Field Notes/Article

The Map on the Wall - From the Green Notebook

A Navy squadron commander uses a pin map to build team culture around diversity, trust, and shared mission.

Overview

A commanding officer describes how he uses a map of the United States — pinned with each team member's hometown — as a practical tool during check-in conversations with new personnel. The piece argues that geographic and cultural diversity within an organization is a structural advantage, not a liability. It connects that argument to a leadership practice built on extending trust and respect from day one, before either is formally earned.

Key takeaways

The pin map makes diversity visible and concrete, turning an abstract value into a daily leadership conversation tool.

Shared purpose is the organizing principle that converts individual differences into organizational strength.

Extending trust and respect on day one — before it is earned — increases the likelihood it will be reciprocated.

Diverse teams approach difficult problems differently, which is a competitive advantage, not a cultural compromise.

A leader's sphere of influence is the organization itself; culture inside the unit can be shaped even when the outside world cannot.

Worth quoting

"We come from different cultures, different values, different educations, different family dynamics, different spiritual or faith traditions — but now we're all here, which means we now have a shared purpose, and all those differences…they're features, not flaws."

"Sometimes you just have to start with the presumption of trust and go from there if you hope to have it reciprocated."

"It's simply a matter of getting the most and best out of the team I've got."

Read the full piece on Jack “Farva” Curtis, From The Green Notebook
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