Codifying Common Sense: Turning What You “Know” into What Your Team Can Use

Written by Orvin Kimbrough | May 18, 2026

Every seasoned leader eventually realizes that wisdom alone doesn’t scale. What you know isn’t what grows your team, what you codify does. The best organizations don’t run on talent alone; they run on translated wisdom.

Most leadership wisdom isn’t revolutionary. It’s common sense, refined, repeated, and remembered.

Carnegie didn’t invent relationships; he codified them. He gave us words, principles, and steps so we could practice connection with intention.

That’s the difference between leaders who have wisdom and leaders who scale wisdom: they codify it. They take what’s instinctive in their heads and translate it into language their teams can act on.

Why Codification Is a Leadership Superpower

Common sense breaks down under pressure. Systems don’t.

When the pace accelerates or the stakes rise, people don’t reach for inspiration, they reach for instruction. That’s where codification earns its value.

  • Memory fades under pressure. Playbooks keep teams consistent when stress rises.
  • Scale beats heroics. If results only happen when you’re in the room, you’ve built a bottleneck.
  • Legacy requires translation. Teaching turns instinct into institutional strength.

Codification is what separates a high performer from a scalable leader.

How I Learned This the Hard Way

Early in my leadership journey, I assumed my team would “get it.” We worked hard, we shared values, and I explained things clearly—or so I thought.

Then one day, after a major presentation, I realized half the team had approached the same problem five different ways. Not because they didn’t care, but because I hadn’t codified how we do things when the pressure hits.

That was my wake-up call. Clarity isn’t control, it’s generosity.

The Banking Connection

In banking, codification is the backbone of trust. You don’t rely on memory to process a loan, manage risk, or safeguard deposits, you rely on systems.

But the best systems aren’t sterile. They’re designed by people who understand that process without purpose is just paperwork. The real art of leadership, especially in a regulated industry like banking, is turning lived wisdom into repeatable principles without stripping out the human judgment that gives it meaning.

That’s what great leaders do: they build playbooks that think and feel.

The NAME → NAIL → NARRATE → NORM Framework

Here’s a simple way to turn what you just know into what your team can actually use.

Example Play: The 3C Debrief

Celebrate → Clarify → Change

  • Celebrate: One thing we’d repeat.
  • Clarify: One confusing moment.
  • Change: One tweak we’ll actually make.

Why it works: It protects morale, extracts learning, and forces a single actionable adjustment instead of a laundry list.

The Common Traps

  • “We’ll remember.” You won’t. Write it down now.
  • Too much theory. Steps beat slogans.
  • One-and-done. Playbooks decay, review quarterly.
  • Leader monologue. Involve the people who will use it.

Premium Leadership Challenge

This month, pick one recurring moment, a first sales call, a weekly check-in, a board prep meeting.

  1. Codify it using NAME → NAIL → NARRATE → NORM.
  2. Run it for two weeks.
  3. Ask your team: “What made this easier? What still felt clunky?”
  4. Refine and lock it.

Because the best leaders don’t just share wisdom, they institutionalize it.

That’s what makes leadership scalable, sustainable, and trustworthy. In banking, that’s how you protect capital. In leadership, that’s how you multiply it.