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Accountability

Owning outcomes and holding others to commitments

Week 9 Day 1: Why New Initiatives Feel Exciting and Follow-Through Feels Like Death

The dopamine hit of launching something new is real. The energy required to sustain it through the messy middle is a completely different fuel source -- and most leaders are running on the wrong tank....

Week 9 Day 2: The Galvanizer's Curse -- Lighting Fires You Do Not Tend

The leader with Galvanizing genius can ignite a room in twenty minutes and disappear for three months. The fire they lit still needs fuel -- and their team is not the fuel....

Week 9 Day 3: Your Team Has Seen This Pattern Before

You think each new initiative is different. Your team recognizes it as the same cycle: excitement, launch, drift, abandon. They are already placing bets on when you will lose interest....

Week 9 Day 4: What It Costs When You Abandon Momentum

Every abandoned initiative costs more than the resources that went into it. It costs credibility, team energy, and the willingness to go all-in next time....

Week 9 Day 5: How to Build Accountability Into the Start

The time to build a completion mechanism is not when you are losing steam. It is when you are at peak excitement. Accountability structures work best when they are created in the moment you least thin...

Week 9 Day 6: The Difference Between Pivoting and Quitting

Pivoting is changing direction based on evidence. Quitting is changing direction based on boredom. Your team can tell the difference even when you cannot....

Week 9 Day 7: Assignment: Pick One Stalled Initiative and Finish It

This week's assignment: identify one initiative you started in the last six months that stalled. Determine whether it should be completed, formally killed, or pivoted -- and do that thing this week....

Week 10 Day 1: You Are a Liability -- And That Is Okay

Every leader is a single point of failure for something. The ones who build great teams are not the ones who eliminate their flaws -- they are the ones who build systems around them....

Week 10 Day 2: The System Is the Safety Net, Not Your Willpower

Willpower is a depletable resource. Systems run whether you have energy or not. The best leaders design their teams so that the right things happen automatically....

Week 10 Day 3: How to Automate Accountability

The best accountability systems do not depend on someone reminding you. They make the status of every commitment visible to everyone, all the time....

Week 10 Day 4: Creating Guardrails for Your Worst Patterns

You know your patterns by now. The question is not whether they will show up again -- it is whether you have built guardrails that catch you when they do....

Week 10 Day 5: What a 'Leader-Proof' Process Looks Like

A leader-proof process is one that produces good outcomes regardless of the leader's mood, energy, or attention on any given day. It is not an insult to your leadership -- it is a testament to your de...

Week 10 Day 6: Your Team Should Be Able to Succeed Even on Your Bad Days

Your worst day should not be your team's worst day. If your bad mood, low energy, or distracted attention derails the team's work, the system is designed around your presence, not around their success...

Week 10 Day 7: Assignment: Design One System That Compensates for Your Biggest Gap

This week's assignment: pick your single biggest leadership gap -- the pattern that costs your team the most -- and design a system that compensates for it. Not a habit. Not a reminder. A system that ...