Posted on Nov 13, 2017
Do you believe in giving a soldier the option of their corrective action (situation dependent), counseling vs. corrective training?
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Posted 7 y ago
Responses: 12
Good question, however, the reality of it is that you always, at a minimum, need to document the ''screw up.'' Always, always, always, counsel the soldier, then take it from there. It's a lot of paperwork, but you are covering yourself. All depends on what you as the supervisor believes deserves a counseling. As many before me, I always give a verbal on the first violation (of course depends on the severity of the violation), a counseling on the second and most likely a corrective action, however on the third there will be some major ''mentoring'' and corrective action. As NCO's and Officers, you need to understand that minor offenses (sleeping in, etc) do and will happen. We are human beings and in no way, perfect. It all depends on the situation. If a soldier misses muster right before a deployment or field problem, then their butt is in for a kicking. Catch my drift?
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SFC (Join to see)
SGT(P) (Join to see) - You're welcome, brother. Most importantly, and I can not stress this enough is to try your very best to not be a micro-manager to your soldiers UNLESS they need to be micromanaged. Go in there trusting them from the start, not having them earn your trust. They will respect you way more for that. Since you are promotable, obviously you have proven your worth and shown that you are ready to lead. But remember this, you are training your replacement(s). Don't focus on being the expert anymore, focus on creating experts. Teach them every single thing you know. And lastly, work hard, but be nice to people. It's that simple.
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My $.02- You always counsel on paper 1st. Because it is a protection for all involved. Part of the corrective action should be that within a certain time period if they stay straight- that counseling goes to file 13. Corrective training should match the crime- inspections on weekends, layouts, field training- all done on what would have been their time, not unit time.
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Oh,, and remember. You are ''setting the tone'' for your section, team, etc. If you are chill and uncaring about certain things, no matter how dumb they may seem, then don't expect your soldiers to be that perfect example of a soldier. Try to see yourself in their boots.
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