Nasa Case Study Effective Leadership Charateristics: BUSM 1282 - Project Management Leadership
Nasa Case Study Effective Leadership Charateristics: BUSM 1282 - Project Management Leadership
Nasa Case Study Effective Leadership Charateristics: BUSM 1282 - Project Management Leadership
• “How effectively a project meets its objectives and that it is delivered within the
constraints of scope, time, cost and quality.” (PMI 2013, p 35)
• During review of launch it was noticed that the insulation was separated from
the spaceship and struck underside of the left wing.
• Project team and experts were ignored and it as stated that the issue was
insignificant
• While entering the Earth’s atmosphere at 10,000 miles hour Columbia Space
ship Disintegrated killing all astronauts.
DYNAMIC LEADERSHIP PYRAMID
BUILD VISION
NURTURE
COLLABORATION
PROMOTE
PERFORMANCE
CULTIVATE LEARNING
ENSURE RESULTS
BUILD VISION
• Build vision - ‘To define the destination and purpose of the project.’
- Motivation statement
• Describes the initial environment which will assist the project leader to focus on
a specific situation
- Vision statement
• Conclusion
NURTURE COLLABORATION
• NASA’s culture did not allow the major concerns reach top decision-makers.
(Shenhar 1992)
PROMOTING PERFORMANCE
• The third principle is all about creating an environment ,that is helpful for team
member for promoting performance.
• For promoting performing in any project, “The performing team” makes the
difference.
Be a role Model
Result-oriented Thinking
Collaboration
CASE STUDY
-Trust issue
(Wilemon, D 1994)
• Solution-oriented thinking?
• Creating the right environment in any project can bring positivity to project.
CULTIVATE LEARNING
CULTIVATE LEARNING “To yield the desired results you have to cultivate learning as they
cannot be lasting performance without learning and they cannot be
resolved without performance.”
(Lloyd-Walker & Walker 2011)
ENSURE RESULTS
CASE STUDY: LEADERSHIP ISSUES
• Throughout the Columbia project, three clear leadership issues were present:
1. Team members were not encouraged to speak out and be honest about the
situation.
2. Project team felt their opinions were not recognized and that they didn’t have
upper management support.
2. Effective listening skills will encourage team members to speak out when
mistakes are found.
“Cultivating learning starts with the project leader.” (Juli 2011, p.66)
ENSURE RESULTS
• It is not only about ensuring results of the final project deliverable. Project success is
based on the success of many results from every part of the project (Juli 2011).
• It is an ongoing characteristic to adapt from the first day of the project to:
First, Stay alert, focus, and double check to ensure all project activities contribute to
the project objectives and directed toward the project vision.
Second, always ensure that interim results are tangible and point it up to keep the
project alive. Make sure that the project team feel interim success and award them (Juli
2011).
• Ensuring Interim results provide benefits related to five principles such as:
Move the team closer to realize the project vision (principle 1).
Enhance collaboration (principle 2).
Boost performance (principle 3).
Provide learning opportunity and encourage innovation (principle 4).
CAUSES AND IMPACT OF POOR ENSURING RESULTS BEHAVIOR
BY NASA
Space project are so risky with a deadly consequences. Ensuring results more than once of every detail
in the project is fatal. However, in Columbia shuttle project poor ensuring process were caused by
(Donovan & Green 2003) :
The senior management consider any delay unacceptable at all which went down to the project
engineers. Working under such a time pressure lowered the quality of ensuring interim results.
NASA managers and engineers did not consider risks in the same way. The risks of foam debris shedding
and foam strikes that caused previous space project incident (The Challenger incident) were considered
differently from the top management perspective. Project leaders did not ensure the risk assessment
process and avoiding previous risks. They should communicated with all involved stakeholders to ensure
identifying risks magnitude properly.
Their organizational culture emphasized only chain of command communications. Leaders did not ensure
the existence of an open and explicit communication channels during the project lifetime. Instead, they
created a culture where the project team voice cannot be heard. As a result, project engineers were
ignored when they tried to point up their safety concerns to the management.
CHARACTERISTICS BEHAVIOR NASA LEADERS SHOULD
APPLIED: BASED ON THE 5TH PRINCIPLE
• Ensure and emphasize the project’s interim results not just rushing toward the
final deliverable to satisfy the senior management.
• Ensure better clear communication channels between all parties involved in the
project.
• •Juli, T., 2010. Leadership principles for project success, Boca Raton: Taylor &
Francis.
• •Shenhar, A. (1992). Project management style and the Space Shuttle program (part
2): a retrospective look. Project Management Journal, 23(1), 32–37.
• •Juli, T., 2010. Leadership principles for project success, Boca Raton: Taylor &
Francis.
• •Shenhar, A. (1992). Project management style and the Space Shuttle program (part
2): a retrospective look. Project Management Journal, 23(1), 32–37.