John Spencer was a new second lieutenant in 2003 when he parachuted into
Iraq leading a platoon of infantry soldiers into battle. During that
combat tour he learned how important unit cohesion was to surviving a
war, both physically and mentally. He observed that this cohesion
developed as the soldiers experienced the horrors of combat as a group,
spending their downtime together and processing their shared
experiences.
When Spencer returned to Iraq five years later to take command of a
troubled company, he found that his lessons on how to build unit
cohesion were no longer as applicable. Rather than bonding and
processing trauma as a group, soldiers now spent their downtime
separately, on computers communicating with family back home. Spencer
came to see the internet as a threat to unit cohesion, but when he
returned home and his wife was deployed, the internet connected him and
his children to his wife on a daily basis.
In Connected Soldiers Spencer delivers lessons learned about effective
methods for building teams in a way that overcomes the distractions of
home and the outside world, without reducing the benefits gained from
connections to family.