Twin Brothers Define What Army Leadership Means by U.S. Army Danae Johnson, Training and Doctrine Command
November 27, 2021
For identical twin brothers, Sgt. Maj.
Thomas (TJ) Baird, G-3/5/7, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command,
and Lt. Col. Dereck Baird, fire support trainer, National Training
Center, leadership takes desire and nobility to inspire.
Sgt. Maj. Thomas
(TJ) Baird, G-3/5/7, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, and Lt. Col. Derek Baird, fire support trainer, National Training Center, sat down for an interview on Army leadership on October 4, 2021. (U.S. Army photo by Danae Johnson, Training and Doctrine Command)
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For the Bairds, two different paths were
chosen within the Army; one enlisted, and one an officer. However,
one thing is the same; to be purposeful and driven leaders. The
brothers learned early in life what discipline and strong
self-awareness looks like in leading. For them, successful leaders
identify and foster a Soldier’s purpose.
“You’d be surprised
how many young Soldiers don’t know what that looks like for them,”
Derek said. “When we look at purposeful leadership we look at
setting a goal to have a purpose, and helping others to find what
that looks like in a positive manner.”
TJ
was the first to join the Army as an enlisted Soldier. For him,
purpose is inspiring others to want to achieve personal and
organizational goals through hard work and determination that will
endure through trying times.
“Sometimes you’re out in the
rain, the mud, or somewhere you don’t want to be at night, but
you’re still serving others. You’re training them to get them ready
for what we need them to do,” TJ said. “More specifically, for the
Army, it is literally to fight and win our nation’s wars. It is to
get down in the mud and do our nation’s bidding. It is in the mud
where inspirational leaders show their true colors by ensuring their
team is prepared to meet whatever challenge they face.”
Achieving the Army’s efforts means leaders ask often and early what
is it they want for their people to be, TJ explained. A leader’s
purpose should be to make people better than them now and into the
future.
For Derek, who joined the Army three years after his
brother, purposeful leaders understand how important engaged teams
and personal interactions are.
“If you want to lead, lead by
knowing who your folks are, so they know who you are, so we
understand each other as we start building these teams of
greatness,” he said. “It has to be done often and early. It can’t
be, ‘I want to get to know you during the emergency or crisis
itself.”
Those who value knowing their teams interpersonally
can recognize the talent of future leaders within their
organization. Especially within young Soldiers, leaders must connect
with their peers and subordinates early on to manage talent, the
Bairds explained.
“Who is going to take over next? Our goal
as a leader is to find someone who is going to replace you,” TJ
said. “If you are a leader who is afraid to recruit and hire
somebody who’s better than you and smarter than you, then you’re not
really managing talent.”
Inspiring the Army’s next generation
of leaders also requires effective energy management the Bairds
believe. When positive energy exists, organizations tend to do
better and uplift those around them.
“If you want to inspire
somebody be energetic, but be energetic effectively. When I talk
about energy, be positive, that positive energy goes a long way. My
No.1 tenant in life, smile and the world smiles with you,” TJ said.
The Bairds also believe that leaders should balance energies
within their organization when circumstances ask for restructuring,
by placing individuals in a different place that better suits their
needs. Often, those individuals perform better by simply being in a
new environment that provides opportunity for personal and
professional growth, Derek described.
One of the most
critical capabilities leaders can implement, according to the Bairds,
is perspective, both sharing theirs and understanding others.
Leaders can learn the perspectives of their Soldiers through
empathetic, bottom-up discussions.
“Empathy is walking a mile
in someone’s shoes to figure out their perspective in life and what
their filters are,” TJ said. “What is the filter that we’re looking
through in life? Whether it’s someone who grew up in the Deep South,
the Bronx, California or the Midwest on a farm, what is their
perspective in life and how do they see that in an organization?”
The brothers emphasized that leaders should identify how
they want to see the organization operate. When clear and supportive
command relationships are established, Soldiers become a part of
well understood cohesive teams. Those teams then are measured by
performance and effectiveness, creating an successful feedback loop
that excels an organization.
TJ believes that when good
units, command structures, and NCO support channels are supported
well from top to bottom, and bottom to top, organizations excel.
“If we get folks that are really supportive of each other,
you’ll see those organizations do fairly well,” Derek said.
According to the Bairds, well-supported command structures are also
determined by how leaders are built. Whether leaders are born or can
be taught is one of the few topics the Bairds have different
perspective about.
“You can teach someone to lead,” TJ said.
“We do that every day in the Army, from the time we enter the Army
to the time we sunset out of the Army, and we do a good job at
producing leaders. However, I believe that great leaders separate
themselves from the pack due to their innate talent to stand up and
lead others to achieve their goals.”
Derek shares a different
view. He believes good leaders are taught through experience and
crucible leadership events. Their work ethic drives them to want to
be a great leader, while learning from those before them.
For
the two brothers, no matter their varying leadership perspectives,
their common purpose as leaders is to encourage others to be better
each day. They accomplish this by inspiring their teams, being
disciplined (thought, word, and deed), and having the energy to lead
through times of ease and challenge.
“It really comes down to
purpose. What is your purpose in life to; do x, y and z? Identifying
that will help drive what you want to accomplish,” the Bairds said.
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