"Leadership should mean giving control
rather than taking control and creating leaders rather
than forging followers." David Marquet, an
experienced Navy officer, was used to giving orders. As
newly appointed captain of the USS Santa Fe, a
nuclear-powered submarine, he was responsible for more
than a hundred sailors, deep in the sea. In this
high-stress environment, where there is no margin for
error, it was crucial his men did their job and did it
well. But the ship was dogged by poor morale, poor
performance, and the worst retention in the
fleet. Marquet acted like any other captain until,
one day, he unknowingly gave an impossible order, and
his crew tried to follow it anyway. When he asked why
the order wasn't challenged, the answer was "Because you
told me to." Marquet realized he was leading in a
culture of followers, and they were all in danger unless
they fundamentally changed the way they did
things. That's when Marquet took matters into his own
hands and pushed for leadership at every level. Turn
the Ship Around! is the true story of how the
Santa Fe skyrocketed from worst to first in the
fleet by challenging the U.S. Navy's traditional
leader-follower approach. Struggling against his own
instincts to take control, he instead achieved the
vastly more powerful model of giving control. Before
long, each member of Marquet's crew became a leader and
assumed responsibility for everything he did, from
clerical tasks to crucial combat decisions. The crew
became fully engaged, contributing their full
intellectual capacity every day, and the Santa Fe
started winning awards and promoting a highly
disproportionate number of officers to submarine
command. No matter your business or position, you can
apply Marquet's radical guidelines to turn your own ship
around. The payoff: a workplace where everyone around
you is taking responsibility for their actions, where
people are healthier and happier, where everyone is a
leader.
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