On the night of May 10, 1940, Winston Churchill became Prime Minister of Great Britain. The Germans had just launched their blitzkrieg into France. The Low Countries were already crumbling and the British Expeditionary Force — 300,000 men — was about to be trapped on the beaches of Dunkirk. The situation was, by any rational military analysis, catastrophic.
Churchill knew all of it. He said later that on that first night in office, he felt a profound sense of relief — because he knew that for all his faults, he was built for exactly this moment. What he did next is what made him Churchill. He didn’t retreat into crisis management. He got personal.
Churchill sent handwritten notes to fighter pilots. He visited bombed neighborhoods in London and wept openly with civilians who had lost everything. He called his generals not just to give orders but to express confidence in them — by name, specifically, personally. His personal secretary later said that Churchill understood one thing that most wartime leaders missed: people fight harder for someone who believes in them.
Across the Atlantic, FDR understood the same thing. In the darkest days after Pearl Harbor, Roosevelt received word that morale among factory workers in Detroit (who were retooling from cars to tanks) was cratering. The workers were exhausted, underpaid, and had no real connection to the war effort. FDR didn’t send a memo, DM or email….. He went there. He stood on the factory floor, looked workers in the eye, told them he had the highest confidence in them, and that what they were doing mattered to the outcome of the entire war.
Production doubled the next quarter. Confidence is not just a soft skill. It’s a force multiplier.