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Leadership Lessons From Space

Space exploration requires the very best - from tech, team members and leaders. What can teams back on Earth learn from astronauts?

What does leadership in a fast-growing space industry look like? And how can Earth-bound companies take note?

“SpaceX shakes up Starship leadership”, CNBC.

“We really want to be first’: UK fights to lead new space race” Financial Times.

“U.S. Space Force partnership will prepare leaders for new challenges”, John Hopkins University.

We’ve witnessed a meteoric shift in space travel, with technology increasing our capabilities for space travel and an increasingly broader spectrum of people at the helm of the industry shifting the agenda. One thing is clear – the leadership of this new era of greater discovery will define it.

The possibilities are seemingly as endless as space itself. But one thing that has remained steadfast on this voyage of discovery is the leadership skills required to successfully guide a spacecraft and its crew into the unknown and return them safely.

Back on Earth, as our industries face ever more unpredictable futures, are there leadership lessons that can be learned from the accelerating space race? A number of leadership experts working at top business schools across the UK and Europe believe so.

What insights into executive management and team organisation can we learn? Here we explore how a few leading business schools are contributing to this fast-changing field…

Leading an industry to greater space travel

Space travel has always something that had been dominated by nation states… until recently. The US government has the largest footprint in space, with over 5000 people, satellites and objects orbiting the planet. They are closely followed by their Russian, Chinese, British and Japanese counterparts, as well as other nation states, albeit to a much smaller extent.

Today countries and their governments are not the only ones blasting off to the stars, as more companies (and billionaires) develop their own space branches. Boeing, Blue Origin (owned by Amazon’s Jeff Bezos), SpaceX (the brainchild of Tesla owner Elon Musk), and Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic all now have the capability to launch their own tech into the Earth’s orbit, and even take passengers up for wildly expensive space tourist trips. Just recently SpaceX agreed to transport some of NASA’s astronauts and their tech to the International Space Station for them, in a move akin to a space-age Uber.

But regardless of their growing galactic capabilities, such companies remain regulated by their home countries. SpaceX, for example, possibly the largest of the private-sector companies in space, has to follow the laws and regulations of the USA where it is based. The US really is the industry leader, in terms of both public investment and private enterprise. But much attention now being paid to how other countries might nab the top spot…

Research by Professors Molly Silk and Kieron Flanagan at Alliance Manchester Business School underlines the potential opportunities to be gained by the UK’s space agency, presented by China’s growing presence in the space race. But the points outlined highlight key answers to the question of what makes an industry leader?

Industry leaders can thus be summarised as well-resourced, flexible, collaborative and secure. But being at the forefront of any industry requires one more thing: a strong team.

Management lessons from the stars

Selecting members of any team can require applicants meeting a strict criteria, but selecting a crew to go to space? Even more so, team members on a spaceflight more often than not have to be experts in a certain field, with significant tests and preparation beforehand. As Franz Viehböck puts it, when managing in space you “will no longer be able to impress your team with your expertise. Instead, you will have to rely on your leadership skills.”

Franz is a former astronaut, or ‘Austro-naut’ being the world’s first from Austria. He is now the CEO of the Bendorf group, meaning he knows better than most which of those key skills needed for leadership in space are also vital down here on earth. In an article written for WU Executive Academy, an institution to which he routinely sends his staff to boost their skills through Executive Education programmes, Franz highlights the key traits for leading a team of astronauts. His insights can be categorised into three main lessons:  

As innovation goes, perhaps no industry sees more change and acceleration than the space sector. And how it is lead defines its growth as a whole, as well as provides new insights into leadership and management here back down on earth.

The intensity of the realities and surviving (and thriving) in space requires the best of the best – whether from tech, resources, team members or, of course, leaders. Not every team on Earth may be as well-resourced as those in space, but there are transferable lessons that every form of management could learn from.

Every team needs a bit of space leadership in their management. And, if you can’t hire a rocket scientist, we’ve seen that you can learn from one – whether an astronaut or an “Austro-naut”.

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