions. GPS and night vision capabilities mean the Army can fight at
night and during periods of limited visibility—conditions that halted or slowed the pace of operations in the
past. Additionally, nonlinear and noncontiguous operations create more difficulty for commanders to
determine critical points on the battlefield.
8-33. Modern technology has increased the complexity of skills the Army requires. Leaders must carefully
manage low-density occupational specialties and fill critical positions with properly trained people who
maintain proficiency in these perishable high-tech skills. Army leaders must balance leadership, personnel
management, and training management to ensure their organizations have people with the appropriate
specialty training and that the entire organization stays continuously trained, certified, and ready.
STRESS OF CHANGE
8-36. To succeed in conditions of continuous change, leaders emphasize the constants of the Army Values,
teamwork, and discipline while helping subordinates anticipate change, adapt, and seek new ways to improve.
Competent leadership implies managing change, adapting, and making change work for the team. Leaders
determine what requires explicit actions to respond to change. Often, building on what already exists limits
stress.
8-37. Stress is a major part of leadership conditions. Major sources of stress include an ever-changing
geopolitical situation, operational stress and related fears, the rapid pace of change, and the increasing
complexity of technology. A leader’s character and professional competence are important factors in
mitigating stress for the organization and achieving mission accomplishment, despite environmental
pressures and changes. When dealing with these factors, adaptability is essential to success.
OPERATIONAL STRESS
8-38. Stress in response to threatening or uncertain situations occurs across the range of military operations
as well as at home, in garrison, and during training exercises. Military experiences expose Soldiers to various
operational stresses throughout their careers. Operational stress control does not minimize the experiences
faced while engaged in such operations, but provides mechanisms to mitigate reactions to those experiences
so Soldiers remain combat effective and maintain the quality of life to which they are entitled (see
ATP 6-22.5).
8-39. Leaders must understand stress and anticipate Soldiers’ reactions. Overcoming obstacles, such as
Soldiers becoming wounded or dying, or the enemy attacking unexpectedly, takes mental discipline and
resilience. Off-site leaders cannot discount the fear Soldiers may experience. A leader who does not share
the same risks could easily fall into the trap of making a decision that could prove unworkable given the
Soldiers’ psychological state. Army leaders with responsibility over a distributed team should ask for detailed
input from the Soldiers or subordinate commanders who are closer to the action and can provide the most
accurate information about the situation.
8-40. When preparing for sustained operations, leaders must thoroughly condition their Soldiers to address
operational stress during all phases of force projection—mobilization, deployment, employment,
sustainment, and redeployment. Positive action to reduce operational stress empowers Army members to
cope with typical, everyday situations and enhance adaptive stress reactions.
8-41. When possible, Soldiers should have access to operational stress control team/behavioral health
personnel, medical personnel, and chaplains to continue their physical and psychological recovery to ensure
successful reintegration. Experts treating the psychologically wounded must work hand-in-hand with the unit
chain of command to stress the importance of maintaining order and discipline. Leaders must not tolerate
aggressive or criminal behavior as compensation for negative operational experiences.
8-42. The Army has implemented a comprehensive recovery plan for all returning Soldiers to counter
operational stress. Sound leadership, unit cohesion, and close camaraderie are essential to assure expeditious
psychological recovery from combat experiences.
8-43. Leaders need to understand that danger and fear will always be a part of their duties. Fear is a natural,
human reaction to danger. Courage does not mean absence of fear—courage is overcoming fear to
accomplish the mission. Battling fear means recognizing fear and effectively dealing with it. Understanding
the situation and acting with foresight and purpose overcomes fear. Fear of the unknown can be terrifying;
fear can paralyze a Soldier. Soldiers who see friends killed or wounded become aware of their own mortality.
Army leaders must expect fear to take hold when setbacks occur, the unit fails to complete a mission, or the
unit takes casualties.
8-44. Preparation, planning, and rigorous training carry Soldiers through the challenges of operating under
hazardous conditions. Leaders must add unanticipated elements to training to create demanding learning
conditions. Realistic training developed around critical warrior tasks and battle drills is a primary source for
the resilience and confidence to succeed along with the ability to demonstrate grit in tough situations. Leader
competence, confidence, agility, courage, and resilience enable units to persevere and find workable solutions
to tough problems. Living the Army Values and the Army Ethic along with the Warrior Ethos and resilience
mobilize the ability to forge success out of chaos to overcome fear, hunger, deprivation, and fatigue to
accomplish the mission.
COUNTERPRODUCTIVE LEADERSHIP
8-45. The Army expects all leaders to live the Army Values and demonstrate the positive characteristics
described by the leader attributes and core leader competencies. Effective leadership is essential for realizing
the full potential of an organization’s combat power and can compensate for deficiencies in other warfighting
functions. The opposite is also true; counterproductive leader behaviors can negate combat power advantages.
8-46. Counterproductive leadership is the demonstration of leader behaviors that violate one or more
of the Army's core leader competencies or Army Values, preventing a climate conducive to mission
accomplishment. Counterproductive leadership generally leaves organizations in a worse condition than
when the leader arrived and has a long-term effect on morale and readiness. The term toxic has been used
when describing leaders who have engaged in what the Army now refers to as counterproductive leadership
behaviors. Counterproductive leadership is incompatible with Army leadership doctrine and Army Values.
It often violates regulations and can impede mission accomplishment.
8-47. All leaders are susceptible to displaying counterproductive leadership behaviors in times of stress, high
operational tempo, or other chaotic conditions to achieve short-term results. Counterproductive leadership
decreases followers' well-being, engagement, and undermines the organization's readiness and ability to
accomplish the mission in the long term. It can have an adverse effect on the unit with cascading results, such
as lowering morale, commitment, cohesion, effectiveness, readiness, and productivity. Counterproductive
leadership behaviors prevent establishing a positive organizational climate and interfere with mission
accomplishment, especially in highly complex operational settings. Prolonged use of counterproductive
leadership destroys unit morale, trust, and undermines the followers' commitment to the mission.
Counterproductive leadership can also decrease task performance, physical and psychological well-being,
and increase negative outcomes such as depression or burnout.
8-48. Army leaders can and will make mistakes, so distinguishing between occasional errors of judgment
and counterproductive behavior is important. Counterproductive leadership can include recurrent negative
leader behaviors and more serious one-time behaviors that have a damaging effect on the organization's
performance and subordinate welfare. Infrequent or one-time negative behaviors do not define
counterproductive leadership. Often, counterproductive leadership behaviors have harmful effects on
individuals or a unit when several instances occur together or take place frequently.
8-49. Counterproductive leadership spans a range of leader conduct that can be organized into several broad
categories that are useful to inform strategies for identifying and addressing such behaviors.
