Posted on Aug 17, 2015
How do I best prepare for an assignment as a First Sergeant? What is your best advice?
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I am looking for an advice, guidance, or best practices that works. I am incredibly pumped for the opportunity to be a company 1SG, but i want to equip myself as best as I can. Any input will be much appreciated.
Posted 10 y ago
Responses: 53
CSM(P) (Join to see)
In the spirit of brevity, in order:
1. Get your unit in the field and do a hard assessment of its capabilities, limitations, and strengths of individual Soldiers.
2. Compare that assessment with the Company Commander. If you disagree in some areas, you might have caught on to something he didn't.
3. Have a nice long talk with the CO about his goals and objectives.
4. *Spend some time on this one* - formulate a plan to develop your Soldiers, NCOs, and unit to meet the CO's goals and objectives.
5. Get buy in from the CO, and bounce your plan off the CSM.
6. Get buy in from key players within the unit.
7. Lay out expectations and set high standards for performance. Set out to be the best.
8. Do things that build esprit and teamwork. Such as a cookout, unit-wide competition days, etc.
9. Determine ways to measure progress towards goals. Be prepared to make adjustments as needed.
10. Celebrate success. Recognize people who bust their hump for you in formation, with or without an accompanying award. An early release, Pass, or coin carries a lot of weight and gives others something to shoot for.
11. Never settle. If you attain your goals, set new ones. At any given time, I have three short-range, three mid-term, and three long-term goals active. When I attain one, I celebrate alone or with others (depending on what it is), then set new ones.
12. Always remember, support, and take an interest in the success of your Soldiers, even after they leave the unit. Your job is to make your unit AND the Army better. Remember that and your men will remember you.
Best of luck. It has been the toughest assignment I have ever had, but certainly the best.
In the spirit of brevity, in order:
1. Get your unit in the field and do a hard assessment of its capabilities, limitations, and strengths of individual Soldiers.
2. Compare that assessment with the Company Commander. If you disagree in some areas, you might have caught on to something he didn't.
3. Have a nice long talk with the CO about his goals and objectives.
4. *Spend some time on this one* - formulate a plan to develop your Soldiers, NCOs, and unit to meet the CO's goals and objectives.
5. Get buy in from the CO, and bounce your plan off the CSM.
6. Get buy in from key players within the unit.
7. Lay out expectations and set high standards for performance. Set out to be the best.
8. Do things that build esprit and teamwork. Such as a cookout, unit-wide competition days, etc.
9. Determine ways to measure progress towards goals. Be prepared to make adjustments as needed.
10. Celebrate success. Recognize people who bust their hump for you in formation, with or without an accompanying award. An early release, Pass, or coin carries a lot of weight and gives others something to shoot for.
11. Never settle. If you attain your goals, set new ones. At any given time, I have three short-range, three mid-term, and three long-term goals active. When I attain one, I celebrate alone or with others (depending on what it is), then set new ones.
12. Always remember, support, and take an interest in the success of your Soldiers, even after they leave the unit. Your job is to make your unit AND the Army better. Remember that and your men will remember you.
Best of luck. It has been the toughest assignment I have ever had, but certainly the best.
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1SG (Join to see)
Very well put! It was challenging but it was almost, almost as much fun as being a DS.
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MSG (Join to see)
Fantastic advice.... I plan on running with this, with some tweaks for a highly deployed team. The assessment piece will be the greatest challenge.
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1SG (Join to see)
MSG (Join to see) - Have a plan ahead of time looking for what you think is important. I keyed on TLPs, PCC/PCI, organization and communication, and some of our core technical skills.
As much as I was looking for displayed execution, I was looking for key individuals that had influence in the formation. Key NCOs, the "Don Specialist", and people that asked the right kinds of questions proved valuable when moving on to the next phase.
As much as I was looking for displayed execution, I was looking for key individuals that had influence in the formation. Key NCOs, the "Don Specialist", and people that asked the right kinds of questions proved valuable when moving on to the next phase.
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MSG Loren Tomblin
Great advice. I was an acting 1SG of a major command back in my day , HHC, 1 Armored Division. I got to know all the troops in my unit prior to that and always asked the advice of the NCO's. It worked out well for me and gave me the opportunity to counsel the whomever and try to set them straight. I always tried to instill in the trooper that if he did not care for being there just suck it up and weather the rest of the time you have. You have your whole life ahead of you and don't let a bump in the road during your stay lay smoke on you for the rest of your life.
