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AIG CEO Peter Zaffino's model for developing talent is putting them on a "tightrope" with a high-stakes project. The leader's critical role is to consciously decide the height of the "safety net"—how much failure is acceptable. This allows employees to experience real pressure and grow while the leader manages the potential downside.

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Nike's leadership development wasn't a structured program. Instead, they pushed promising talent like future CEO Mark Parker by assigning them to solve urgent business crises. This "on the job training by crisis" rapidly developed their general management skills, resilience, and adaptability.

Instead of progressive overload, Palantir puts promising talent on high-stakes projects with a near-fatal dose of responsibility. This forces the maximum rate of learning, which is coincident with the maximum ability to tolerate pain, creating superheroes instead of plodding careerists.

Instead of seeking a fully-formed, expensive owner-level thinker, a more practical strategy is to hire a top-tier project-level thinker showing potential. Granting them autonomy and responsibility can cultivate them into the owner you need.

A leader's critical skill is acting as the team's regulator. They must push for higher standards and remind people that success isn't permanent. Simultaneously, they must know when to apply a softer touch and offer support, all without lowering the high-performance bar.

Managers often spend disproportionate energy on low-performing employees. The highest-leverage activity is to actively invest in your top performers. Don't just leave them alone because they're doing well; run experiments by giving them bigger, more visible projects to unlock their full potential and create future leaders.

Instead of avoiding risk, teams build trust by creating a 'safe danger' zone for manageable risks, like sharing a half-baked idea. This process of successfully navigating small vulnerabilities rewires fear into trust and encourages creative thinking, proving that safety and danger are more like 'dance partners' than opposites.

To accelerate growth for talented individuals, give them responsibility where their failure rate is between one-third and two-thirds. Most corporate roles are over-scaffolded with a near-zero chance of failure, which stifles learning. High potential for failure is a feature, not a bug.

Top performers intentionally push themselves to their "danger line"—the messy edge of their capabilities where breakthroughs and failures are equally possible. This uncomfortable state of risk is required to unlock potential, yet most people actively avoid it in their personal and professional lives.

Andrew Robertson advises that a great boss is someone who gives you a project when you're "probably not quite ready for it" and will cover for you if you fail. Actively seeking out leaders with this trait is a key strategy for rapid career growth.

To foster an innovative team that takes big swings, leaders must create a culture of psychological safety. Team members must know they won't be fired for a failed experiment. Instead, failures should be treated as learning opportunities, encouraging them to be edgier and push boundaries.