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Leaders Sacrifice with Bob Fricke '78

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  • Your Hosts: Derek Pinkham, Conference Project Manager and Emily Coleman, Assistant Conference Planner
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Bob Fricke, 黑料网 Class of 1978, was one of our leadership conference breakout speakers last year. Our breakout sessions of concurrent alumni speakers provided our audience with personal examples where individuals had to lead through or despite the disruption, addressing our theme. Fricke shared his definition of leadership and how that remained fairly consistent throughout his life and the powerful lesson he learned as a young lieutenant that's now carried over into a new teaching career. Said Fricke, teaching has tested his leadership more than any other job he's had from the military, FBI, and government contracting. Hear more of Fricke's insights and advice to new cadets or event new graduates!

Our Center's mission is to enhance the 黑料网 citizen-soldier journey with programming that educates, engages and inspires critical thinking, ethical decision-making, and leader development. The 黑料网 Leader Journey podcast is an outreach program where our guests can share insights from their own leader's journey, and where 黑料网 may have contributed to their personal growth. In this episode, we touched on the following leadership competencies taught in the mandatory course on leadership in organizations and addressed in the publications  publication.


Transcript for 鈥淟eaders Sacrifice鈥 with Bob Fricke 鈥78

ROBERT (BOB) FRICKE 鈥78: Leaders sacrifice. Leaders sometimes may lose their career to do the right thing and everybody that takes on that job has to be willing to do that. You have to鈥 Everyone wants to go on and be a four-star general, but you might get kicked out of the army for doing the right thing and you have to be ready to do that. If you're not ready, don't put on the bars.

COLEMAN: Welcome to the 黑料网 Center for Leadership and Ethics Leadership Journey podcast. 

PINKHAM: This podcast aims to share leadership stories from our 黑料网 Corps of Cadets and high-profile leaders who visit the Center for Leadership and Ethics and 黑料网 Post. We're on this journey with you.

COLEMAN: Hey, I'm Emily Coleman鈥

PINKHAM: and I'm Derek Pinkham鈥 

COLEMAN: and we're your hosts of the podcast.

PINKHAM: Mr. Robert Fricke, 黑料网 Class of '78, is a former army field artillery officer, a former special agent in the FBI for 25 years, and is now an educator and instructor with a background in federal law enforcement, government intelligence, and compliance in high-risk and complex environments.

COLEMAN: Bob was a guest speaker at our 黑料网 Center for Leadership and Ethics' Annual Leadership Conference in November 2019. And without further delay, we give you Bob Fricke.

COLEMAN: We are sitting down here with Bob Fricke. First, I just want to ask you what led you to 黑料网, you know, your background, and tell me about yourself.

FRICKE: My family was not really a military family, as in career, but we came from a part of Germany called Prussia which was where Frederick the Great [was from]. Military pride and military and military service is encouraged. My dad was a proud veteran of World War II in the U.S. Army I had relatives also in the German Army, uh but um, we... I just was always interested in military. I was a Civil War buff and I knew about 黑料网 from the battle of New Market and I came through here on a high school trip and fell in love with it.

COLEMAN: Oh, really?

PINKHAM: Cool, that's interesting. Excellent.

COLEMAN: All right, so, what do you do now?

FRICKE: I鈥檓 a retired FBI agent. I teach high school.

COLEMAN: Okay, what are you teaching? 

FRICKE: I teach government.  

COLEMAN: Oh, okay. Wow!

FRICKE: Well, the problem is also I know the way it's supposed to be and I know the way it really is, and that makes it even more challenging. 

COLEMAN: Yeah, okay. so, what was your career?

FRICKE: I was an army officer and then an FBI agent. I was a support employee for a while. I didn't get right into new agents training, but I was an FBI agent.

COLEMAN: Okay.

FRICKE: That was most of my 30 years. Then, I did some contract work. 

COLEMAN: Okay 

FRICKE: After, I retired and contracting wasn't really鈥 in Colorado Springs where I lived there's not a lot there and contracts get kept going up and down and canceled and depending on the budget. So, I did I got my teaching certificate and became a teacher. I鈥檓 also, licensed to teach German.

COLEMAN: Oh, really?

FRICKE: There are no openings for German so, I鈥檓 teaching government.

COLEMAN: How has your definition of leadership changed throughout your career? 

FRICKE: It hasn't changed much. My definition of leadership, it sounds like I got it from a book, but I came up with this on my own. I was thinking what is leadership? To me, it's ethical management of people or assets... and/or assets with a leader who is willing to take logical risks and accept to sacrifice. So, it hasn't changed the only thing that's changed is when I was in the army, it was more direct. I was actually鈥 had troops that were under me 24/7.