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The first thing you can do is stop looking so angry in your pucture! Second always listen to your PLs. They know everything. Look at random regulations everyday and ask questions about them in your morning meetings to assert your knowledge of all things. Never add cream or sugar to your coffee, if you do, let no one see you! And most importantly, walk through your company/troop/battery area and randomly do push ups in the presence of the lower enlisted soldiers.... This will build their confidence that you are capable of leading them into any fight!. Lol. Congratulations MSG, you made it and the fact that you are asking for advice lets me know you will be an awesome 1SG.
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CSM(P) (Join to see)
SFC Jernerial (Jay) Robinson, all of these are the exact suggestions i was looking for. perfect advice! Thanks for the input!
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MSG (Join to see)
Definitely the "read random regs and pubs"
Here's a good one on Army Leadership Transitions: http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/army/leadership_transition_hdbk.pdf
Also, I have noticed a lot of senior NCOs not aware of emerging Army Doctrine. New FM 6-22 Leader Development was published June 2015... I myself need to catch up on this one.
Here's a good one on Army Leadership Transitions: http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/army/leadership_transition_hdbk.pdf
Also, I have noticed a lot of senior NCOs not aware of emerging Army Doctrine. New FM 6-22 Leader Development was published June 2015... I myself need to catch up on this one.
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MSG Loren Tomblin
Imwas reclassified from an 84B4L to an AIG. Within 5 weeks I could quote almost and reg. The best one was when the unit went to the field and I was the rear contingent 1SG. One morning at "police call" I instructed everyone to get it done. Several SGT's challenged me that if was E-4 and bellow's required to do it. I laid the reg on them and asked anyone to challenge me or face failure to repair. The job was completed. lol
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Loyalty! It's gonna be an easy assignment if you and your commander mesh. It'll be a hard one if you don't. Be loyal until he puts Soldiers in danger or is way off mark. Take time to groom him/her. They look to you for advice, but never give them personal advice. Tell them that you are the NCO and they are the officer. Don't try to do his job and don't let him do yours. Finally, watch wreck it Ralph. There's a scene in the beginning where Zangieb states that he's a bad guy. It's funny. But it relates. It's not easy to be the standard bearer. You will want to put your hands in your pockets, grown long hair, gamble and drink with the boys. But don't do it. There's always someone waiting to take your place. And if you allow your armor to crack, they'll take advantage of you. There is no book on how to be a great leader. Everyone's company is different. Your CSMs will give you advice that worked for them. But times are changing. You must be able to accept change while still maintaining the standard. One more thing. pT is great. But not all great Soldiers are great at PT. Don't let a pt score be the standard for sending troops to school. As you can see, it worked for me. But I don't agree with it. Allow those who are total soldiers schools. You will see that it will pay off in the long run.
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MSG -
I'm making a couple of assumptions, but hear me out.
1. Start STRONG. Understand the PSGs pretty much are going to size you up from Jump Street. Impress them with your strength of character and conviction, and you've won half the battle in the first five minutes.
2. Know your people - starting with the PSGs. You don't need (or want) to know every intimate detail, but things like whether/where they've deployed, what they see as needing fixing - can help form the basis of a common operating picture. They need to know what you expect and how you plan to operate.
3. Let your people get to know you. Again, not on an intimate basis, but enough to know what you expect.
4. Lead from the front. There's nothing I hate more than some lard-ass paper-pusher sitting in a chair, ginning up Power Point slides while I'm breaking my butt. That's the wrong answer. If your Soldiers are out doing PT, you should be out-PT'ing them. Don't worry if you cant outrun them - but pushups and situps are easy, low-hanging fruit. Even at my age (I'll be 60 next month), I hit 60+ pushups and situps all the time. I believe it leaves an impression with my Soldiers and encourages them to dig deep, too.
5. Have FUN. Apart from being a Drill Sergeant, the 1SG billet is the best job the Army's got. Enjoy it, but remember -- Soldiers are the reason you're in business; NOT the other way around.
I'm making a couple of assumptions, but hear me out.
1. Start STRONG. Understand the PSGs pretty much are going to size you up from Jump Street. Impress them with your strength of character and conviction, and you've won half the battle in the first five minutes.
2. Know your people - starting with the PSGs. You don't need (or want) to know every intimate detail, but things like whether/where they've deployed, what they see as needing fixing - can help form the basis of a common operating picture. They need to know what you expect and how you plan to operate.
