Keys to Longevity: Resolution, Resources, and Resiliency

Tara Parker-Pope did a piece in The New York Times last month on "Living to 100 and Beyond".  Lovely.  Inspiring.  If you listen to the half dozen or so centerians she interviewed, you'll likely come away with three and half keys: Resolution, Resources, and Resiliency.

Regarding the half: last year I heard a Valentines' Day interview with a couple celebrating their 75th anniversary.  When asked what the secret was, the husband said "You have to live a really really long time".  Hazel Miller in Parker-Pope's piece says, "“There’s no secret about it. You just don’t die…"

Those ideas are also key to "Surviving to 18 months and beyond in a new job".

Resolution

Most things come down to what you want and what you're willing to give up to get it.  If you really really want longevity in your new job, invest in the basics.  Get a head start.  Manage communication.  Inspire and enable others.  Most of the time, focusing on the basics and implementing them with ongoing, consistent discipline will get you most of the way there.  Resolve to succeed.

Resources

Know that you can't do this on your own.  We are social beings.  Just as Parker-Pope's centerians had others helping them, you will need the help of others if you want longevity in your new job.  Your most important swim buddy is your boss.  Beyond him or her, enrole peers and even subordinates as coaches.  Show some vulnerability to build your strengths.  Give up control to gain influence over the most important resources.

Resiliency

Interesting article in the most recent Harvard Business Review on the difference between leadership in the Navy and Air Force vs. the Army and Marines.  Because of the equipment the Navy and Air Force uses (boats and planes), small mistakes have big consequences.  Their leaders enforce the hierarchy, process and discipline required to do things right the first time.  Because of the ever-changing nature of the situations they face on the ground, Army and Marine leaders enforce flexibility.  They get 70% of things 70% right and get going, adjusting along the way.  They know they will make mistakes.  They build in resiliency so people can adjust to the hits.  Be ready to adjust to your every-changing situation as you onboard.

Read More Articles

Argentina flag with the body shape of the country in soccer field.
Strategic Adaptation in Leadership: Lessons from the Argentina–England World Cup Semi-Final

The Argentina–England World Cup semi-final was not just a game; it was a live case study in how leaders deploy strategy and tactics—and what happens when they fail to adjust…

Read Article
Confident executive standing on a modern stage, delivering a presentation
Act Like You’re Already Successful to Jump-Start Success

Success doesn’t start when you “make it.” It starts when you behave like you already have. The best leaders - whether they are taking on a new CEO role, launching…

Read Article
Picture of the Allies Normandy World War II amphibious assault D‑Day
Why Leaders Get the Followers and Decisions They Deserve

Leaders don’t simply get the followers they deserve; they get the decisions they design for. When leaders understand the different ways people create value - artistically, scientifically, and interpersonally -…

Read Article
Primegenesis Operational Leadership
The Underappreciated Power of Operational Leadership

Operational leadership is the undervalued fulcrum between theory and reality. It is where strategy stops living in slide decks, where culture becomes observable behavior, and where tactics gain the coherence…

Read Article
NBA Champions game
The Stockdale Paradox: Preparing Your Leadership Team for Adversity

Down 29 points in the third quarter of Game 4 of the 2026 NBA Finals, the New York Knicks did something that had never been done in Finals history. With…

Read Article
Building Accountability in High-Performing Teams: From Slogan to Commitment

Turning empowerment from a slogan into a mutual agreement and engagement from an attitude into observable commitment  Almost every leader says they want empowered people. Almost every employee says they…

Read Article