GENERAL STANLEY MCCHRYSTAL SPOKE WITH RICH KARLGAARD, OUR EDITOR-AT-LARGE AND GLOBAL FUTURIST. THIS INTERVIEW HAS
BEEN EDITED AND CONDENSED. FOR THE EXTENDED CONVERSATION, VISIT FORBES.COM/SITES/RICHKARLGAARD.
What kind of companies seek out your
consulting firm, the McChrystal Group?
It’s not a failing company, but they’ll say,
“We are too slow making decisions. We are
ineffective at implementing decisions.”
Your epiphany about speed and flexibility came
during your career in the military, fighting al
Qaeda in Iraq and as well as groups such as ISIS.
We had purposely built a counterterrorist
force, JSOC, and over 22 years we had
tweaked it until it was unparalleled in
the world, in terms of competence and
professionalism, as well as in its use of
existing technologies. We could do things
that were literally elegant: precision raids,
hostage rescues and whatnot. We were
a beautifully crafted bullet
that would fly straight and
true, and be lethal if aimed
correctly and fired at the
right time. But we weren’t
responsible for those two
parts of things—which is
fine, as long as you’re going
up against a somewhat
predictable enemy. But in
Iraq we got into a constantly
changing environment,
against a different kind of
enemy, and, suddenly, we
had to operate much faster
and couldn’t take our time
painting the Sistine Chapel.
We had to paint faster and
get the job done quickly. We
stopped being able to be the
bullet; we had to become the
gun. The bullet still needed to
be good, but elegance was less
important than effectiveness.
And we couldn’t do it just
once; we had to literally
change the organization on a
daily basis.
Did you have to upend the classic
military hierarchy?
Not formally. But it changed
who got what information,
how it was controlled, where
decisions were made. That was
against al Qaeda in Iraq. If
you think about ISIS now, ISIS is Uber.
I don’t think Uber would like the comparison.
But like Uber, ISIS has little capital
investment in what they’re doing. They’re
creating franchises, and those franchises
are very well suited to the conditions on the
ground because they formed themselves,
and they constantly adapt. The upside for
ISIS is that these groups are willing to call
themselves ISIS. If they succeed, that’s good,
but if they fail, ISIS has no investment.
How do you encourage people to share power in
an organization? It can seem like no one wants to.
It’s just not our nature. The trick is to
convince people at different parts in the
organization that it’s in their interest. You
incentivize them to be connected to the
larger goals.
How do you create what you call a shared-
consciousness culture?
Tell people how to think about things and
the broader mission. There’s a great line we
used to use in Afghanistan: “If, when you get
on the ground, the order that we gave you is
wrong, execute the order that we should have
given you.” Think about the responsibility
you’re giving your subordinates when you
issue that instruction.
Can you create a flexible group without lots of
debate and argument?
No. In all healthy organizations, argument
happens face-to-face. You debate, argue
and move on. By the way, there’s a pile
of argument in the military. It just takes
different forms. But when the landing-craft
ramp drops and hits the beach, that’s not a
time to argue the plan.
Do you seek diversity or uniformity in teams?
Diversity is better. The challenge is creating
diversity that communicates well. If you
take a SEAL or a Ranger organization, they
look homogenous. But they have a range
of thinking styles. Good commanders
encourage diverse thinking and use that to
test their thinking in various directions.
Switching subjects, how do you keep so fit?
I get up and run for at least an hour and then
stretch. On alternate days, I will get up and
do about an hour of abs and core workouts in
the house, and then I’ll go to the gym.
Then you go to the gym?
For another hour or 4 0 minutes of weights
and pull-ups. I almost never take a day off.
And somehow you eat just one meal a day.
I’ve been doing it for about 4 0 years,
just because I thought I was getting fat.
Everybody told me how stupid I was, how
it’s bad for my body. Now they’re starting
to say it’s okay, even good. In a few years,
they’ll say it’s bad again. I’m 63. If I change
suddenly now, it might kill me.
Combat Consultant
Ex-U.S. general Stanley McChrystal on the importance of flexible
teams, disagreement and eating just one meal a day.
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