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In this episode, we look at Values-Based Integrity and Authenticity through the lens of one of the most quietly remarkable leaders of the twentieth century, Fred Rogers, and what his decades-long consistency between public and private behavior can teach us about the trust that actually holds teams together.
What we cover:
* Why reputation gets built or destroyed in the moments when doing the right thing costs something — not the ordinary ones
* How Fred Rogers walked into a hostile Senate hearing in 1969 and won $20 million in public broadcasting funding by simply being himself (video of hearing below)
* Why his consistency wasn’t softness — and the steel underneath it that people didn’t see coming
* The difference between integrity as compliance and integrity as a genuine decision made repeatedly under pressure
* Why this behavior has a different developmental sequence than every other behavior in The Ready Set model
* How to build a values set specific enough to actually function as a decision filter when stakes are high
Three things to try this week:
* Ask yourself: what would you refuse to compromise regardless of organizational pressure? Write it down specifically — not as abstract values, but as actual decision filters
* After your next significant interaction, ask honestly: was I the same person in that room that I am everywhere else?
* Find one person who will tell you the truth and ask them directly: where do you see gaps between what I say and what I do?
The Ready Set is a behavioral leadership model built on 15+ years of observational data. New content drops weekly on Substack.
Subscribe: thereadyset.substack.com
By Where history's greatest leaders meet the behaviors that matter most.In this episode, we look at Values-Based Integrity and Authenticity through the lens of one of the most quietly remarkable leaders of the twentieth century, Fred Rogers, and what his decades-long consistency between public and private behavior can teach us about the trust that actually holds teams together.
What we cover:
* Why reputation gets built or destroyed in the moments when doing the right thing costs something — not the ordinary ones
* How Fred Rogers walked into a hostile Senate hearing in 1969 and won $20 million in public broadcasting funding by simply being himself (video of hearing below)
* Why his consistency wasn’t softness — and the steel underneath it that people didn’t see coming
* The difference between integrity as compliance and integrity as a genuine decision made repeatedly under pressure
* Why this behavior has a different developmental sequence than every other behavior in The Ready Set model
* How to build a values set specific enough to actually function as a decision filter when stakes are high
Three things to try this week:
* Ask yourself: what would you refuse to compromise regardless of organizational pressure? Write it down specifically — not as abstract values, but as actual decision filters
* After your next significant interaction, ask honestly: was I the same person in that room that I am everywhere else?
* Find one person who will tell you the truth and ask them directly: where do you see gaps between what I say and what I do?
The Ready Set is a behavioral leadership model built on 15+ years of observational data. New content drops weekly on Substack.
Subscribe: thereadyset.substack.com