[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":10},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fpC81ZCuRfM7BMwFaxrYACRhJIKxmzoUwuucvEIZmZ5U":3},{"slug":4,"title":5,"excerpt":6,"publishedAt":7,"updatedAt":8,"html":9},"all-in-how-great-leaders-build-unstoppable-teams-20260227","All In: How Great Leaders Build Unstoppable Teams","A practical guide revealing why employees disengage and how leaders can transform workplace culture to create truly motivated, high-performing teams.","2026-02-27 03:32:03","2026-02-27 06:28:14","\u003Csection class=\"fulltext-section\" data-index=\"-100\">\n  \u003Ch2 class=\"fulltext-title\">Introduction\u003C/h2>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">&quot;People who want to do a job always outperform people who need to do a job. &quot;Mike Michalowicz hired Elliott in desperation.  Elliott was manipulative, disengaged, and eventually stolen from customers.  Mike&#x27;s response? Fire Elliott and blame Elliott. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">Then Mike became an employee under terrible leadership.  And realized: Elliott wasn&#x27;t the problem.  Mike was. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">He had treated people like human resources instead of human beings.  This book emerges from that revelation.\u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">The central question: Why don&#x27;t employees care about your company as much as you do? Not as complaint, but as engineering problem. The answer is the FASO formula: Fit, Ability, Safety, Ownership.  Everyone has A-player potential when properly positioned. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">You must create conditions where people can be themselves, develop their strengths, feel genuinely safe, and experience psychological ownership of outcomes. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">The book systematizes this: How to recruit through workshops instead of interviews.  How to create five-star fit processes. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">How to build three dimensions of safety.  How to engineer ownership through control, knowledge, and investment.  How to align individual dreams with company mission.\u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">The controversial stance: Hire slow, fire slower.  Most performance problems are positioning problems.  Your job as leader isn&#x27;t to judge underperformance but to understand why it&#x27;s happening and fix the system.\u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">This is team-building rebuilt from &quot;How do we get more from people? &quot; to &quot;How do we help people become who they&#x27;re capable of becoming? &quot;. \u003C/p>\n\u003C/section>\n\u003Csection class=\"fulltext-section\" data-index=\"1\">\n  \u003Ch2 class=\"fulltext-title\">The Elliott Disaster\u003C/h2>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">Let me tell you about the biggest hiring mistake I ever made.  I hired Elliott because I was desperate. My business partner and I were drowning, working past midnight every night, constantly telling ourselves we&#x27;d find time next week to properly hire someone. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">That week never came.  Then Elliott walked in with a perfect resume, spoke well in the interview, and I hired him on the spot. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">Here&#x27;s what I did next.  I handed him a toolkit and client addresses, pushed him out the door, and told him to start fixing computers. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">No training.  No orientation.  Nothing.  I justified this by thinking his resume showed experience, so he should be able to figure it out. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">Within a month, Elliott had configured client systems his own way, set passwords only he knew, and made himself the only person who could support certain accounts. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">I couldn&#x27;t fire him without losing clients.  The employee I most wanted gone became the employee I felt forced to pay more. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">Then in December, Elliott left a voicemail at 1 AM saying his grandmother died and he needed a week off for the funeral. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">There was club music thumping in the background.  I approved it anyway because who denies funeral leave. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">A client later spotted him at a party in the Bahamas.  He&#x27;d won contest tickets and fake-killed his grandmother to get paid vacation.\u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">Years later, I took a job at Robert Half.  My boss there did the exact same thing to me. No real onboarding, vague expectations, constant criticism for not reading his mind.  I was confused and disengaged, just trying to survive each day. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">That&#x27;s when it hit me.  Elliott wasn&#x27;t a bad employee who I happened to hire.  I created Elliott&#x27;s behavior. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">The desperation hiring, the non-existent training, the sink-or-swim mentality.  I had treated him exactly like Robert Half treated me. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">And in both cases, the disengagement wasn&#x27;t a character flaw.  It was the predictable result of terrible leadership.\u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">The question isn&#x27;t how to avoid hiring people like Elliott.  It&#x27;s how to stop creating them.\u003C/p>\n\u003C/section>\n\u003Csection class=\"fulltext-section\" data-index=\"100\">\n  \u003Ch2 class=\"fulltext-title\">Review\u003C/h2>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">So here&#x27;s the thing: Elliott wasn&#x27;t broken.  Your next hire isn&#x27;t broken.  The system is.  FASO isn&#x27;t a hiring hack—it&#x27;s admitting that extraordinary performance comes from ordinary people in the right conditions.\u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">Start small: define one Primary Job this week.  Host one workshop next month.  Ask one employee about their actual dreams. \u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">Because the gap between &#x27;the company&#x27; and &#x27;our company&#x27; isn&#x27;t bridged by pizza parties.  It&#x27;s built through the daily choice to see people as humans with potential, not resources to extract value from.\u003C/p>\n  \u003Cp class=\"fulltext-detail\">That shift? It doesn&#x27;t just change your team.  It changes you.\u003C/p>\n\u003C/section>",1772454502321]