Feedback often gets 'massaged' and politicized as it travels up the chain of command. Effective leaders must create direct, unfiltered channels to hear from customers and front-line employees, ensuring raw data isn't sanitized before it reaches them.

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Dara Khosrowshahi credits Barry Diller with teaching him a vital leadership tactic: go directly to the source. The higher you get, the more information is filtered by the organization. To avoid disastrous errors of judgment, leaders must actively fight this curated information flow and seek raw data from front-line employees.

Elon Musk's management playbook is built on a few core principles: only engineers truly matter, the CEO must violate the chain of command to talk directly to line engineers, and the CEO's job is to parachute in weekly to fix the single biggest bottleneck by working alongside them.

Frontline employees have the most information about customer needs, while leaders have all the authority. To deliver exceptional service, empower the people interacting with customers to make decisions in the moment. This closes the gap and allows the organization to be truly responsive.

To stay connected to frontline operations and customer sentiment, former EasyJet CEO Caroline McCall made it a ritual to help cabin crew collect trash on every flight. This simple, repeated act provided invaluable, unfiltered feedback from both employees and passengers that she couldn't get in the office.

A new CEO’s first few months are best spent gathering unfiltered information directly from employees and customers across the business. Avoid the trap of sitting in an office listening to prepared presentations. Instead, actively listen in the field, then act decisively based on those firsthand insights.

Inspired by Jensen Huang, CEO Nikesh Arora expanded his staff meeting from 8 to 25 people. This bypasses a layer of management filtering, ensuring more leaders hear the strategic "why" directly, reducing confusion and improving alignment down the organization.

Effective leadership in a fast-moving space requires abandoning the traditional org chart. The CEO must engage directly with those closest to the work—engineers writing code and salespeople talking to customers—to access unfiltered "ground truth" and make better decisions, a lesson learned from Elon Musk's hands-on approach.

As an organization scales, some leaders become skilled at managing up while being poor managers to their teams. Executives must conduct regular skip-level meetings with frontline employees to get direct, unfiltered feedback and catch these bad behaviors that would otherwise be hidden.

Middle managers often feel threatened by new ideas from their teams and become innovation blockers. A pragmatic solution shared by one executive is for frontline employees to bypass this layer and seek approval for experiments directly from senior leadership, who are often more receptive.

Bypass C-suite gatekeepers by interviewing lower-level employees who experience the problem daily. Gather their stories and pain points. Then, use this internal "insight" to craft a highly relevant pitch for executives, showing them a problem their own team is facing that they are unaware of.