Counterproductive leadership is not limited to these behaviors listed below. Leaders can demonstrate more
than one of the behaviors and their conduct can span multiple categories:
Abusive behaviors—includes behaviors that involve a leader exceeding the boundaries of their
authority by being abusive, cruel, or degrading others. These behaviors are contrary to what is
required for the moral, ethical, and legal discharge of their duty. Specific examples include, but
are not limited to, bullying, berating others for mistakes, creating conflict, ridiculing others
because of the authority held, domineering, showing little or no respect to others, insulting or
belittling individuals, condescending or talking down to others, or retaliating for perceived slights
or disagreements.
Self-serving behaviors—includes behaviors that result from self-centered motivations on the part
of the leader, where they act in ways that seek primarily to accomplish their own goals and needs
before those of others. Specific examples include, but are not limited to, displaying arrogance,
lacking concern or empathy for others, taking credit for others' work, insisting on having their
way, distorting information to favor own ideas, exaggerating accomplishments or abilities, putting
own work and accomplishments ahead of others' and the mission, displaying narcissistic
tendencies, or exhibiting a sense of entitlement.
Erratic behaviors—includes behaviors related to poor self-control or volatility that drive the leader
to act erratically or unpredictably. Specific examples include, but are not limited to, blaming
others, deflecting responsibility, losing temper at the slightest provocation, behaving
inconsistently in words and actions, insecurity, or being unapproachable.
Leadership incompetence—includes ineffective leadership behaviors that result from a lack of
experience or willful neglect. Incompetence can include failure to act or acting poorly. While
incompetent leadership can arise from reasons unrelated to counterproductive leadership, it is
included as a category often associated with arrogant or abusive leaders who are not aware of their
shortcomings and do not seek to correct their shortcomings. Conversely, some leaders lacking
competence are aware of their shortcomings, which lead them to behave in counterproductive or
negative ways to cover up their shortcomings or mistakes. Specific examples include, but are not
limited to, unengaged leadership, being passive or reactionary, neglecting leadership
responsibilities, displaying poor judgment, poorly motivating others, withholding encouragement,
failing to clearly communicate expectations, or refusing to listen to subordinates.
Corrupt behaviors—includes behaviors that violate explicit Army standards, regulations, or
policies. Violations may range from behaviors subject to administrative discipline to criminal
actions subject to discharge or incarceration. Specific examples include, but are not limited to,
dishonesty, misusing government resources or time, creating a hostile work environment,
EEO/SHARP violations, or violating Section 3583 (Requirement of Exemplary Conduct), Title
10, United States Code, AR 600-100, or the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
8-50. As the Army moves into increasingly more complex operational environments, it is critical that leaders
rely on positive behaviors to influence others and achieve results. The Army is committed to stopping these
negative behaviors and promoting positive work environments. All leaders are susceptible to
counterproductive behaviors, so they must monitor their personal behavior. Commanders and leaders have a
responsibility to monitor and take action to eliminate counterproductive leadership. All Army members who
witness these behaviors have a responsibility to prevent, intervene, counter, or mitigate them. Soldiers and
DA Civilians must be willing to confront and address these behaviors in their units and should leverage their
chains of command to assist and involve relevant installation resources where and when necessary.
Chapter 9
Organizational Leadership
You have to lead men in war by requiring more from the individual than he thinks he can
do. You have to lead men in war by bringing them along to endure and to display qualities
of fortitude that are beyond the average man’s thought of what he should be expected to
do. You have to inspire them when they are hungry and exhausted and desperately
uncomfortable and in great danger; and only a man of positive characteristics of
leadership, with the physical stamina that goes with it, can function under those conditions.
General of the Army George C. Marshall
Testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Military Affairs (1940)
LEADING
9-1. Whether they fight for key terrain or work to achieve training readiness, organizational leaders must
be able to translate complex concepts into understandable plans their subordinates can execute.
Organizational leaders develop the plans and synchronize the systems that allow subordinates to turn ideas
into action.
9-2. Organizational leaders build teams of teams with discipline, cohesion, trust, and proficiency through
personal example, using a wide range of knowledge and applying leader competencies. They focus their
organizations down to the lowest level on the mission by disseminating a clear intent, sound concepts, and a
systematic approach to execution.
9-3. Organizational leaders build on direct leader experiences, reflect the Army Values, and instill pride
within organizations. Since they lead complex organizations throughout the Army’s generating forces and
operating forces, organizational leaders often apply elements of direct and organizational leadership
simultaneously.
LEADS OTHERS
9-4. Organizational leaders have developed a strong background in fundamentals as well as an appreciation
for the geopolitical implications of their situation. From their experiences, they have developed the instincts,
intuition, and knowledge that form their understanding of the interrelation of the levels of leadership. Their
refined skills allow them to understand, integrate, and synchronize the activities of multiple systems and
employ resources and systems across a range of challenges.
9-5. Given the increased size of their organizations, organizational leaders influence indirectly more often
than directly. Soldiers and subordinate leaders look to their organizational leaders to set achievable standards,
to provide clear intent, and to provide the necessary resources. Decisions and actions by organizational
leaders have greater consequences for more people over a longer time than those of direct leaders. Since the
connections between action and effect are sometimes more remote and difficult to see, organizational leaders
spend more time than direct leaders coordinating, thinking, and reflecting about what they are doing and how
they are doing it. Organizational leaders develop clear concepts for operations as well as policies and
procedures to control and monitor execution.
LEADS BY EXAMPLE
9-9. The Army’s organizational leaders play a critical part in maintaining focus on fighting the enemy and
not the plan. They are at the forefront of adapting to operational environment changes and exploiting
emerging opportunities by applying a combination of intuition, analytical problem solving, systems
integration, and leadership by example—as close to the action as feasible.
9-10. Organizational leaders position themselves with the necessary means to maintain contact with critical
elements and headquarters. Proximity to operations provides organizational commanders with the required
awareness to apply quick creative thinking in collaboration with subordinate leaders. Proximity facilitates
adjustments for deficiencies in planning and shortens reaction time when applying sound tactical and
operational solutions to changing realities. Operations require leaders who understand the context of factors
affecting the situation, act within that understanding, continually assess and adapt those actions based on the
interactions and circumstances of the enemy and conditions, consolidate tactical and operational
opportunities into strategic aims, and are able to effectively transition operations.
9-11. .Organizational leaders prioritize what changes their organization will pursue and guide their
organizations through several steps to ensure their initiatives for change last. The steps of the leading change
process are—
Assess the need for change (anticipate problems or identify opportunities).
Build a guiding coalition.
Create and communicate a compelling vision.
Determine how to implement vision (design plan, gather resources).
Empower others to act.
Facilitate learning (promote new skill development).
Goal reinforcement (identify and reinforce evidence of progress).
Hone the change process through monitoring and reinvesting.
COMMUNICATES
9-12. Leaders are responsible for ensuring shared understanding. They should share information as much as
possible with their organization and subordinates. An open, two-way exchange of information reinforces
sharing team values and encourages constructive input.
9-13. Communicating openly and clearly with superiors is important for organizational leaders.