3. Let your people get to know you. Again, not on an intimate basis, but enough to know what you expect.
4. Lead from the front. There's nothing I hate more than some lard-ass paper-pusher sitting in a chair, ginning up Power Point slides while I'm breaking my butt. That's the wrong answer. If your Soldiers are out doing PT, you should be out-PT'ing them. Don't worry if you cant outrun them - but pushups and situps are easy, low-hanging fruit. Even at my age (I'll be 60 next month), I hit 60+ pushups and situps all the time. I believe it leaves an impression with my Soldiers and encourages them to dig deep, too.
5. Have FUN. Apart from being a Drill Sergeant, the 1SG billet is the best job the Army's got. Enjoy it, but remember -- Soldiers are the reason you're in business; NOT the other way around.
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Well Ken, being as where you came from and where you are going, you are going to need to adjust approach.
I think I saw someone mention it here, but I think the single most important thing for me as a 1SG was having a relationship with my commander. And, I saw the difference when I got a commander that understood command team importance. If you two can't be brutally honest with each other, then we'll, good luck.
You have to understand you ate gonna have three Classes of Soldiers. You are gonna have your Solid well rounded Soldiers, you are gonna have your profile super geeks. They barley pass the APFT, can't spell AWT, but they are SMEs in their MOS, and you are gonna have soldiers that just need to go. They tried the Army and it is clearly not for them.
You to know your SSGs and SFCs are not gonna have the skill sets you think they should for their rank. Have patience, teach them. Lean on your platoon or section sergeants, how ever you have it set up.
Don't lie to your Soldiers or commander.
You are gonna have days when you don't get it right. That is okay. Just remember to fail foward. Get up, dust off, and keep running.
Your soldiers are never gonna see everything you do for them. But they will always remember when you have them doing stupid stuff and wasting their time.
Your soldiers will want to be challenged. Challenge them physically, mentally, and tactically.
And most of all, enjoy the time...
I think I saw someone mention it here, but I think the single most important thing for me as a 1SG was having a relationship with my commander. And, I saw the difference when I got a commander that understood command team importance. If you two can't be brutally honest with each other, then we'll, good luck.
You have to understand you ate gonna have three Classes of Soldiers. You are gonna have your Solid well rounded Soldiers, you are gonna have your profile super geeks. They barley pass the APFT, can't spell AWT, but they are SMEs in their MOS, and you are gonna have soldiers that just need to go. They tried the Army and it is clearly not for them.
You to know your SSGs and SFCs are not gonna have the skill sets you think they should for their rank. Have patience, teach them. Lean on your platoon or section sergeants, how ever you have it set up.
Don't lie to your Soldiers or commander.
You are gonna have days when you don't get it right. That is okay. Just remember to fail foward. Get up, dust off, and keep running.
Your soldiers are never gonna see everything you do for them. But they will always remember when you have them doing stupid stuff and wasting their time.
Your soldiers will want to be challenged. Challenge them physically, mentally, and tactically.
And most of all, enjoy the time...
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Be yourself and don.t change horses in the middle of the stream, meaning do not change things that are working and do not need changing. Focus on the substandard and improve on them. Show your Soldier tough love and not a popularity contest. Counsel in private and not public and allow them to improve do not ride them for mistakes made. And never I say again never point to your Diamond or say I am the 1SG they know who you are and remember to always listen, be a good listener. Soldiers want a leader who really cares for their well being and not just say they do but demonstrated through their action. And finally remember Respect is up and down and earned not given or taken.
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MSG Vaillancourt,
Congratulations on your selection. I too have been selected for a First Sergeant position and am doing all I can to prepare. Having been on a battalion staff for the last 5 years, I started out by rereading "The Three Meter Zone - Common Sense Leadership for NCOs" by J. D. Pendry; a little refresher training. I also ordered "The Diamond" by CSM (Ret) Bobby Owens and "The First Sergeant - Getting Started" by Jessie Sasser (Both available on Amazon.com). They both offer a variety of pre- and post-assignment timelines and ideas for establishing a Leadership Philosophy as well as flow-charts for likely situations that a First Sergeant might encounter. I've already started looking at unit measures of performance to visualize the overall health of the unit and to arrive somewhat prepared to conduct initial counseling within 15-30 days. I'd be interested in comparing notes with you after we've both been on the job a few weeks.
Good Luck Top!
