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Content provided by Scott De Long and Vince Moiso. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Scott De Long and Vince Moiso or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
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From Control to Culture: Evolving Leadership for Resilient, People-Focused, Organization

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Manage episode 520073892 series 2971693
Content provided by Scott De Long and Vince Moiso. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Scott De Long and Vince Moiso or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In Episode 6.2 of The CEO Podcast limited-run reboot series, Leadership at the Crossroads, hosts Vince Moiso and Scott De Long, Ph.D., examine the resurgence of the command-and-control leadership style in today's supercharged economic and political climate. They frame the issue as a common reaction to pressures such as inflation, tariffs, and AI disruption conditions that tempt even seasoned leaders to revert to top-down directives.

Vince reflects on his personal evolution from a harddriving, authoritarian approach to a more principled, people-centered model influenced by Stoic philosophy (e.g., Ryan Holiday's work) and his experiences coaching youth sports. Scott underscores the drawbacks of command-and-control: while it can deliver short-term execution, it erodes culture, stifles development, and risks producing the next generation of jerk managers. They argue for data-informed, collaborative decision making that empowers people and sustains performance over time.

Both acknowledge there are narrow circumstances where decisive command is warranted—true emergencies (fire in the building) or moments when time is genuinely of the essence. Even then, they recommend anchoring decisions in clear processes (e.g., routing major choices through a single function like finance), aligning actions with a shared vision, and practicing self-reflection; are you stressed, or is the business stressed? The episode closes with a call to choose what's best for the organization (us) over what's easiest for the leader (me).

Key Takeaways

  1. Command-and-control can drive short-term results but damages culture and long-term performance.
  2. Use decisive top-down leadership sparingly—primarily for true emergencies or when time is critical.
  3. Sustainable leadership pairs clear processes and shared vision with empowerment, reflection, and data-informed decisions.

Key Insights

  • Economic/political pressure often triggers regression to top-down behaviors even in progressive cultures.
  • Personal evolution as a leader may require unlearning early models (e.g., sports-style toughness coaching).
  • Stoic practices (control your response, not external events) help leaders avoid reactive overreach.
  • Command-and-control excels at speed and clarity, but undermines autonomy, development, and trust.
  • Culture built on development (not just training) yields higher productivity, empowerment, and retention.
  • Data-informed, collaborative decisions create buy-in and better execution across functions.
  • Processes can prevent panic leadership (e.g., routing big decisions through finance or another gatekeeper).
  • Leaders should ask: Is this choice better for me or better for us (the whole organization)?
  • Self-check under pressure: Are you stressed personally, or is the business actually stressed?
  • Revisit and align with a near-term vision (35 years) so decisions support strategic direction.

Connect:

Scott De Long, Ph.D. & Lead2Goals

Vince Moiso & Vis Business Group

The CEO Podcast

  continue reading

116 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 520073892 series 2971693
Content provided by Scott De Long and Vince Moiso. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Scott De Long and Vince Moiso or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In Episode 6.2 of The CEO Podcast limited-run reboot series, Leadership at the Crossroads, hosts Vince Moiso and Scott De Long, Ph.D., examine the resurgence of the command-and-control leadership style in today's supercharged economic and political climate. They frame the issue as a common reaction to pressures such as inflation, tariffs, and AI disruption conditions that tempt even seasoned leaders to revert to top-down directives.

Vince reflects on his personal evolution from a harddriving, authoritarian approach to a more principled, people-centered model influenced by Stoic philosophy (e.g., Ryan Holiday's work) and his experiences coaching youth sports. Scott underscores the drawbacks of command-and-control: while it can deliver short-term execution, it erodes culture, stifles development, and risks producing the next generation of jerk managers. They argue for data-informed, collaborative decision making that empowers people and sustains performance over time.

Both acknowledge there are narrow circumstances where decisive command is warranted—true emergencies (fire in the building) or moments when time is genuinely of the essence. Even then, they recommend anchoring decisions in clear processes (e.g., routing major choices through a single function like finance), aligning actions with a shared vision, and practicing self-reflection; are you stressed, or is the business stressed? The episode closes with a call to choose what's best for the organization (us) over what's easiest for the leader (me).

Key Takeaways

  1. Command-and-control can drive short-term results but damages culture and long-term performance.
  2. Use decisive top-down leadership sparingly—primarily for true emergencies or when time is critical.
  3. Sustainable leadership pairs clear processes and shared vision with empowerment, reflection, and data-informed decisions.

Key Insights

  • Economic/political pressure often triggers regression to top-down behaviors even in progressive cultures.
  • Personal evolution as a leader may require unlearning early models (e.g., sports-style toughness coaching).
  • Stoic practices (control your response, not external events) help leaders avoid reactive overreach.
  • Command-and-control excels at speed and clarity, but undermines autonomy, development, and trust.
  • Culture built on development (not just training) yields higher productivity, empowerment, and retention.
  • Data-informed, collaborative decisions create buy-in and better execution across functions.
  • Processes can prevent panic leadership (e.g., routing big decisions through finance or another gatekeeper).
  • Leaders should ask: Is this choice better for me or better for us (the whole organization)?
  • Self-check under pressure: Are you stressed personally, or is the business actually stressed?
  • Revisit and align with a near-term vision (35 years) so decisions support strategic direction.

Connect:

Scott De Long, Ph.D. & Lead2Goals

Vince Moiso & Vis Business Group

The CEO Podcast

  continue reading

116 episodes

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