Understanding the intent, priorities, and thought processes makes anticipating future planning and resourcing
priorities easier. Understanding the direction of the higher headquarters reduces course corrections at lower
levels, thus minimizing friction and maintaining a stable organizational tempo and climate.
DEVELOPING
9-17. Comparatively, organizational leaders take a long-term approach to developing the entire organization.
They prepare their organizations for the next quarter, next year, or five years from now. The responsibility
to determine how the Army fights the next war lies with today’s Army leaders, especially those at the
organizational and strategic levels. Leaders at the organizational level rely more on indirect leadership
methods, which can make leading, developing, and achieving more difficult.
9-19. Characteristics of successful organizational climates include a clear, widely known purpose; well
trained, confident Soldiers and DA Civilians; disciplined, cohesive teams; and trusted, competent leaders. It
is a climate that adheres to and promotes the Army Values and fosters the Warrior Ethos, encourages learning,
promotes creativity and performance, and establishes cohesion. To create such a climate, organizational
leaders recognize mistakes as opportunities to learn, create cohesive teams, and reward leaders of character
and competence with increasing responsibilities. Organizational leaders value honest feedback and constantly
use available means to maintain a feel for the organization. Special staff members including equal opportunity
advisors, chaplains, medical officers, and legal advisors assist the organizational leader with maintaining a
positive environment.
PREPARES SELF
9-20. The demands on leaders vary at different levels. While leader competencies stay the same across levels,
moving from direct to the organizational level requires a shift in approach. What may occupy a great deal of
a leader’s time at a lower level (for example, face-to-face supervision of Soldiers) involves less time at higher
levels. Certain technical skills vital to a direct leader will be of less importance to an organizational leader
who must spend time on system-wide issues. Leaders need to accustom themselves to rely on less direct
means of direction, control, and monitoring to aid their transition in the scope and breadth of responsibilities.
9-21. Organizational leaders keep a focus on where the organization needs to go and what leaders must be
capable of accomplishing. As role models, they develop themselves and actively counsel their subordinate
leaders about their professional growth. Organizational leaders continue to seek broadening experiences to
expand their knowledge, skills, and capabilities. At the organizational level, leaders ensure that systems and
conditions are in place for objective feedback, counseling, and mentoring for all organization members,
including themselves.
9-22. Self-aware organizational leaders who know their organizations generally achieve high quality results
and do not shy away from asking close subordinates to give informal feedback as part of an open, transparent
assessment and feedback effort. When they are part of official AARs, organizational leaders should invite
subordinates to comment on how the leaders could have made things better. Subordinates easily spot errors
by organizational leaders since these errors often affect those lead. Consequently, admitting, analyzing, and
learning from these errors add value to the training. For the Army’s organizational leaders—just as leaders
at other levels—reflecting, learning, and applying corrective actions in operations is critical for effectiveness.
DEVELOPS OTHERS
9-23. Organizational-level leaders are stewards of the Army profession. They fulfill this function by placing
a high priority upon investment in future leaders at all levels. Leader development is an investment required
to maintain the Army as a profession and is a key source of combat power. Organizational leaders set
conditions for a robust leader development system and create conditions that enable organization members
to learn from their experiences and those of others. They rely on conditions that use learning as well as self-
development through various procedures such as 360 assessments. To strengthen learning, organizational
leaders can make numerous avenues available for lifelong learning: assignment-oriented training,
simulations, learning centers, and virtual training.
9-24. Organizational leaders determine the potential of others. This takes awareness of others and flexibility
to build on strengths and address weaknesses. Developing others at this level is challenging; the
organizational leader has to balance the criticality of the task and the developmental needs of all subordinates.
Another consideration for organizational leaders is how and what individuals need to learn. Learning in
challenging situations may be a good way for leaders to learn from failure, but others need to experience
more successes than failures to develop self-confidence and initiative. Organizational leaders lead, coach,
and mentor subordinate leaders.
Army components. Strategic leaders influence organizational leaders. Organizational leaders, in turn,
influence subordinate leaders to achieve organizational goals.
9-26. Generally, organizational leaders rely on others to follow and execute their intent and guidance as well
as to communicate effectively that intent and guidance to subordinates. Turning a battlefield vision or training
goal into reality takes the combined efforts of many teams inside and outside of the organization.
Organizational leaders build solid, effective teams by developing and training them.
9-27. By circulating among subordinate units, organizational leaders can assess subordinates’ understanding
of intent, preparation, execution, and assure successful command and control. Organizational leaders learn
about units in the task organization and personally motivate Soldiers by their presence. Organizational leaders
work with subordinate units to create shared understanding. Together they identify options of greatest value
and manage high-risk actions. Organizational leaders act with other leaders across the chain of command to
create context for fostering organizational and team capabilities.
9-28. Well-trained subordinates who work hard and fight tenaciously sense they are part of a first-rate team.
Collective confidence comes from succeeding under challenging, stressful conditions. Sense of belonging
derives from experiencing technical and tactical proficiency—first as individuals and later collectively. That
proficiency expresses itself in the confidence team members have in their peers and leaders and trust shared
with each other. Ultimately, cohesive teams combine into a network—a team of teams. Cohesive
organizations work in synchronized fashion to complete tasks and missions.
ACHIEVING
9-34. For consistent results, organizational leaders have to be competent in planning, preparing, executing,
and assessing. They must provide clear focus with their intent so subordinates accomplish the mission,
regardless of the original plan.
effects of joint military and nonmilitary assets to overwhelm opponents. Effective synchronization and
integration requires leaders to pull together technical, interpersonal, and conceptual abilities and apply them
to warfighting goals, objectives, and tasks.
9-45. Because their decisions can have wide-ranging effects, leaders must be sensitive to how their actions
affect the organization’s climate. The ability to discern and predict second- and third-order effects benefits
organizational leaders in assessing the health of the organizational climate and providing constructive
feedback to subordinates.
STRATEGIC LEADERS
10-1. Strategic leaders represent a finely balanced combination of high-level thinkers, accomplished
Soldiers, and military experts. Strategic leaders simultaneously sustain what is necessary within current
conditions, envision the future, and convey that vision to a wide audience. They often personally spearhead
change. Their policies guide lifecycles and talent management of all Army personnel. They guide the design
and employment of technological advances and establish programs that care for Army families. They secure
resources for facilities and infrastructure, weapons and equipment, supply and maintenance, and manpower
and force structure. America’s complex national security conditions require strategic leaders with an in-depth
knowledge of the diplomatic, informational, military, and economic instruments of national power.
10-2. Strategic leadership involves the activities to affect the achievement of a desirable and clearly
understood vision. It focuses on influencing Army culture, securing and prioritizing resources, and shaping
and supporting organizational and direct level leaders. These goals are realized through directives, policies,
programs, systems, and consensus building.
