ALIGN — The Origin Story
How a leadership crisis at Boeing led to the creation of a practical engagement system.
Leadership transformation through engagement, trust, and practical systems.

The Crisis
When Trust Breaks Down
In early 2000, Boeing's engineering workforce walked off the job in what became the largest white-collar strike in U.S. history. Beneath the headlines was something far more serious than a labor dispute — a deep fracture in the relationship between people and their organization.
ToxiCulture
Years of eroding trust had created a climate where employees no longer believed leadership was listening.
Collapsing Morale
Engagement plummeted. High performers disengaged. Attrition doubled. Teams fragmented under the weight of unresolved conflict.
Organizational Crisis
Union conflict strained every layer of leadership. Something had to change — and it had to change quickly.
The Human Cost
More Than a Business Problem
When the strike ended, the contract may have been signed — but the damage wasn't undone. Employees returned to work carrying anger, grief, and distrust. Leaders had lost credibility. Teams were fractured. The emotional residue of the conflict touched every conversation, every meeting, every interaction.
What People Felt
  • Unheard and undervalued
  • Disconnected from leadership
  • Emotionally and operationally drained
  • Skeptical that anything would change
What the Organization Faced
  • Damaged manager-employee relationships
  • Persistently low engagement scores
  • Declining team performance and collaboration
  • A leadership culture struggling to rebuild credibility
This was not just an operational failure. It was a human one.
"Engagement happens when people bring their hearts and their minds to work."
What Actually Creates Engagement?
The question at the center of the crisis wasn't about process improvements or policy changes. It was a deeper, more fundamental question: Why do people choose to give their best — or choose not to? The answer pointed to relationships, not resources.
Engagement is not a program. It is the lived experience of four essential connections — all of which begin with leadership.
The Insight
The Problem Was Not Just Process
Leaders had spent years trying to fix systems — workflows, structures, incentives. But the real problem ran deeper. The organization had optimized for output while neglecting the people producing it. The insight that changed everything was both simple and profound:
People Needed to Feel Heard
Not surveyed once a year — but genuinely listened to, regularly, by the person they reported to every day.
Trust Had to Be Rebuilt
Trust is not restored through announcements. It is rebuilt through consistent, repeated acts of transparency and follow-through.
Engagement Cannot Be Demanded
You cannot mandate discretionary effort. Engagement has to be created — through leaders who genuinely invest in their people first.

Core Belief: People support organizations that genuinely support them first.
The Experiment
A Different Leadership Approach
Rather than launch another sweeping initiative, a small team made a counterintuitive choice: start simple. A practical leadership engagement experiment was quietly launched across the engineering organization — built on the belief that small, consistent actions could restore what years of conflict had broken.
1
Simple
Any leader could learn and apply the process within a single day — no certification required.
2
Fast
Designed for real work environments — not long workshops, but brief, meaningful touchpoints built into the regular rhythm of work.
3
Scalable
Built to work across thousands of employees and hundreds of leaders simultaneously.
4
Human-Centered
Relationships first. Data second. The process was designed to make people feel valued before anything else.
This was the beginning of what would become the Q1 / Q2 / Q3 process — the foundation of ALIGN.
Q1
Q1 — How Satisfied Are You?
The first question was deceptively simple: "On a scale of 1–9, how satisfied are you with your work and your team?" Teams answered anonymously. Leaders tracked trends over time. The act of asking — consistently, visibly, and with genuine follow-through — sent a message more powerful than any policy memo: your experience here matters.
How It Worked
  • Anonymous scoring — psychological safety to respond honestly
  • Team trend tracking — patterns emerged quickly
  • Leadership accountability — scores tied to leader behavior
  • Continuous cadence — not annual, but ongoing
1–9
Satisfaction Scale
Simple, consistent, and comparable across every team
100%
Leader Visibility
Every leader saw their team's data — no hiding from the truth

