The Informed Airman

Model The Standard


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There’s a lot of noise out there about standards, which ones matter, which ones don’t, and whether leadership really

supports those who enforce them.

Here’s the truth: Every standard matters.

Some may not seem directly tied to launching aircraft, securing networks, or defending the base, but every single one

reinforces the discipline, trust, and professionalism that make the mission possible. Uniform appearance, customs and

courtesies, on-time reports, none of those tasks win wars alone, but they form the foundation of how we fight. If we get

comfortable skipping “the small stuff,” the cracks spread into bigger things that eventually do cost readiness and

credibility.

We are members of the Profession of Arms. That title carries weight. It means we live by standards that may not always

make sense to outsiders, but they exist to preserve something greater than convenience, they preserve trust. When we

signed up, we accepted a covenant with our nation and each other. Our Core Values: Integrity First, Service Before Self,

and Excellence in All We Do, aren’t slogans; they’re the spine of every standard we uphold.

I get it, some standards feel disconnected from the mission at first glance; but that’s where leaders step in. It’s our

responsibility to bridge that gap for all our Airmen, to explain the “why,” to connect the dots between discipline today

and mission success tomorrow. When we do that, standards become less about control and more about commitment. If

we walk past a problem, we don’t just accept it, we rewrite the standard. And that new standard is unacceptable.

Leadership is about being kind, not nice. Nice ignores problems. Kind steps in, corrects with respect, and develops

people in the process.

So, I’m calling on every Airman: Uphold the standard, teach the standard, and support those doing it right. Leaders are

the calm in the storm, the professional presence that reminds your formation, this is what right looks like.

Tactical Takeaway:

Every standard exists for a reason. Connect the “why,” enforce with dignity, and model what it means to be a

professional Airman every day.

Focus This Week:

  • ​ Re-examine one standard your team overlooks, connect it to core values and mission impact.
  • ​ Set up some time (Airman’s time) to coach on how to provide feedback (good ref: the SBI).
  • ​ Mentor one Airman on why discipline in small things matters.
  • ​ Publicly reinforce someone modeling high standards.
  • ​ Be the calm in the storm: the example others follow when the easy choice would be to look away.

Don’t Wait, LEAD Your Team Through the Storm!

More Resources Here:

https://linktr.ee/theinformedairman


https://drive.google.com/file/d/1I2faP_RRPd7Yh3MwUsWCWVZbdfgHkBvk/view?usp=drivesdk

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The Informed AirmanBy Caleb

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