10-3. Strategic leaders serve inside or outside the Army and must thoroughly understand political-military
relationships. Army strategic leaders have responsibilities that extend beyond the Army to the national
government, its leaders, and ultimately, to the American people. Senior Army leaders are the strategic
stewards of the profession. At the strategic level, senior Army leaders address ends, ways, and means to
accomplish global missions. They maintain the trust of the American people by living and upholding the
Army Values in their decisions and actions taken in regard to policies, programs, systems and the care they
provide to Soldiers, DA Civilians, and Army Families. Those serving in strategic leadership positions may
lead complex organizations composed of members of the U.S. Army, other U.S. armed services, and those
of other nations, members of federal agencies, and non-governmental entities. Strategic leaders, regardless
of position, apply professional expertise and uphold the Army Values.
10-4. Strategic leaders have a stewardship responsibility for the relationship between the military and civilian
leaders of the Army. Leaders take an oath of office that subordinates the military leader to the laws of the
Nation and its elected and appointed leaders, creating a distinct civil-military relationship. Army
professionals understand this and appreciate the critical role this concept has played throughout America's
history. Equally important, this concept requires military professionals to understand the role of civilian
leaders and their responsibilities to the civilian leadership. A critical element of this relationship is the trust
that civilian leaders have in their military leaders to represent the military and provide professional military
advice. Military professionals have unique expertise, and their input is vital to formulating and executing
defense policy. Based on mutual trust, this relationship requires candor and authority to execute the decisions
of the civilian leaders. These decisions provide the strategic direction and framework in which strategic
military leaders operate.
10-5. To maintain focus, strategic leaders survey conditions to understand the context for their roles. Highly
developed interpersonal abilities and intergroup relations are essential to building consensus with civilian
and military policy makers on national and international levels. Strategic leaders must think in multiple
timelines to anticipate change and be agile to manage change. Strategic leaders extend influence in conditions
where they interact with other high-level leaders and influential figures over whom they have minimal formal
authority or no authority at all.
10-6. Strategic leaders are keenly aware of the complexities of national and international security conditions.
They operate in intricate networks of overlapping and sometimes competing constituencies. Strategic leaders
identify trends, opportunities, and threats that could affect the Army’s future and move vigorously to address
them. Their actions affect acquisitions, budget constraints, Total Army issues, civilian programs, research,
contracting, congressional hearings, and inter-service cooperation. Strategic leaders process information
from these areas while assessing alternatives. They formulate practical decisions and garner support.
10-7. Strategic leaders operate with the same attributes and competencies as direct and organizational
leaders. The situations and conditions create differences in how attributes and competencies apply. In general,
strategic leaders accommodate—
Greater complexity under high uncertainty.
Broader scope with longer time spans.
Greater risks and stakes.
Greater need for indirect methods of influence.
National-level interests, goals, and priorities.
10-8. Strategic leaders understand the influence of their decisions and actions and contribute their best efforts
to accomplish the strategic mission. They set the example for the Army and inspire others to do what is
right—for its own sake—and understand that violations of the Army Values can compromise the mission
and have strategic implications contrary to national interests.
10-9. While direct and organizational leaders have a more near- and mid-term focus, strategic leaders must
concentrate on the future. They spend much of their time looking toward long-term goals and positioning for
long-term success as they contend with mid-term and immediate issues.
10-10. To create powerful organizations and institutions capable of adaptation, strategic leaders and their
staffs develop networks of knowledgeable individuals who can positively develop their own organizations.
Through continuous assessments, strategic leaders seek to understand the personal strengths and weaknesses
of the main players on a particular issue. Strategic leaders adeptly read other people while disciplining their
own actions and reactions. Strategic leaders influence external events by providing quality leadership, timely
and relevant information, and access to the right people and agencies.
LEADING
10-11. When leading at the highest levels of the Army, the DOD, and the national security establishment,
Army strategic leaders spearhead changes and, at the same time, must balance risks. They balance current
operational risks against future institutional or operational risks. To mitigate future institutional risks, these
leaders are responsible for providing leadership to the men and women who serve in their organizations and
developing their successors to meet future challenges.
LEADS OTHERS
10-12. Strategic leaders influence both the organization and external conditions. Like direct and
organizational leaders, strategic leaders lead by example and exert indirect leadership by communicating,
inspiring, and motivating. Strategic leaders make decisions balancing delegation, empowerment, and control.
A truly effective strategic leader understands the organization from multiple perspectives, transcending from
an inside perspective to understanding the views of outsiders. Strategic leaders are able to move beyond their
own experiential biases to view the environment and their mission objectively. Through formal and informal
networks, strategic leaders actively seek information relevant to their organizations as well as subject matter
experts who can help.
10-13. Strategic leaders routinely address complexity, ambiguity, rapid change, and alignment of policies.
They are responsible for developing well-reasoned positions and advise the Nation’s highest leaders.
Strategic leaders seek to determine what is important now and what will be important in the future. Their
experience, wisdom, and conceptual abilities contribute to solid insight and sound judgment across many
simultaneous challenges. Strategic leaders need an acute sense of timing—knowing when to accept risk and
proceed vigorously or when to proceed incrementally, testing the waters as they go. Their insight on issues
is strong, and they can skillfully sort relevant from irrelevant connections.
10-14. Envisioning is a key function of strategic leaders made possible by their insight and expertise.
Leaders determine a vision by applying thoughtful analysis and judgment to the current or projected situation.
Strategic leaders identify trends, opportunities, and threats that could affect the Army’s future and move
vigorously to mobilize the talent that will create strategic vision. Strategic leaders are open to ideas from
many sources, not just their own organizations.
10-15. When providing vision, direction, giving guidance, and setting priorities, strategic leaders must
judge realistically what the future may hold. Strategic leaders seek to keep their vision consistent with
external conditions, alliance goals, and national strategy. They incorporate new ideas, technologies, and
capabilities. From a mix of ideas, facts, conjecture, and personal experience, they create an image of their
organizations and the means to achieve desired results. A strategic leader’s vision may have a time horizon
of years or decades.
10-16. The ability to provide clear vision is vital to the strategic leader. The strategic leader’s vision
provides the ultimate sense of purpose, direction, and motivation. This vision is the starting point for
developing goals and plans, measuring accomplishment, and checking organizational values. For a vision to
be effective, the strategic leader must personally commit to it, gain commitment from the organization as a
whole, and persistently pursue the goals and objectives that will spread the vision throughout the
organization.
EXTENDS INFLUENCE
10-17. Strategic leaders use focused messages to extend influence and to gain support. Whether by nuance
or overt presentation, strategic leaders represent the Army and influence other organizations and agencies by
communicating what the Army does. Their audience is the Army itself, the Nation, and the rest of the world.
Strategic leaders must be proactive in creating relationships. Extending influence requires a shift from direct
influence to greater reliance on indirect methods. They focus on increasing engagement with multiple parties
or organizations and creating conditions to maximize unity of effort. Strategic leaders rely on writing and
public speaking to reinforce their central messages.