Key Insight: What gets acknowledged — honestly and regularly — can improve. Measurement is an act of respect.
Q2
Q2 — What Matters Most to You?
"What is most important to you at work — and why?"
This single question changed the nature of leadership conversations at Boeing. It shifted the dynamic from manager-to-subordinate to human-to-human. Leaders sat down one-on-one with each team member — not to evaluate, but to understand.
Listen for Meaning
What motivates this person? What gives their work significance? What would make them want to stay?
Build Shared Goals
When leaders understand what matters most, they can align team goals with individual values — creating genuine commitment, not compliance.
Create Real Relationships
Engagement deepens when people feel seen, heard, and valued — not as headcount, but as whole human beings.
Q3
Q3 — What Needs to Improve?
The third question gave employees something rare: real ownership. Teams were asked to identify the barriers, frustrations, and improvement opportunities that affected their work most. Then — and this is the critical part — they were empowered to help solve them.
Identify Barriers
Employees named the real obstacles — not the ones leadership assumed existed, but the ones they actually lived with daily.
Propose Solutions
Ideas came from the people closest to the work. Teams proposed and selected improvements — with leaders supporting rather than controlling the process.
Act and Follow Through
Leaders committed to visible action on team-identified priorities. Follow-through was what rebuilt trust.

Key Message: People engage deeply when they have genuine ownership — not just a voice, but a role in shaping their own environment.
The Results
What Happened Next
Despite the trauma of the strike, the shadow of 9/11, and significant organizational layoffs, the data told a clear and remarkable story: the process worked. Across every key measure, teams that engaged consistently with the Practical Engagement survey outperformed those that did not.
Engagement, job satisfaction, management effectiveness, skills utilization and productivity all trended significantly upward — offering compelling evidence that a human-centered leadership approach was not just the right thing to do. It was the smart business decision.
The Union Relationship
Rebuilding Partnership
Perhaps the most unexpected outcome was what happened between leadership and the union. What had been an adversarial relationship — defined by conflict, distrust, and competing agendas — began to transform into something neither side had expected: genuine partnership.
Joint Problem Solving
Leadership and union representatives began working through challenges collaboratively — not across the table from each other, but side by side.
Improved Negotiations
With trust rebuilt through consistent action, the tone and outcomes of contract conversations shifted dramatically toward mutual respect and shared interest.
80% Contract Approval
Employees voted to approve their new contract with an 80% approval rate — a remarkable signal of restored confidence in leadership and the organization.

The Lesson: Trust, when rebuilt with consistency and care, transforms even the most fractured relationships.
Why It Worked
Why ALIGN Works
The Q1/Q2/Q3 process didn't succeed because it was complicated or proprietary. It succeeded because it honored a set of enduring human truths about what people actually need to give their best at work.
People Engage When They Feel Valued
Discretionary effort follows emotional investment. Value must be demonstrated, not assumed.
Trust Starts With Leaders
Culture flows downward. The single greatest driver of team engagement is the behavior of the immediate manager.
Listening Creates Connection
When leaders stop talking and start genuinely listening, the relationship changes — and with it, everything else.
Ownership Creates Commitment
People protect what they help build. Give teams a genuine role in shaping their environment and commitment follows naturally.
Teams Contain Wisdom
The answers to most organizational challenges already exist inside the team. The leader's job is to ask the right questions and create the space to surface that wisdom.
The Evolution
From Practical Engagement to ALIGN
Over time, the original process was refined, tested across industries, and evolved into a comprehensive leadership framework. The Q1/Q2/Q3 discipline became the operational heartbeat of a larger system — one designed to be both rigorous and deeply human. The name changed. The core principles never did.
Assess
Measure the current state honestly
Listen
Hear what matters most to people
Identify
Surface barriers and opportunities
Go Act
Take visible, meaningful action
Nurture
Sustain trust and build momentum
The Invitation
The Next Chapter
What began as a response to crisis has become a proven leadership system — one that has transformed teams, rebuilt trust, and improved performance in organizations across industries. Now, it is your turn.
Learn
Practical leadership systems you can apply immediately
Strengthen
Build teams with deeper trust and stronger connection
Transform
Develop the healthier, more engaged culture your people deserve
"You don't need to have all the answers. Sometimes leadership begins by simply asking better questions."
Welcome to ALIGN. This is where the next chapter begins.