Netflix "Quarterback" & Leadership: Part 1
Bradd Busick
Senior Vice President, Chief Information Officer: I build amazing teams, emphasize the importance of culture and deliver transformational outcomes. ??
Confession, I binge watched (with my son), the first season of “Quarterback” on Netflix , an 8-episode docuseries from National Football League (NFL) films that follows three of the biggest quarterbacks in the game, providing an upfront look at the lives of QBs on the field, and off.
As an avid football fan, I was incredibly impressed by the preparation, energy, and relentless focus each of these players had in support of a single goal. While watching, I couldn’t help but write down parallels between the philosophies, mindset and preparation required for any individual in a leadership role, and how the tone starts at the top. ?While this list of observations is not all inclusive, it is the first time I’ve actually taken notes during a show.?As such, I’ve broken this post up into two parts to hit some of the highlights! ?Ready…set….hike!
They are never done growing and challenging themselves
The athletes’ desire for growth is insatiable. They are never satisfied and are constantly learning, studying, and adapting to the situation at hand.?Whether it’s modifying their individual game to deal with an injury, adjusting to a player/coach dynamic, or even a situation at home, the relentless focus on growth was a through line for all three players who are observed studying, prepping, simulating and trying to look around every corner in support of gaining a competitive advantage.
This challenged me to think about my own continued growth. With 1440 minutes in a day, what am I doing to add more value to my organization, be a better colleague, be a better dad, husband, or friend.?This year, I decided to apply to go back to graduate school for an additional Masters and was fortunate enough to have been accepted at 美国布朗大学 .?While this is going to stretch me intellectually, culturally and impact time with my family, I am confident that the investment will pay dividends and I can’t wait to see what 2024 brings as I meet my new cohort!
The Power of a Winning Culture
Culture is King and a healthy culture elevates productivity and allowed these athletes to thrive.?
“How bad do you want it?... Want it for each other!” – This was a quote that Patrick Mahomes yells in the huddle to his teammates as they were losing to the Eagles during the Superbowl.?I loved this statement….because it wasn’t about him winning, it was about wanting to show out for the team mate in the trench with you.
I watched each of these QBs lead their teams with varying styles of humility, passion and work ethic and was inspired be the idea that while they are clearly three unique individuals, these traits were consistently evident in how they led both their personal and professional lives. Throughout the series, these QBs encourage their teammates publicly and privately in support of getting the best out of one another.?No play was too small, no extra effort went unnoticed and the QB was the first to recognize an exceptional hustle play, a great play call or a selfless block to free up a receiver for a TD.
We all know that winning is contagious, but when was the last time any of us wanted something at work so bad on behalf of a team member that we went above/beyond a job description or ‘working hours’ to defy expectations?
As I posted a few weeks ago, we recently went live with Workday and I watched my colleagues do just this as we wanted to win for each other!?There was no ego, no titles, no tenure…if tickets needed closing, we did it. If the command center needed to be set up, we did it.?Selfless leadership has become so rare that it is anomalous when we actually witness it firsthand and yet, winning together makes you actually want to win even more…not for yourself, but for your team.
Self-Care & a Team of Teams
Aside from the amazing amenities each of these franchises has, all of the athletes had an additional team around them, ranging from personal chefs and strength coaches to mental coaches and ‘body teams’ that focused solely on accelerating healing between games.
Admittedly, the excuse we tell ourselves is that we aren’t NFL athletes, and we can’t ‘afford’ this type of luxury.?However, being intentional about taking PTO, getting good sleep, spending time with friends and/or whatever fills your cup is something that I need to do a better job at in 2023 as you can’t be your best self for your team if you aren’t taking care of yourself.
How are you measuring how you are taking care of yourself? What is your work/rest ratio?
‘The little things’ are the difference between winning and losing
To quote what I ask my son after a match, ‘Did you win or did you learn?”?Yes, in football the score dictates a winner or loser, but learning can/does come from either outcome.
These athletes spend so much time on the little things in practice and outside of ‘work’ that on game day, they make the heroic look pedestrian.???
When was the last time we spent ‘extra’ time to hone our craft??How are we engaging with others inside/outside of our own vertical to learn about what works, what doesn’t and perhaps pick up some habits or traits that we can apply to our own organization?
I think about the incredible network of leaders I’ve been fortunate enough to engage with who push me to be curious.?We share ideas, failures and celebrate wins…even if our organizations would never do business with one another.?These are the ‘little things’ that are the force multipliers, moving individuals, teams and organizations from good to great.
I hope Part 1 of this post was an entertaining way to think about the parallels in our own lives as I believe we all have things we can learn from each other, despite the role, profession or industry!?
Make it an awesome week (and go Seattle Seahawks )!
BEB
Founder + Creative Chair, OBERLAND | AdAge Purpose-Led Agency of 2024 | AdAge Small Agency of the Year | AdAge Agency to Watch | Intersection of Business + Creativity | Educator
1 年A lot of 'behind the scenes' work goes into being a great leader. The parallels you listed, Bradd, are spot-on to what it takes to be an ever-curious leader.
Improving safety and outcomes for moms and babies
1 年Bradd Busick "Did you win or did you learn"? This is something I started doing with my daughters last year after soccer games. A friend and business owner shared this with me and since then it always stuck and has made a big difference in our post-game drives home. Finished Quarterback lastnight - so good! Thanks again for sharing!
Global Marketing Transformation Leader | Driving Revenue, Scaling Brand
1 年Bradd - simply love this post- I am so motivated as a leader after reading this and looking forward to part 2 - I had goosebumps after reading this as I also saw a famous Indian movie “Chak De! India https://g.co/kgs/PjzkKe “last evening with my daughters and was having a similar discussion on importance of team spirit and right attitude and above all leadership- thank you for sharing - I am tagging leaders that I want to share this with Frances Frei Dr. Tina O. Tsedal Neeley Frances Karamouzis John Taschek Tiffani Bova Vala Afshar
CIO at Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
1 年First, looks like I found the next show to watch with my boys, these parallels also mirror the types of lessons we strive to pass on to our children in how they prepare for life. Second, I immediately thought of a couple other parallels that the game of football naturally does well that we as leaders have to be very intentional about creating. 1. The power of a clear goal and clear way to measure what success looks like with that goal. and 2. Clear roles and responsibilities in achieving this goal, so everyone knows the playbook and the role they are expected to play for the team to win. Football has these built into the game, good leaders build this into the culture of their team. Look forward to part 2
?? Find & Solve Problems CEOs Care About //?Practitioner // ?? Trainer // ??Coach // ?Coffee Nerd // ?? Hockey // ???????? Family Guy
1 年I hope they keep running with this model to create new docuseries. Loved Netflix’s Formula One - Drive to Survive series. Looks like I have a new show to watch. Appreciate you sharing the recommendation.