Episode
149: Carey Lohrenz - Navy’s First Female Top Gun on Performing Under Pressure
- Published
- Dec 31, 2025
- Duration seconds
- 4653
- Processing state
not_requested
Actions
POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/do-business-do-life-the-financial-advisor-podcast-dbdl-6175641/episodes/149-carey-lohrenz-navy-s-first-female-top-gun-on-performing-under-pressure/transcription-requests
Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/do-business-do-life-the-financial-advisor-podcast-dbdl-6175641/149-carey-lohrenz-navy-s-first-female-top-gun-on-performing-under-pressure.md
Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.
Summary
What do fighter pilots and financial advisors have in common? More than you might think—especially when it comes to performing under pressure. In this episode, I sit down with Carey Lorhenz—the first female F-14 Tomcat fighter pilot in U.S. Navy history—to talk about how the Navy trains people to perform in high-stakes environments without leaving success to chance. We get into simulation training before live reps, checklists built for people under pressure (because even really smart people forget things), and why debriefing is one of the fastest ways to build trust and alignment on a team. If you’re building an advisory team, trying to develop younger advisors, or tired of repeating the same mistakes as a firm, this episode gives you a playbook you can actually use. 3 of the biggest insights from Carey… #1.) Training Should Look More Like Simulation In the Navy, pilots don’t get thrown into real situations and told to figure it out. Carey explains why so much time is spent in academics and simulators—and why skipping this step is where a lot of advisor training breaks down. #2.) Checklists Exist Because People Forget Checklists aren’t about being rigid. They’re about performing when pressure is high. Carey breaks down how the Navy designs checklists for stressed humans—and why the same thinking applies to client meetings and important conversations. #3.) The Debrief Is Where Teams Actually Get Better Carey walks through a simple five-question debrief that builds trust, surfaces blind spots, and transfers knowledge fast—so teams improve week over week instead of repeating the same mistakes. SHOW NOTES https://bradleyjohnson.com/149 FOLLOW BRAD JOHNSON ON SOCIAL Twitter Instagram LinkedIn FOLLOW DBDL ON SOCIAL: YouTube Twitter Instagram LinkedIn Facebook DISCLOSUR…