10-18. Successful negotiating requires a wide range of interpersonal skills. Strategic leaders must often rely
on negotiation skills to obtain the cooperation and support necessary to accomplish a mission. To resolve
conflicting views, strategic leaders visualize several possible end states while maintaining a clear idea of the
best end state from the national command’s perspective. Strategic leaders must use tact to justify standing
firm on nonnegotiable points while still communicating respect for other participants.
10-19. A successful negotiator must be particularly skilled in active listening. Other essential personal
characteristics include logical judgment and mental agility. Successful negotiating involves communicating
a clear position on the issues while conveying a willingness to bargain on negotiable portions. Negotiators
must be able to diagnose unspoken agendas and detach themselves from the negotiation process. This requires
recognizing what is acceptable to all concerned parties and working toward a common goal.
10-20. To reach acceptable consensus in negotiations, strategic leaders often circulate proposals early so
that further negotiations can focus on critical issues and solutions. Strategic leaders’ commitment to selfless
service enables them to subordinate the need for personal recognition for ideas to finding positive solutions
that produce the greatest good for their organization, the Army, and the Nation.
10-21. Outside Army boundaries, strategic leaders have roles as integrator, alliance builder, negotiator, and
arbitrator. Strategic leaders are skilled at reaching consensus and building coalitions. They may apply these
skills to tasks—such as designing combatant commands, joint task forces, and policy working-groups—or
determine the direction of a major command or the Army as an institution. Strategic leaders routinely bring
designated people together for missions lasting from a few months to years. Using peer leadership rather than
strict positional authority, strategic leaders carefully monitor progress toward a visualized end state. They
focus on the health of the relationships necessary to achieve the end state. Interpersonal contact sets the tone
for professional relations: strategic leaders must be tactful.
10-22. General Dwight D. Eisenhower’s creation of Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force
during World War II is an inspiring example of coalition building and sustaining fragile relationships.
General Eisenhower exercised his authority through an integrated command and staff structure that respected
the contributions of all nations involved. To underscore the united team spirit, sections within had chiefs of
one nationality and deputies of another.
LEADS BY EXAMPLE
10-23. Strategic leaders are the ultimate representatives of the organization, its cause, and purpose. As the
top leaders for the Nation’s military, they also represent our country as diplomats and national
representatives. Due to their elevated level of responsibilities and visibility, the Army holds strategic leaders
to higher expectations and increased scrutiny. They must exude positivity and confidence. Strategic leaders
use multiple outlets to convey strategic messages and set necessary conditions to advance national security
interests. Their responsibilities involve spanning the boundaries among the Army and other Services,
militaries, coalitions, Congress, industry, and the media.
10-24. Due to increased responsibilities and longer horizons of their decision making, timing, and attention
to detail are vital. A strategic leader’s decision at a critical moment can rapidly alter the course of events or
affect the execution of budgets several years into the future. Strategic leaders have to set the example for time
management. Effective leaders at the strategic level not only make timely decisions but also sense at what
level of detail to engage and what to delegate. Strategic leaders judiciously seek counsel from established
networks and invest sufficient time to prepare for decisions. Likewise, poor focus and poor time management
can have enormous cascading effects.
10-25. Strategic leaders best address complexity by embracing it. This means they expand their frame of
reference to fit a situation rather than reducing a situation to fit their preconceptions. Because of their sense
of duty, competence, intellectual capacity, and judgment, they tolerate ambiguity, as they will never have all
the information wanted. Instead, strategic leaders carefully analyze events and confidently decide when to
make a decision, realizing that they must innovate and accept some risk.
10-26. Resilience is a means for strategic leaders to handle the stress from frequent changes, ambiguity,
and complexity—all characteristics of strategic- and enterprise-level operations. Improving self-awareness
and self-mastery helps build and sustain resiliency. Resiliency is the product of work-life balance, effective
time management, family and peer support systems, along with access to executive health programs and
education about stressors.
COMMUNICATES
10-27. Words have international consequences at the strategic level. Communication at the strategic level
encompasses a wide array of staffs and functional and operational component teams interacting with each
other as well as external agencies. In their interaction with others, strategic leaders need a sharp sense of
organizational and personal dynamics. One prominent difference between strategic leaders and leaders at
other levels is the greater emphasis on symbolic communication. Strategic leaders must carefully consider
the enduring nature of all their communications. Strategic leaders’ words, decisions, and actions often have
consequences beyond their immediate intent.
10-28. Candor and integrity must always be hallmarks of a strategic leader to earn general trust. They must
carefully use their authority to identify messages and convey them to the right target audiences. Knowing
when to speak and to whom can be just as important as what is said. To achieve desired outcomes, strategic
leaders commit to a few powerful and consistent messages that they repeat in different settings. They devise
and follow a communications plan outlining how to address each audience. When preparing to address an
audience, they determine its composition and agenda beforehand so they know how best to reach its members.
They carefully assess the message effect in the categories of medium, frequency, vocabulary, and context.
Ensuring the message goes to the right groups with the desired effect is essential.
10-29. Strategic leaders use dialogue to persuade individuals or groups. Dialogue takes the forms of
advocacy and inquiry. Advocacy seeks to advance a position while inquiry looks to find out about another’s
position or perspective. Dialogue that blends the two has value for leaders who must address issues more
complex than personal experience. To advocate a view, leaders make reasoning explicit, invite others to
consider the view, encourage others to provide different views, and explore how views differ. When inquiring
into another’s view, leaders should voice their assumptions and seek to identify what support exists for other
views. Open dialogue can overcome reluctance to consider different points of view.
DEVELOPING
10-30. Strategic leaders invest in subordinates with a long-term focus. They create the conditions for long-
term success by endorsing systems and processes that develop subordinates who can continue to improve the
institution. Developing the institution, its organizations, and people involves an ongoing balance of operating
today and building for tomorrow and, in general, being stewards of the resources the Nation entrusts to its
care.
PREPARES SELF
10-31. Strategic leaders develop throughout their career. An honest understanding of self is important to be
able to draw on strengths and compensate for weaknesses. Neither General Marshall nor General Eisenhower
had led troops in combat before assuming strategic leadership positions in World War II, but both were
instrumental in preparing and leading the United States and its allies to victory. Eisenhower especially felt
disadvantaged by his lack of experience. Both future strategic leaders compensated with professional
education between the wars, gaining a strategic appreciation of the conditions and the future that was far
better than those with extensive combat experience were.
10-32. Strategic leaders bring forward their mastery of broad leadership and technical skills. Strategic
leaders, more so than direct and organizational leaders, draw on their developed conceptual abilities to
comprehend and manage complex concerns. These challenges include national security, theater strategies,
operating in the strategic context, and evolving vast organizations. The variety and scope of strategic leaders’
concerns demand greater preparation.
