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Dr. Pellerin

How nasa builds teams

High-performing teams are crucial for any successful organization, but traditional team-building methods often fall flat with technical professionals like scientists and engineers. NASA faced this issue in the early 1990s following the flawed launch of the Hubble Space Telescope. In response, they formed a successful repair team using the "4-D Team Building Process". By 2001, this system was implemented across NASA, benefiting over 500 project and engineering teams and significantly improving performance. Learning from NASA's experiences, integrating the 4-D System can enhance team building and management.

How nasa builds teams
How nasa builds teams

book.chapter Fundamentals of 4-d system

The 4-D system is a leadership model that breaks down effective leadership into four key dimensions: Cultivating, Including, Visioning, and Directing. Cultivating involves making everyone feel valued and appreciated. Including is about ensuring everyone's opinions matter and are taken into account. Visioning involves thinking about potential futures and planning accordingly. Directing is about taking decisive action to make things happen. This model is not only useful for developing strong leaders, but it also serves as a robust team-building process. It emphasizes the importance of the social context, which is a key driver of team performance. John Mather, a NASA Nobel Laureate in physics, once stated that half the cost of a project is socially determined. This was evident in the case of the Hubble Space Telescope, which cost NASA 15 years of work and $1.7 billion of taxpayer money. After the telescope was launched into space in 1980, it was discovered that the telescope's mirror had a spherical aberration, rendering it unusable for its intended purpose. The Failure Review Board found that this issue was caused by a misadjusted null corrector manufactured by a contractor. There were hints of the mirror flaw in some tests, but these were not pursued rigorously enough to uncover the underlying problem. This incident highlighted the tendency of technical workers to focus so intensively on their tasks that they fail to notice or manage the larger social context within which their technology operates. This is akin to concentrating so hard on climbing a ladder that no one stops to consider whether the ladder is leaning against the right wall. The social context always plays a significant role in the outcome of projects. For instance, a study by Wilson and Kelling in 1982 showed that crime rates increased in rental buildings in New York when broken windows were not repaired. The unrepaired windows created a context where people assumed no one cared, leading to an increase in crime. This led to a large-scale experiment where crime on New York subways was reduced by removing graffiti and arresting fare jumpers. In the aerospace industry, many project heads at NASA and other organizations, despite having authority over multi-billion-dollar budgets, expect to be fired within two years or less. They believe cost overruns are inevitable and that they will be fired when they have to report these overruns. In the case of the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA program managers openly criticized and pressured contractors to meet tight delivery and cost budgets. This led the contractors to withhold troubling information, using guerilla tactics. The review board concluded that the problem with the Hubble Space Telescope was more a failure of leadership than anything else. To better understand, measure, and manage context, a simple tool was needed to analyze the performance of teams and leaders. The 4-D system uses an X-Y coordinate system to simplify teams and leaders. By combining the X-axis and Y-axis, a two-by-two matrix is created, representing the four core elements or dimensions of leaders and high-performance teams. The four dimensions are: Cultivating, which embraces deep feelings for an idealized world and is concerned with addressing the interests of others and making them feel understood and appreciated; Including, which is about building relationships with others and focuses on making others feel like they are part of a team and ensuring everyone keeps their commitments; Visioning, which is about thinking about possible futures and involves articulating a bright future while acknowledging the difficult realities facing the team at present; and Directing, which involves thinking and organizing and includes planning, organizing, and controlling the output of the group. Charles Pellerin, the creator of the 4-D system, stated that social context drives behavior and perception. Flawed social contexts can cause space disasters, airplane crashes, and dysfunctional families. By managing your behaviors, you can manage your contribution to your work and family context. The 4-D system replaces the lists of 'what matters' for team and leadership excellence with a system akin to a law of physics. It analyzes leaders and teams with sufficient repeatability that Pellerin has faith in its continued use.

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