Congratulations on your selection. I too have been selected for a First Sergeant position and am doing all I can to prepare. Having been on a battalion staff for the last 5 years, I started out by rereading "The Three Meter Zone - Common Sense Leadership for NCOs" by J. D. Pendry; a little refresher training. I also ordered "The Diamond" by CSM (Ret) Bobby Owens and "The First Sergeant - Getting Started" by Jessie Sasser (Both available on Amazon.com). They both offer a variety of pre- and post-assignment timelines and ideas for establishing a Leadership Philosophy as well as flow-charts for likely situations that a First Sergeant might encounter. I've already started looking at unit measures of performance to visualize the overall health of the unit and to arrive somewhat prepared to conduct initial counseling within 15-30 days. I'd be interested in comparing notes with you after we've both been on the job a few weeks.
Good Luck Top!
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CSM(P) (Join to see)
MSG Etherton,
I really appreciate your response, especially all the recommended reading you listed. I fully intend to source all of these in my preparation. After I transition into the job, i will definitely touch base with you and compare notes. Congratulations to you as well on your selection as a 1SG.
I really appreciate your response, especially all the recommended reading you listed. I fully intend to source all of these in my preparation. After I transition into the job, i will definitely touch base with you and compare notes. Congratulations to you as well on your selection as a 1SG.
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MSG(P) (Join to see)
MSG,
Could you both share with me as well? I'm going into a First Sergeant position in Nov for US Army NATO BDE and would love to see what you have.
Could you both share with me as well? I'm going into a First Sergeant position in Nov for US Army NATO BDE and would love to see what you have.
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1. You can't fix/amend all things you want in one day.
2. There's a lot of things being done right now that aren't "wrong" just different than you're used to, and if they're working let them ride.
3. Fixing small issues will snowball into fixing big issues.
4. Praise publicly, chastise privately.
5. Have a reason for doing what you're doing, not because "I said so". There's a time and a place for that (like in battle) but by giving your Soldiers some buy in (when feasible) lets them know you're not on a power trip and there's a reason behind the madness, and therefore they'll trust you in those moments you can't give them the explenation.
6. When you don't know something - don't fake the funk! Just be honest and flexible enough to learn.
2. There's a lot of things being done right now that aren't "wrong" just different than you're used to, and if they're working let them ride.
3. Fixing small issues will snowball into fixing big issues.
4. Praise publicly, chastise privately.
5. Have a reason for doing what you're doing, not because "I said so". There's a time and a place for that (like in battle) but by giving your Soldiers some buy in (when feasible) lets them know you're not on a power trip and there's a reason behind the madness, and therefore they'll trust you in those moments you can't give them the explenation.
6. When you don't know something - don't fake the funk! Just be honest and flexible enough to learn.
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1) Find out the company background
2) Know the strength and weaknesses of the Senior NCO's
3) Enforce training and readiness
4) NCO Meetings at least twice daily and make it clear about any complaints and problems bring a solution along with it. I can't stand a person who whines and try to dump things in your lap, teach leaders to be solution base problem solvers which they should've learn in their leadership courses.
I hope this helps just throwing a few ideas to help you along the way, I wish you well in this position.
2) Know the strength and weaknesses of the Senior NCO's
3) Enforce training and readiness
4) NCO Meetings at least twice daily and make it clear about any complaints and problems bring a solution along with it. I can't stand a person who whines and try to dump things in your lap, teach leaders to be solution base problem solvers which they should've learn in their leadership courses.
I hope this helps just throwing a few ideas to help you along the way, I wish you well in this position.
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SPC (Join to see)
Pay attention to your strong specialist, and pay attention to the specialists in the shadows.
As a jr enlisted. The biggest killer I see from 1stSgts is micromanage. Go in trusting your NCOs. Let them do their jobs and then come back brief. Then if they start to fail come in to pick up slack
As a jr enlisted. The biggest killer I see from 1stSgts is micromanage. Go in trusting your NCOs. Let them do their jobs and then come back brief. Then if they start to fail come in to pick up slack
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MSG Floyd Williams
SPC (Join to see) - Pay attention down to the lowest pay grade, we can learn from Privates too.
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Congrats CSM(P) (Join to see) on your upcoming assignment. I will also be putting the Diamond back on very soon for my second stint as a 1SG. There is no better position in the Army than that of 1SG (in my humble opinion). One of the things that I remember from my first stint was taking a few weeks in the beginning to assess. Assess the procedures that are in place, assess your NCOs, your Officers, and your Soldiers. While the handover will provide you the "one over the world," there is nothing better than seeing and evaluating with your own eyes. Second, sit down with your Commander. Understand his/her philosophy and leadership style. Make sure that he/she also understands yours. In my experience, understanding each others leadership styles and "non-negotiables" are important when getting started. Third, be fair and transparent with everything. And last but not least, have fun. Good luck!!!
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