10-33. Self-aware Army leaders build a personal frame of reference from schooling, experience, self-study,
and assessment while reflecting on current events, history, and geography. Strategic leaders create a
comprehensive frame of reference that encompasses their entire organization and places it within strategic
conditions. Strategic leaders are unafraid to rethink experiences to learn from them. They are comfortable
with abstractions common to operational and strategic conditions. A well-developed frame of reference gives
strategic leaders a thorough knowledge of organizational subsystems. Aware of relationships among systems,
strategic leaders foresee the possible effects of one system upon others, which allows them to anticipate and
prevent potential problems. Using their understanding of the systems within their own organizations, strategic
leaders work through the complexity and uncertainty of the operational environment and translate abstract
concepts into concrete actions.
10-34. Strategic leaders train staffs and organizational teams to package concise, unbiased information and
build networks across organizational lines. Strategic leaders make wide-ranging and interrelated decisions so
they must be able to rely on imaginative teams who comprehend the conditions, foresee outcomes of many
courses of action, and identify key information requirements.
10-35. As strategic leaders build and use effective staffs, they continually seek honest, competent people
capable of diverse thought. They cannot afford to have teams that blindly agree with everything they say.
Strategic leaders encourage teams to participate in open dialogue with them, discuss alternative points of
view, and explore all facts, assumptions, and implications.
DEVELOPS OTHERS
10-39. Strategic leaders, as all leaders, have the responsibility to actively develop direct subordinates.
Strategic leaders are the top-level stewards of the Army, caring for and managing the people, physical, and
financial resources entrusted to them. Strategic leaders become enablers as they underwrite the learning,
efforts, projects, and ideas of rising leaders. Through developing others, strategic leaders build a team of
leaders prepared to fill critical positions in the future.
10-40. More than a matter of following formats and structured sessions, mentoring by strategic leaders
means giving the right people an intellectual boost so that they make the leap to successfully operating and
creatively thinking at the highest levels. Leaders speak to audiences at service schools about what happens
at their level and share their perspectives. Today’s subordinates will become the next generation of strategic
leaders.
10-41. Global strategic conditions in constant flux have increased the importance of building agile, honest,
and competent staffs and command teams. Strategic leaders mold staffs and organizational teams able to
integrate concise, unbiased information and build networks across organizational lines. Strategic leaders
make wide-ranging and interrelated decisions so they must be able to rely on imaginative staff and
subordinate leaders who comprehend the conditions, foresee consequences of many courses of action, and
identify key information.
10-42. Because they must be able to compensate for their own weaknesses, strategic leaders cannot afford
to have staffs that blindly agree with everything they say. Strategic leaders encourage staffs to participate in
open and candid dialogue with them, discuss alternative points of view, and explore all facts, assumptions,
and implications. Such dialogue, that includes inquiry and advocacy, enables strategic leaders to assess all
aspects of an issue and clarifies their vision, intent, and guidance.
ACHIEVING
10-44. Strategic leaders organize and integrate their efforts to prepare for and achieve the goals of the Army,
joint forces, the Nation, and organizations with which they collaborate. Their ability to get results is a function
of how well they integrate their leader competencies. The National Security Strategy, National Defense
Strategy, and National Military Strategy guide strategic leaders as they develop their visions. Strategic leaders
must define for their diverse organizations what success means. They monitor progress and results by
drawing on personal observations, organized review and analysis, strategic management plans, and informal
discussions.
10-47. Strategic-level plans must balance competing demands across the DOD. The fundamental
requirements for strategic-level planning are the same as planning at the direct and organizational levels. At
all levels, leaders establish realistic priorities and communicate decisions. What adds complexity at the
strategic level is the sheer number of players and resource factors that can affect the organization.
10-48. Because lives are precious and resources are limited, strategic leaders must make tough decisions
about priorities. Strategic Army priorities focus on projecting landpower. When planning for tomorrow,
strategic leaders consistently call on their understanding and knowledge of the budgetary process to
determine which technologies will provide the capability commensurate with the cost. Visionary Army
leaders of the 1970s and 1980s realized that superior night-fighting systems and greater standoff ranges would
expose fewer Soldiers to danger, yet kill more of the enemy. Those leaders committed the necessary resources
to developing and procuring these and other superior systems. The shifts from Cold War to regional conflicts
to counterinsurgencies within decades reinforces that the conduct of war continuously changes. Strategic
leaders must therefore seek current information about shifting strategic conditions to determine what force
structure to prepare. Strategic leaders must consider—
Who, what, and where is the next threat?
Will we have allies or contend alone?
What are our national and military goals?
What is the successful strategic end state?
10-49. Strategic leaders oversee the relationships between their organizations as part of the nation’s total
defense force and the national policy apparatus. Among their duties, strategic leaders—
Provide military counsel in national policy forums.
Interpret national policy guidelines and directions.
Plan for and maintain military capabilities required to implement national policy.
Present the organization’s resource requirements.
Develop strategies to support national objectives.
Bridge gaps between political decisions made as part of national strategy and the individuals and
organizations that must carry out those decisions.
10-50. Just as direct and organizational leaders consider sister units and support agencies, strategic leaders
consider and work with other Services and government agencies. Many of the Army’s four-star billets are
joint or multinational. Lieutenant generals hold similar positions on the Joint Staff, with the DOD, or in
combatant commands. While other strategic leaders are assigned to nominally single service organizations
(such as Army Materiel Command, Forces Command, Futures Command, and Training and Doctrine
Command), they frequently work outside Army channels. Many DA Civilian strategic leaders hold positions
that require a well-rounded joint perspective.
10-51. Creating a hybrid culture that bridges gaps between partners in multinational operations is often
critical for success. Strategic leaders take time to learn about their partners’ cultures including political,
social, and economic aspects. Cultural sensitivity and geopolitical awareness are critical tools for achieving
results beyond the traditional chain of command. Strategic leaders must devise Army courses of action that
reflect national policy objectives and consider the interests of other organizations and agencies.
10-52. Strategic leaders routinely address complexity, ambiguity, rapid change, and alignment of policies.
They are responsible for developing well-reasoned positions and advise the Nation’s highest leaders.
Strategic leaders seek to determine what is important now and what will be important in the future. Their
experience, wisdom, and conceptual abilities contribute to solid insight and sound judgment across many
simultaneous challenges. Strategic leaders need an acute sense of timing—knowing when to accept risk and
proceed vigorously or when to proceed incrementally, testing the waters as they go. Their insight on issues
is strong, and they can skillfully sort relevant from irrelevant connections.
10-53. The Army’s strategic leaders recognize that as an institution, the Army experiences a nearly constant
state of change: processing and integrating new people, missions, technologies, equipment, and information.
To fulfill its mission, the Army must proactively address change. Strategic leaders anticipate change while
shielding their organizations from unimportant distracters. Strategic leaders know that change generally
requires influence grounded in commitment rather than forced compliance. Many major change efforts fail
without organization-wide support, so leaders must reinforce commitment consistently throughout the
organization. While all levels of leaders lead change, strategic level leaders make the most-sweeping changes
and ones that focus on the most distant time horizon. Strategic leaders must plan for and manage change by—
Identifying the force capabilities necessary to accomplish the National Defense Strategy.
