Posted on Apr 29, 2015
SGM Senior Adviser, National Communications
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Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS
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I (generally) don't over-think problems. You wouldn't know it based on these forums, but...

If I see "a truck stuck in the mud", I don't worry about how it got there, why it's there, who put it there. I look for the simplest way to get it out. Sure that may cause additional problems, but those will often be easier to deal with than "the truck in the mud."

A lot of people get wrapped around secondary problems that they never get to fixing the primary issue.
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CPT Bob Moore
CPT Bob Moore
>1 y
That is a great skill to have. Fixing the main issue generally takes care of the secondary problems or the symptoms that many people are overly concerned with.
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SGM Erik Marquez
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Edited >1 y ago
My most intangible skill?.... ability to look at an issue, a problem and fix it... sometimes in a common manner, sometimes out of the box.. never afraid to change the conditions to achieve the endstate, or at least offer it up to the commander...if he so chooses, off we go. 

"What the hell is marquez doing??" was a common statement
Followed later with "How the hell did he get that done"
Often followed with.. "Who did he piss off now?"
I was commonly heard telling my commanders or senior NCO's... "be careful what you ask me to get done, you just might get it"
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CPT Bob Moore
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Edited >1 y ago
Time to toot my own horn a little...toot toot!

I work for a school district in Kentucky as the CIO\Director of Technology. I had the superintendent give me a compliment the other day as we discussed several things. I think it fits the topic quite well.

He said I had the ability to discuss things at the level of the person I am talking with and not speak down to them. While this isn't an earth shaking skill, it is unusual in the technology world. There are many brilliant people in IT that can't translate what their plans are from technical speak to what a school board member or other decision maker can understand.

He also said I have the ability to focus on the important parts of the conversation depending on who I am speaking with. In the corporate or government "executive" world, this is extremely important. You need to give the decision makers the information they need without wasting their time. However, you don't want to give them too little information so that they feel like you are hiding something.

Edit: Those are both things I developed in the military doing briefings on top of briefings for people at all levels from team leaders all the way up to generals.
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SGM Senior Adviser, National Communications
SGM (Join to see)
>1 y
Amen to that, CPT Moore. Good stuff.
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