Today, June 6th, 2026 is the 82nd Anniversary of D-Day, the first day of the Allied Forces liberation of Europe during World War II. General Dwight D. Eisenhower is properly credited for planning and leading Operation Overlord, the code name for the opening phase of the operation, which began with the Allied landings at Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944. I've posted a few times in the past to honor the soldiers, sailors, and airmen that participated in the battle that was the "turning point" during the European Theater of World War II (see, in particular, "Ike's Back-up", "...plans are useless, but planning is indispensable", "D-Day", and "Logistics wins wars!").
I've always been very interested in D-Day and the lessons on leadership that studying Operation Overlord can provide, even to those of us who aren't in the military. I highly recommend the historian Stephen Ambrose's two books, D-Day and Band of Brothers (Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg produced a HBO mini-series based upon Ambrose's book called "Band of Brothers" - one of my all-time favorites!). I also highly recommend The Longest Day by Cornelius Ryan. I am looking forward to reading Normandy '44 by James Holland in the very near future (it's currently at my bedside), as well as Leadership, Management, and Command: Rethinking D-Day by Keith Grint (I've posted on Grint's model of Leadership, Management, and Command for Wicked, Tame, and Critical problems in the past). Finally, I am really looking forward to seeing the new D-Day movie "Pressure" starring Brendan Fraser and Andrew Scott.
There's a lot to say about General Eisenhower (the same can be said about President Eisenhower, by the way). No one but a brilliant strategist and tactician with superb organizational and managerial skills could have possibly orchestrated and supervised combat operations that began with an airborne invasion involving over 1,200 paratroopers, followed by a multi-national amphibious assault involving over 5,000 ships and boats and nearly 160,000 soldiers from the United States, Great Britain, Canada, Australia, Poland, France, and other forces from the Allied nations of World War II. Suffice it to say, however, I think there are three key leadership points to be made:
Planning is indispensable, Plans are not
As the former heavyweight boxer Mike Tyson once said, "Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the face." Alternatively, the Prussian war general Helmuth von Moltke (the Elder) said, "No plan survives first contact with the enemy." Adaptability and agility are both key leadership traits here. The writer Cicely Simpson has called adaptability "the secret sauce of leadership". Adaptability is defined in this context as "the capacity to recognize when a situation has changed, relinquish what's no longer working, and orient toward what's actually needed now". Simpson suggests that it is a combination of flexibility and versatility. Agility is defined as the ability to manage and deal with change. The recently released movie "Pressure" tells the story of how Eisenhower and his meteorologist James Stagg had to make last second adjustments to their original battle plans due to changing weather conditions at Normandy. Again, having a plan is absolutely important. But both the leader and the plan should be adaptable and agile enough to adjust due to unforeseen circumstances.
Unity of command is necessary
The French general Napoleon Bonaparte once said, "Nothing is so important in war as an undivided command. There should be only one army conducted by one chief...Better one bad general than two good ones." The D-Day invasions required unprecedented collaboration and cooperation, not only between the different branches of military service, but between different Allied militaries, each having their own leadership hierarchy. Eisenhower was named the "Supreme Allied Commander" for a reason. He had the final say in all of the major decisions, but he was also the one who would be held accountable for those same decisions (he famously wrote, "If any blame or fault attaches to the attempt, it is mine alone" in a letter that he would send if the mission had failed). There was no other way to manage the clash of personalities and differing interests - and there were many - but, everyone knew that Eisenhower was ultimately in charge. That's important for leading during any crisis (see Grint's "Command" during "Critical" problems), but even when not leading in a crisis, it's important to know and understand the "rules of the road" in terms of the team's roles and responsibilities, authority, and accountability. I personally like the "Responsibility Assignment matrix", also known as the RACI matrix, which I feel should be generated anytime a group of individuals gets together to accomplish some task or solve a problem as a group. It always helps to know who is making the decision.
Empower your front-line leaders
"Deference to expertise" is one of the key defining characteristics of a so-called High Reliability Organization (HRO). Paratroopers in the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions landed off-course during the initial hours of D-Day. They didn't wait for orders - instead, they improvised and adapted in order to complete their missions. In contrast, the German soldiers defending Normandy were unable to adjust - they had to wait for orders from the top. Famously, the German Panzer tank divisions couldn't be used without permission from Adolf Hitler himself, who was still in Berlin at the time!
The bottom line is that General Eisenhower was the absolute best leader for the mission. Through a combination of planning, adaptability, agility, trust, and empowerment, the operations on D-Day were successful. Today, we remember General Eisenhower's leadership and take it as a lesson for what we can do as leaders today. Today, we also honor the sacrifices of the soldiers, sailors, and airmen who sacrificed their lives on that day 82 years ago. D-Day marked the beginning of the end - the liberation of Europe from Nazi Germany.