Assigning strategic and operational missions, including priorities for allocating resources.
Preparing plans for using military forces.
Creating, resourcing, and sustaining organizational systems, including requisite personnel and
equipment resources, force modernization programs, and essential command and control systems.
Developing and improving doctrine and the training methods supporting doctrine implementation.
Planning for the second- and third-order effects of change.
Maintaining an effective leader development program and other human resource initiatives.
10-54. While the highly volatile nature of the strategic conditions may tempt some strategic leaders to
concentrate on the short term, they cannot allow the crisis of the moment to absorb them. They must remain
steadfast in their responsibility to shape an organization or policies that will perform over the next ten to
twenty years. Strategic leaders also understand complex cause-and-effect relationships and anticipate the
second- and third-order effects of their decisions throughout the organization. Planning and foresight cannot
predict or influence all future events; therefore, strategic leaders prepare intellectually for a range of threats
and scenarios. Strategic leaders work carefully to influence the future with the means available through the
diplomatic, informational, military, and economic instruments of national power, as well as their character,
competence, and confidence.
Sources are listed by page number. Where material appears in a paragraph, it lists both
the page number followed by the paragraph number(s). Quotations are identified by
the first few words of the quote. Boldface indicates vignettes.
+Chapter 1: The Army Profession, Ethic, and Leaders
1-1 “…the Soldier above all…”: General Douglas MacArthur, Thayer Award acceptance speech, 1962.
https://www.dvidshub.net/audio/44472/general-douglas-macarthur-thayer-award-acceptance-address.
1-13 Army Oaths: Oath of Enlistment, DD Form 4, Enlistment/Reenlistment Document Armed Forces of the
United States, October 2007 and Oath of Office: DA Form 71, Oath of Office–Military Personnel, July
1999; 5 USC 3331. The oath administered to commissioned officers includes the words, “I [full name],
having been appointed a [rank] in the United States Army....”
1-14 Colonel Robert B. Nett: https://history.army.mil/moh/wwII-m-s.html#NETT.
1-21 First Sergeant Conrad Schmidt: https://history.army.mil/html/moh/civwarmz.html.
Chapter 2: Character
2-3 General Jonathan M. Wainwright: https://history.army.mil/html/moh/wwII-t-
z.html#WAINWRIGHT.
2-4 “The discipline which makes…”: Major General John M. Schofield, Address to the United States
Corps of Cadets, 11 August 1879 in Manual for Noncommissioned Officers and Privates of Infantry of
the Army of the United States (Washington, DC: War Department, 1917), 12.
2-5 Sergeant David B. Bleak: https://history.army.mil/html/moh/koreanwar.html.
2-5 Lieutenant Vernon Baker: https://history.army.mil/moh/wwII-a-f.html.
2-6 Warrant Officer Hugh C. Thompson, Jr.: https://www.loc.gov/rr/frd/Military_Law/pdf/RDAR-Vol-
I.pdf.
2-7 Captain Humbert R. Versace: https://history.army.mil/html/moh/vietnam-m-z.html.
2-9 The Soldier’s Creed: https://www.army.mil/values/soldiers.html.
2-9 The Army Civilian Corps Creed: https://www.army.mil/values/corps.html.
2-10 Task Force Kingston: Roy E. Appleman, South to the Naktong, North to the Yalu (CMH Pub 20-2)
(Washington, DC: Center of Military History, 1992). https://history.army.mil/html/books/020/20-
2/CMH_Pub_20-2.pdf.
2-10 “Discipline is the soul…”: George Washington, “Instructions to Company Captains, 29 July 1757,”
National Archives Founders Online. https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/02-04-02-
0223.
2-11 Discipline in the Face of the Enemy: TRADOC Pam 525-100-4, Leadership and Command on the
Battlefield: Noncommissioned Officer Corps (Fort Monroe, VA: Department of the Army, 1994), 26.
https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a283327.pdf
Chapter 4: Intellect
4-2 “Judgment comes from experience…”: Omar N. Bradley, “Leadership: An Address to the U.S. Army
War College, 07 October 1971,” Parameters 1(3) (1972): 8.
https://ssi.armywarcollege.edu/pubs/parameters/articles/1972/bradley.pdf.
4-2 Gatlings to the Assault: https://history.army.mil/catalog/pubs/21/daposters/21-46.html.
Chapter 5: Leads
5-1 “The American soldier…”: Omar N. Bradley, “American Military Leadership,” Army Information
Digest 8, no. 2 (February 1953): 5.
5-2 5-9 through 5-18. Gary Yukl, Leadership in Organizations, 8th ed. (Boston, MA: Pearson Education,
2012).
5-5 D-Day statement to soldiers, sailors, and airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Force, 6/44.
https://www.archives.gov/historical-docs/todays-doc/?dod-date=606.
5-10 Breakthrough at Chipyong-ni: https://history.army.mil/catalog/pubs/21/daposters/21-47.html.
5-11 5-56 and 5-60. Jonathan Hughes and Jeff Weiss, Making Partnerships Work: A Relationship
Management Handbook (Boston, MA: Vantage Partners, LLC, 2001).
5-11 5-67 thru 5-69. Ha Hoang and Frank T. Rothaermel, “How to Manage Alliances Strategically,” MIT
Sloan Management Review 58 (August 23, 2016): 18.
5-12 “Example whether it be…”: George Washington, “From George Washington to Major General
Stirling, 5 March 1780”, National Archives Founders Online.
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/03-24-02-0525.
5-13 Master Sergeant Roy P. Benavidez: https://history.army.mil/html/moh/vietnam-a-
l.html#BENAVIDEZ.
Chapter 6: Develops
6-1 “The commander must assure…”: FM 100-5, Operations (Washington DC: Department of the Army,
1976).
Chapter 7: Achieves
7-1 “The truly great leader…”: George C. Marshall, “Graduation of Officer Candidates Class,” Fort
Benning, Georgia, 27 September 1941.
Chapter 8: Leadership in Practice
8-1 “But once war…”: Douglas MacArthur, “Address of General of the Army Douglas MacArthur,”
Congressional Record 97 (1951) p 4123, (Text from Congressional Record Permanent Digital
Collection). https://www.govinfo.gov/app/collection/crecb/_crecb/Volume%20097%20(1951).
8-1 Third Battalion, 358th Infantry Regiment: General Orders 25 (Washington DC: War Department,
1945).
8-2 Remagen Bridgehead: https://history.army.mil/catalog/pubs/21/daposters/21-32.html.
Chapter 9: Organizational Leadership
9-1 “You have to lead men…”: George C. Marshall, “Compulsory Military Training and Service,”
Testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Military Affairs, 76th Congress, 3rd session, 12 July
1940.
9-2 9-11. Jeroen Stouten, Denise M. Rousseau, and David De Cremer, “Successful Organizational Change:
Integrating the Management Practice and Scholarly Literatures,” Academy of Management Annals 12
(9 July 2018): 752788.