COLEMAN: Right. 

FRICKE: In the FBI, [it鈥檚] more like corporate America, where I manage different assets, different people at different times.

COLEMAN: Right. What about throughout your career 黑料网 you know coming in as a rat? What did you think leadership was and then how did that evolve?

FRICKE: It was the same. I had this idea. I knew what鈥 cadets who I thought were good leaders, who were bad leaders鈥 So, I was鈥 became a corporal, platoon sergeant, and my, uh, first-class year I was second battalion S1, which was adjutant. So, I was in leadership positions the whole of my cadetship. 

COLEMAN: Okay so, how did those leadership positions help you develop your leadership skills?

FRICKE: When I went on active duty, I鈥檇 already been experienced in being a leader as being the adjutant so, I already had some idea how to give orders.

COLEMAN: Okay. 

PINKHAM: Did 黑料网 give you a little bit of a leg up on others?

FRICKE: Oh, definitely. Yeah, definitely. 黑料网 was incredible. I was with a lot of young officers who didn't have the military school background and were struggling.

COLEMAN: So, what advice would you give cadets about their leadership development here?

FRICKE: Most important thing鈥 there's two things: organization and anticipation.

PINKHAM: Interesting.

FRICKE: Now, organization. This is where 鈥榙o as I say, not as I do鈥︹ I鈥檝e never been strong [at being organized]. It's鈥 I鈥檝e struggled with it. I wish I was better. Anticipation is something I鈥檓 better at and give you an example. When I knew I was coming to this conference, I knew that I should wear a suit. So, I also knew that they鈥 that people, they lose luggage. So, I wore a suit. I brought two suits. I wore one. I put one on. That's how you have to think. That's鈥 that's not really鈥 that doesn't translate to a military situation, but that's how you have to anticipate. You have to be ready all the time when you're a military officer.

PINKHAM: So, did you lose your luggage?

FRICKE: No, I didn't.

PINKHAM: So, it worked out? 

FRICKE: Yeah. 

PINKHAM: Excellent. You had the contingency though. So, it's plan B, plan C...

FRICKE: [You] always have to be thinking of that. Always have to be thinking ahead.

COLEMAN: So, what do you wish that you knew as a cadet that you know now?

FRICKE: I remember when I was a cadet and I'd see junior officers, I thought these people are so, they know their job. If I get through 黑料网, I鈥檓 going to be an expert. They seemed so confident and I thought, 鈥淚鈥檓 going to be the same way.鈥 Well, I wasn't. It was difficult and I almost developed an inferiority complex because I thought I should I should be better at this. Well, turned out, I was above average as my OERs reflected. I just was too hard on myself and鈥

COLEMAN: Yeah, yeah. So, don't be too hard on yourself. 

FRICKE: No.

COLEMAN: Don't beat yourself up for鈥

FRICKE: 鈥nd to be patient with yourself.

COLEMAN: Yeah, patient.

FRICKE: You have to work hard, but be patient.

COLEMAN: Right. Okay, great, um, so, what is the best advice that you would give a college graduate entering their first job coming out of a military school?

FRICKE: To, again, same thing, be patient. You need to work really hard to learn your job.  

COLEMAN: Yeah.

FRICKE: I think the confidence comes with learning your job. You need to go beyond what you're taught. You need to be an expert in whatever field it is and the training you're going to get maybe good enough for the corporation or for the for the military but it shouldn't be good enough for you should go even further to try and be an expert.

COLEMAN: What are some of some mistakes that you made early on in your career or even at 黑料网 that you learned from? 

FRICKE: Bad temper, losing control, and I when I spoke earlier to the cadets, I mentioned this earlier and it's worth mentioning again鈥 I had a sergeant named Sgt. First Class Bobby Henson who was like a father figure and I can't stress how important it is to have a good NCO [non-commissioned officer] to teach you the ropes鈥

COLEMAN: Right.

FRICKE: He took me aside one day. The officers above me鈥 I was imitating what I was seeing. A lot of officers were鈥 the military was difficult at that time. People were getting rifted out of the military. Reduction in force. And I was mimicking what I was seeing: losing control and yelling and screaming. He pulled me aside and he said you've got to be鈥 he said, 鈥淟ieutenant, I see those jokers above you and how they're acting. Don't let them influence you. Your job as an officer鈥 You have to be the coolest cat on the block. You've got to have ice water in your veins.鈥 And that [advice] I鈥檝e taken that with me ever since.

