Lead Like The Camera Is Always On

Lead Like the Camera Is Always On Because the future of policing will be defined by what your people do when it is. What the Camera Sees Culture isn’t found on a poster. It lives in the decisions your people…

Lead Like the Camera Is Always On Because the future of policing will be defined by what your people do when it is. What the Camera Sees Culture isn’t found on a poster. It lives in the decisions your people…

The Chaos Is the Job There’s a moment every leader in policing knows well. You’ve finally gotten your arms around one issue. Your team has adapted. You’ve updated the training, revised the policy, had the conversation you needed to have.…

Authenticity Is Owning Who You Are The concept of authenticity has been a subject that is being batted around in business circles and policing circles a like. Conversations point to the importance of honesty, availability, and vulnerability in an evolving…

Boss vs. Leader: The Choice that Changes Everything In policing, we talk a lot about leadership but what we often mean is supervision, management, or simply authority. Real leadership is about caring for those in your charge and creating the…

Great leadership extends beyond holding rank or making decisions. It’s about creating the conditions where the best answers can surface. The fastest way to do that is to lead like a learner. This approach is not about pretending. Rather, it’s…

Almost every leader in policing will, at some point, discover a simple truth: culture isn’t the posters on the wall or the slogans on a website. Culture is the way your people feel when they show up to serve. Culture…

There’s a quiet strategy that too many in leadership rely on. It’s not written in any book or taught in any academy, but it’s practiced every day. It’s the strategy of nothing. Do nothing. Say nothing. Decide nothing. For some,…

In policing, communication is part of the job from day one. In the academy, recruits spend hours learning how to write reports that capture the facts: who, what, where, and when. The goal is clarity, objectivity, and precision. That skill…

When I was police chief, one of my favorite things to do was visit new recruits in the police academy. In those first few weeks, their excitement was palpable. You could see the pride they felt in earning their spot…

Walk into any police department or sheriff’s office and you’ll find a simple truth: chiefs and sheriffs don’t patrol the streets. They don’t clear calls. They don’t run code 3. They’re not jumping fences or writing reports after a 12-hour…