Chapter 10: Strategic Leadership
10-1 “If we desire…”: George Washington, “From George Washington to the United States Senate and
House of Representatives, 3 December 1793,” National Archives Founders Online.
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-14-02-0306.
The glossary lists acronyms and terms with Army or joint definitions. Terms for which
ADP 6-22 is the proponent are marked with an asterisk (*). The proponent publication
for other terms is listed in parentheses after the definition.
SECTION II – TERMS
*Army leader
Anyone who by virtue of assumed role or assigned responsibility inspires and influences people by
providing purpose, direction, and motivation to accomplish the mission and improve the organization.
+*Army ethic
The set of enduring moral principles, values, beliefs, and laws that guide the Army profession and
create the culture of trust essential to Army professionals in the conduct of missions, performance of
duty, and all aspects of life.
+*Army profession
A trusted vocation of Soldiers and Army civilians whose collective expertise is the ethical design,
generation, support, and application of landpower; serving under civilian authority; and entrusted to
defend the Constitution and the rights and interests of the American people.
command
The authority that a commander in the armed forces lawfully exercises over subordinates by virtue of
rank or assignment. (JP 1)
command and control
The exercise of authority and direction by a properly designated commander over assigned and
attached forces in the accomplishment of mission. (JP 1)
*counterproductive leadership
The demonstration of leader behaviors that violate one or more of the Army's core leader competencies
or Army Values, preventing a climate conducive to mission accomplishment.
*leadership
The activity of influencing people by providing purpose, direction, and motivation to accomplish the
mission and improve the organization.
mentorship
The voluntary developmental relationship that exists between a person of greater experience and a
person of lesser experience that is characterized by mutual trust and respect. (AR 600-100)
mission command
(Army) The Army's approach to command and control that empowers subordinate decision making
and decentralized execution appropriate to the situation. (ADP 6-0)
REQUIRED PUBLICATIONS
These documents must be available to the intended users of this publication.
DOD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms. July 2019. Available at
https://www.jcs.mil/Doctrine/.
ADP 1-02. Terms and Military Symbols. 14 August 2018.
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
These documents contain relevant supplemental information.
ARMY PUBLICATIONS
Most Army doctrinal publications are available online at https://armypubs.army.mil/.
ADP 6-0. Mission Command: Command and Control of Army Forces. 31 July 2019.
AR 350-1. Army Training and Leader Development. 10 December 2017.
AR 600-20. Army Command Policy. 6 November 2014.
AR 600-100. Army Profession and Leadership Policy. 5 April 2017.
ATP 5-19. Risk Management. 14 April 2014.
ATP 6-22.1. The Counseling Process. 1 July 2014.
ATP 6-22.5. A Leader’s Guide to Soldier Health and Fitness. 10 February 2016.
ATP 6-22.6. Army Team Building. 30 October 2015.
FM 3-13. Information Operations. 6 December 2016.
FM 6-22. Leader Development. 30 June 2015.
FM 6-27. The Commander’s Handbook on the Law of Land Warfare. 7 August 2019.
FM 7-22. Army Physical Readiness Training. 26 October 2012.
GTA 22-06-001. Ethical Climate Assessment Survey. 1 October 1997.
+OTHER PUBLICATIONS
Appleman, Roy E. South to the Naktong, North to the Yalu (CMH Pub 20-2). Washington, DC: Center
of Military History, 1992.
Army Civilian Corps Creed. Available at https://www.army.mil/values/corps.html.
Army Values. Available at https://www.army.mil/values/.
Bradley, Omar N. “American Military Leadership,” Army Information Digest 8, no. 2, February 1953.
Bradley, Omar N. “Leadership: An Address to the U.S. Army War College, 07 October 1971.”
Parameters 1(3), 1972.
https://ssi.armywarcollege.edu/pubs/parameters/articles/1972/bradley.pdf.
Department of the Army. FM 100-5, Operations. Washington DC: Department of the Army, 1976.
General Orders 25. Washington DC: War Department, 1945.
Hoang, Ha and Frank T. Rothaermel. “How to Manage Alliances Strategically.” MIT Sloan
Management Review 58 (August 23, 2016): 1-8.
Hughes, Jonathan and Jeff Weiss. Making Partnerships Work: A Relationship Management Handbook.
Boston, MA: Vantage Partners, LLC, 2001.
MacArthur, Douglas. “Address of General of the Army Douglas MacArthur.” Congressional Record
97 (1951). Text from Congressional Record Permanent Digital Collection,
https://www.govinfo.gov/app/collection/crecb/_crecb/Volume%20097%20(1951).
MacArthur, Douglas. Thayer Award acceptance speech, 1962.
https://www.dvidshub.net/audio/44472/general-douglas-macarthur-thayer-award-acceptance-
address.
Manual for Noncommissioned Officers and Privates of Infantry of the Army of the United States.
Washington, DC: War Department, 1917.
Marshall, George C. “Graduation of Officer Candidates Class,” Fort Benning, Georgia, 27 September
1941.
Marshall, George C. Testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Military Affairs. “Compulsory
Military Training and Service.” 76th Congress, 3rd session, 12 July 1940, Hearings on S
4164, 372-385.
Stouten, Jeroen, Denise M. Rousseau, and David De Cremer. “Successful Organizational Change:
Integrating the Management Practice and Scholarly Literatures.” Academy of Management
Annals 12 (9 July 2018): 752-788.
The Constitution of the United States. Available at https://www.archives.gov/founding-
docs/constitution.
The Soldier’s Creed. Available at https://www.army.mil/values/soldiers.html.
Title 10, USC. Available at http://uscode.house.gov/browse/prelim@title10&edition=prelim.
Uniform Code of Military Justice. Available at https://jsc.defense.gov.
Washington, George. “From George Washington to Major General Stirling, 5 March 1780”, National
Archives Founders Online, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/03-24-02-
0525.
Washington, George. “From George Washington to the United States Senate and House of
Representatives, 3 December 1793,” National Archives Founders Online.
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-14-02-0306.
Washington, George. “Instructions to Company Captains, 29 July 1757,” National Archives Founders
Online. https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/02-04-02-0223.
Yukl, Gary. Leadership in Organizations. 8th ed. Boston, MA: Pearson Education, Inc., 2012.
WEBSITES
Comprehensive Soldier and Family Fitness Program: https://armyfit.army.mil.
The National Archives. Available at https://www.archives.gov/.
United States Army Center of Military History. Available at https://history.army.mil/index.html.
PRESCRIBED FORMS
This section contains no entries.
REFERENCED FORMS
Unless otherwise indicated, most Department of the Army forms are available online at
https://armypubs.army.mil/ . Most Department of Defense forms are available at
https://www.esd.whs.mil/Directives/forms/.
DA Form 71. Oath of Office - Military Personnel.
DA Form 2028. Recommended Changes to Publications and Blank Forms.
DD Form 4. Enlistment/Reenlistment Document Armed Forces of the United States.
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1922706
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