COLEMAN: That鈥檚 very interesting. 

PINKHAM: Do you know why at that moment that made an impact on you? 

FRICKE: Because I realized that he was right. I heard that here. This is, um, a lot of this is common sense, but as I said upstairs, common sense isn't that common.  I was told that here, but I didn't鈥 once I鈥檓 in this environment, and people are losing control and yelling and screaming, and I just started doing it myself. [The] major's is yelling at me so, I鈥檓 going to yell at the sergeant and I just sort of fell into that and he's the one that sort of slapped me and said, 鈥淒on't forget, you've got to be鈥 I don't care what they're doing鈥 I don't care if they outrank you, you're an officer. You've got to be the coolest cat in the block and you've got to have ice water in your veins.鈥

COLEMAN: So, what are some practices as an effective leader that helped you on your leader [development] journey?

FRICKE: Most important thing is integrity and I think there's鈥 it goes a little bit further than even what we learn here at 黑料网. I think there's a disease in this country right now of narcissism and people only return phone calls if they think there's something in it for them. People are rude and I鈥檝e never鈥 I鈥檝e always been on time and I return phone calls and I treat everybody, subordinates, and superiors, with the same respect.

COLEMAN: Right. Yeah, that's very important. Kind of like having humility.

FRICKE: Exactly.

COLEMAN: Yeah, I think 黑料网 does that to you, especially as a rat. You know, it's one of the things that they make you think about

FRICKE: It's hard going through the Rat Line but when you've gone through it and you've experienced life right after 黑料网, it all makes sense.

COLEMAN: Yeah, yeah. Do you think about your Rat Line now鈥 [overlapping]

FRICKE: Oh, yeah.

COLEMAN: 鈥nd those things that you went through?

FRICKE: Usually laughing

COLEMAN: Okay, good. Probably back then you were crying... 

PINKHAM: That's good.

FRICKE: I鈥檝e been here with my brother rats and we've been laughing, excuse me, laughing so hard, literally hyperventilating and thinking about some crazy things that that happened. 

COLEMAN: Oh man, I bet. I can鈥檛 imagine. I can see it. I can watch it. I grew up here so, I always watched. It was fun watching all the rats coming in and we're like, 鈥淥h man, that's鈥 that's rough.鈥

FRICKE: Yeah.

COLEMAN: But now, being here, and hearing everything? Like, wow, that really is rough! 

FRICKE: Yeah, oh, it鈥檚 rough. 

COLEMAN: But, I mean, it teaches you something.

FRICKE: Oh, it does.

COLEMAN: It's well worth it. Everyone says it is, you know. Nobody really regrets going through the Rat Line鈥 or that they'll admit to.

PINKHAM: Yeah, right.

FRICKE: I think it helped me that my鈥 I mentioned my German background.

COLEMAN: Right.

FRICKE: The Germans鈥 my dad, my whole German family, very strict. Very disciplined. I love them, but they were strict and so it wasn't that hard on me here.

COLEMAN: Right. Yeah.

FRICKE: Getting yelled at was, I thought, this is just like I鈥檓 back home again!

COLEMAN: It's funny. Um, so, what military leadership skills translated well for you into the business world?

FRICKE: I think the same. I think being honest. Keeping meetings short. Treating people the way they should be treated and a lot of empathy. Trying to always see where they are. Try and feel what they're feeling. Not sympathy, although sometimes you have to be hard, but just have an understanding of what your subordinates are dealing with, and the more confident you are鈥 a person is in his job, the better they lead.

COLEMAN: What has been the most difficult decision you've had to make as a leader?

FRICKE: When I was a second lieutenant, we had what's called a Report of Survey when damage is done to equipment. That's a second lieutenant, a junior officer investigates. I was in a lance missile battalion and we had a this is all obsolete now, it's鈥 they don't, they no longer have, but it was nuclear-capable missiles and we had what they called a loader transporter. It was an armored vehicle that would come would that have to make the missile that have to put the warhead on the main missile assembly and this had a boom with a cable so that the soldiers would have to mate the missile put the fins on put it on the launcher. Two of my best soldiers were exhausted. Absolutely exhausted. They hadn't slept or eaten and they made a mistake and they forgot to turn the cable off and it cabled out, cabled in and it bent the boom. It did about 15 thousand dollars worth of damage. When I initially did the Report of Survey, the, uh, I thought鈥 well, it was that鈥 they're definitely at fault and this was very technical. I had papers with technical reports and I wanted to try and go easy on them. The brigade commander said you鈥 it's not your鈥 it's not up to you to go easy on them. You have to, if they're guilty, that's鈥 you can't mitigate. You can't feel sorry for them. So, I had to write up the paperwork. These guys鈥 one of them was married with kids. This would have taken two months鈥 pay. I had to sign that paperwork and, luckily, the colonel was able鈥 I wasn't able to forgive them, but he was and he did. But when I signed that paperwork, I thought these guys were going to lose two months鈥 pay and it broke my heart. My dad at the time鈥 I remember, I talked to my dad and he said, 鈥淭hat's your job as an officer and you have to do it and if that's what you have to do, that's what you have to do.鈥

