Let me tell you about my experience. In 1973 I
became the project director of India's satellite launch vehicle program,
commonly called the SLV3. Our goal was to put India's "Rohini"
satellite into orbit by 1980. I was given funds and human resources but was
told clearly that by 1980 we had to launch the satellite into space. Thousands
of people worked together in scientific and technical teams towards that goal.
By 1979 I think the month was August we thought
we were ready. As the project director, I went to the control center for the
launch. At four minutes before the satellite launch, the computer began to go
through the checklist of items that needed to be checked. One minute later, the
computer program put the launch on hold; the display showed that some control
components were not in order. My experts I had four or five of them with me told
me not to worry; they had done their calculations and there was enough reserve
fuel. So I bypassed the computer, switched to manual mode, and launched the
rocket. In the first stage, everything worked fine. In the second stage, a
problem developed. Instead of the satellite going into orbit, the whole rocket
system plunged into the Bay of Bengal. It was a big failure.
That day, the chairman of the Indian Space Research
Organization, Prof. Satish Dhawan, had called a press conference. The
launch was at 7:00 am, and the press conference where journalists from around
the world were present was at 7:45 am at ISRO's satellite launch
range in Sriharikota [in Andhra Pradesh in southern India]. Prof. Dhawan,
the leader of the organization, conducted the press conference himself. He took
responsibility for the failure he said that the team had worked very hard,
but that it needed more technological support. He assured the media that in
another year, the team would definitely succeed. Now, I was the project
director, and it was my failure, but instead, he took responsibility for the
failure as chairman of the organization.
The next year, in July 1980, we tried again
to launch the satellite and this time we succeeded. The whole nation was
jubilant. Again, there was a press conference. Prof.Dhawan called me aside
and told me, "You conduct the press conference today."
I learned a very important lesson that day. When
failure occurred, the leader of the organization owned that failure. When
success came, he gave it to his team. The best management
lesson I have learned did not come to me from reading a book; it came from that
experience.
(Excerpt from Dr APJ Abdul Kalam’s note on ‘A Leader
Should Know How To Manage Failure’)
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