Having been blessed with a veritable cascade of outstanding
managers and leaders, mentors, in my career, one standout was Captain Bo Cox,
Armor, U. S. Army. Bo was my first
company commander when I was a young platoon leader in the 24th
Infantry Division. Along with my fellow
2nd Lieutenants in C Company, 4/64 Armor, winning was expected,
routine, and even fun under Bo’s (we called him Captain Cox, of course)
leadership.
Bo was actually Carlisle B. Cox III, a third generation armor
officer. Not a perfect man (who is?), Bo was 30, a little overweight, liked his beer, and was the biggest
nicotine addict I have ever seen. Bo
would dip Copenhagen smokeless tobacco in one cheek, stuff Days Work chewing
tobacco in the other, and smoke a cigar…at the same time!! So, it would not be unusual to find his team
of junior officers, all emulating our fearless leader, with chew stuffed in our
cheeks and not a dry spot on the ground within six feet of where we were
gathered.
Much of my foundation as a leader was formed by serving
under Bo Cox, and much of what I did as a business leader everyday goes back to
these examples he set:
Understand you have a serious responsibility, but don’t
take yourself too seriously.
A company commander in the army has a great deal of
responsibility in both peacetime and wartime. Care and accountability for equipment valued in the multi-millions, and responsibility for the discipline,
development, well-being of 50 or 60 soldiers and junior officers fall on the
Army’s company commanders. Even
so, Bo was a man of good humor. Bo was confident
in his abilities and talent, which meant he was secure enough to be
himself. He was no poser.
Don’t jump to judgment.
A commander in the army has a great deal of power over
subordinates. Understanding the gravity
of his decisions, Bo made sure he got all the facts before passing
judgment. He realized that one (or two,
or three) people saying something doesn't make it so. There are always multiple points-of-view to
any situation. He had the maturity to
know as fact that one can never really know another person’s motives and
perspective. Bo based decisions on
demonstrable facts alone.
Have compassion
I observed Bo make a decision that sent a soldier to
jail. This soldier had a severe alcohol
problem, and after several offenses was sent to “the brig”. Through this, Bo did not judge the person,
only the offense. He sought multiple
opportunities to get the soldier help.
My first platoon sergeant was a performance problem. Bo mentored me in the art of
managing through performance problems, lessons that I applied throughout my
career. Most people, he taught, want to
perform. He modeled that a leader must
take the good with the bad in any person, making the most of the “good” and
seeking to improve the “bad”.
Have courage
We didn't go to war from 1983-1987 when I served, and that's ok with me. I have no doubt that, had we gone to battle together, Bo would have been a model of physical courage.
However, I did see Bo model moral courage, stand up to politics, do the right thing when there was no immediate benefit to himself. He had a bias for principles of fairness and common sense, and would speak his mind, even to senior officers, when he saw those principles violated.
Show me, don’t tell me
In my experience, the U. S. Army is the ultimate
meritocracy. Many of my colleagues got their
commissions through the USMA at West Point.
Many others, like me, were commissioned through a university ROTC
program. A few came through Office
Candidate School. Bo didn't care how we
got there, he cared about demonstrated, measurable performance. “Talk is cheap”, he modeled. “Show me, don’t tell me”.
Deflect credit, accept blame
C Company was well trained, combat ready, and qualified to the highest standards. Whenever possible, Bo would deflect credit to his junior officers, NCO's and soldiers. Likewise, he willingly took responsibility for mistakes. I never saw Bo throw anyone under the bus. Or the tank.
Timing is key
Bo always seemed to know when to praise, when to provide a
kick to the rear, when to press, and when to give relief. A knack for timing is invaluable in
leadership, whether one is leading a tank company, a business unit, a single subordinate,
or a child.
On one occasion, I was complaining to Bo about something or another. He called me out for being a "whiner". Because I knew how much mutual respect we had, and how invested he was in my development, that hit home hard. And I was being a "whiner"!
Have fun
Bo managed to inject fun into almost any situation. On one training exercise, we were moving our
company of M60A3 tanks across a muddy field.
By mid-afternoon, every tank was mired in mud up to the top of the
tracks. Many commanders would have
flipped out. Not Bo. He stood the company down for the night, and
when the lowered temperatures firmed up the ground the next morning, we had “vehicle
recovery” training.
I was privileged to serve with an amazing group of young
officers. Mike Lehto. Mike Woods. Jon Walter. Mark Terrill.
Chuck Palmer. Debbie Palmer.
Terry Feisthammel. Lori Feisthammel. Eric Turner.
Charles King. Buddy Miller. Andy Atcher.
Harry Darby. Aaron Danis. I get chills calling to mind the quality and
commitment of these friends and fellow officers. And we did have fun, working and playing hard, under
Bo Cox’s direct leadership or influence.
I could not have hoped for a better leader for such a
formative period in my career than Carlisle B. Cox III. "Bo".
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