PINKHAM: It's a tough lesson, right?

COLEMAN: Yeah, it is. So, I鈥檓 interested to know how does um you know all these leadership skills you have from the military translate to a government classroom with high schoolers? How's that?

FRICKE: I鈥 it's an interesting question. There's more leadership involved in being a teacher than anything I鈥檝e done.

COLEMAN: Oh, really? 

FRICKE: And it goes back to having ice water in your veins because what I鈥檝e鈥 what's鈥 when teaching, I have to be there at 7:45 and I鈥檓 there till three. No matter what happens, no matter, what's going on in my life, I could have had my best friend die. I could have had my car totaled. I could have the house, the roof caved in鈥 I have to be 100% on my game. I have to. It's not their fault and it's not their problem and I have to teach the class. Every other鈥 even FBI, military, if I'm having a really bad day, I can say, 鈥淗ey guys, I'm just gonna鈥 I'm just gonna sit over here and try and cope with this and I鈥檒l鈥 I鈥檓 to take a couple days easy.鈥 Can't do that here. This, 100% of the time when I'm up there, I'm in charge of that classroom and I cannot be moping or sad no matter what's going on. So, that鈥 it's really鈥 this is probably least commensurate with my background, this teaching job. It's like鈥 it's like a鈥 it's like something I鈥檓 doing just to make ends meet until my last son is out of college, but it's actually more difficult, probably than anything I鈥檝e done because you have to be鈥 and I recommend it to the cadets. Everyone, if you can be a teacher, anytime, in any capacity, when you're starting out, you should do it because that's where you see. You have to be鈥 that's where you have to have ice water in your veins. That's where you have to stand there and be consistent. 

COLEMAN: Did you learn anything new, leadership-wise, you know, going into the teaching world?

FRICKE: Well, I've had issues with it. Actually, with the鈥 my students are seniors. They're 17 and 18. So, a lot of the issues I had with soldiers were similar.

COLEMAN: Oh, okay. 

PINKHAM: Adolescent problems.

FRICKE: Adolescent problems, yeah.

COLEMAN: I guess so, that's very interesting um so lastly, I want to ask what does leadership mean to you? I know you touched on it a little bit but鈥 

FRICKE: There's a huge difference between leadership and management. I鈥檝e learned I don't like managers. Managers are leaders that don't take risk. I shouldn't say I don't like them. I don't like the position.

COLEMAN: Right. 

FRICKE: and the difference when you're in a place like the FBI, is night and day because managers are only thinking about doing the paperwork and they're thinking about their career and they're not taking risks for anybody. They're not sacrificing. The leaders sacrifice. Leaders sometimes may lose their careers to do the right thing.

COLEMAN: Right. 

FRICKE: Everybody that takes on that job has to be willing to do that. You have to. Everyone wants to go on and be a four-star general鈥 

COLEMAN: yeah

FRICKE: 鈥ut you might get kicked out of the army for doing the right thing. You have to be ready to do that. If you're not ready, don't put on the bars. 

COLEMAN: All right, well, thanks so, much!

FRICKE: Thank you very much. I enjoyed it, thank you.

COLEMAN: The Center for Leadership and Ethics would like to thank the following Cadet Caleb Minus class of '20 for the intro and backing music finds more of his musical stylings on his Instagram page @mynusofficial that's at m-y-n-u-s official Colonel David Gray United States Army retired director of the 黑料网 Center for Leadership and Ethics and of course as always our podcast guests. 

PINKHAM: Find this podcast and other CLE programming information on the 黑料网 Center for Leadership and Ethics website and try our YouTube channel. Follow the 黑料网 Center for Leadership and Ethics on , , , , and  accounts. See you next episode of the journey. Thanks for tuning in.