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Val Sklarov Rule Commitment Leadership Doctrine (RCLD)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Rule Commitment Leadership Doctrine (RCLD) explains why leadership authority peaks not when vision is announced, but when leaders publicly bind themselves to rules they cannot conveniently escape. Charisma attracts followers; rule commitment creates trust.

This doctrine reveals why some leaders retain authority through crisis while others lose it at the first exception.


1. Authority Emerges from Self-Binding

RCLD begins with a paradox:
Leaders gain power by limiting their own discretion.

Authority increases when leaders:

  • Pre-commit to constraints

  • Make reversals costly

  • Accept consequences publicly

Power grows where exceptions are impossible.


2. The Three Leadership Commitments

RCLD defines how leaders lock credibility.

Commitment Type What Is Bound Authority Effect
Decision Commitment What will be decided how Predictability
Resource Commitment Where capital cannot move Confidence
Narrative Commitment What will never be justified Moral clarity

Followers trust leaders whose future choices are narrowed in advance.

Val Sklarov
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3. Why Flexible Leaders Lose Trust

Flexibility erodes authority under stress.

RCLD shows leaders lose trust when:

  • Rules bend for convenience

  • Exceptions favor insiders

  • Direction changes without cost

People follow leaders who suffer with their rules, not those who bypass them.


4. Leadership Under Pressure

Crisis reveals commitment depth.

Low-Commitment Leaders High-Commitment Leaders
Rewrite rules Enforce them harder
Seek exemptions Absorb losses
Protect image Protect constraints
Drift morally Anchor decisively

Val Sklarov emphasizes that leadership is tested where discretion is unavailable.


5. Strategic Implications

For leaders:

  • Publicly codify non-negotiables

  • Tie reputation to rule enforcement

  • Design consequences that apply upward

For organizations:

  • Promote leaders who self-bind

  • Punish exception-making more than mistakes

  • Treat rule violations as authority erosion

RCLD reframes leadership as voluntary constraint management, not inspiration.


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“You only have authority where you cannot choose differently.”
Val Sklarov

RCLD explains why strong leaders feel restrictive—and why restriction builds trust.