What has Going to Mars got to do with How You Lead Your Team Remotely?
Andrew Bryant, CSP
?? Global Leadership Authority | ?? Bestselling Author: Self-Leadership, Team Performance, and Human Potential | ?? Executive Coach to Fortune 500 Leaders | ??International Keynote Speaker
A manned trip to Mars within our lifetimes is a high probability. Billionaire, Elon Musk has his heart set on it, and there’s a modern-day space race between nations to get there first.
Just as the race to the moon gave us more down-to-earth technological advancements, like sneakers, digital photography, and wireless headsets, preparation for the moon is revealing how teams will function remotely.
Before I share some recent findings from Long Mars Simulations, let’s review what a Mars shot has in common with leading a team.
Teams. Long Mars Simulations, and Work-from-Home
How would a team of astronauts separated from home by nearly 380 million kilometers (236 million miles) fare in a manned landing on Mars, and with a prolonged stay? Would they be able to maintain constant communication with Earth and work flawlessly as a team? Or would they devolve into anarchy, cutting off communication with their superiors and establishing an autonomous colony??
Russian researchers have been finding out before spending billions on the real thing by putting a group of people in a Mars colonization simulation.
The results from Project Sirius (Scientific International Research In Unique Terrestrial Station) were recently published in Frontiers in Physiology. With the aim to understand astronauts’ psychology during long space flights, seventeen and 120-day isolation experiments were conducted in 2017 and 2019, respectively.
Little did they know that there would be a Global isolation experiment, prompted by the pandemic, from 2020 to 2022!
The results confirmed their fears: the delay in communication due to distance, combined with the extended period away from Mother Earth, caused the astronauts to become detached from mission control and almost autonomous.
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Similar observations have been made with extended work-from-home experiments.?
While it is encouraging that an isolated team was able to take matters into their own hands and live autonomously, their disconnection from Mission Control (MC) was concerning.
The concern was that the decreased communication reduced MC’s ability to understand the needs and problems of the team, which consequently hinders their ability to provide support.
Some gender differences were observed. Women reported problems to MC? more frequently and their communication styles were more emotional. Men, on the other hand, were less likely to report to MC. Surprisingly, by the end of the simulation, both men and women had adapted to each other’s communication styles, forming a similar level of emotion and communication regularity.
Conclusion
As I write about in The New Leadership Playbook: Being Human Whilst Successfully Delivering Accelerate Results, developing autonomy within individuals and teams is important for productivity and adaptability. The challenge is to maintain communication at an empathetic as well as tactical level.
Many leaders have adapted to engaging their virtual teams and checking in with how they are feeling before launching into objective-setting and feedback.
I recently gave a speech to a group of CTOs and was asked what else they could do to show empathy. My answer was that instead of taking on all the responsibility for the communication, tap into the autonomy of the team members and ask them what their needs were and how thy best wanted to share those.
Leadership is a conversation, whether one-to-one or one-to-many, and a conversation goes both ways.?
Going to Mars and leading a team are both challenging endeavors that require vision, strategy, collaboration, and self-leadership. The skills and qualities needed to succeed in one are transferable to the other, and leaders can learn a lot from the lessons of space exploration.
Professional Speaker | Certified Conscious Capitalism Consultant | Organisational Transformation
2 年We may never see man on Mars in our lifetime Andrew, but the new working paradigm of remote teams is here right now and I believe it will grow as time goes on. I have worked in several countries and had to run my teams whilst in other continents, time zones can be an issue, but I believe we are all much better equipped to deal with these challenges now and technology has advanced considerably in the last few years to make it easier to communicate and work, even when in different parts of this world.
International ???????????????????? ???????????????????? & Organisational Culture Consultant, 2x ???????? ?? Keynote Speaker, Author, Trainer & Mentor. Developing Delightful Leaders, Organizations, and Communities.
2 年Smart. Original. Thought provoking
Award-winning keynote speaker | Management Consultant for Board of Directors, CXOs | Event host, Compere, MC | Expert in self-leadership, change and transformation | Mindset & relationship coach | Author
2 年It’s a great point, Andrew Bryant, CSP! Astronauts are trusted to work “remotely” in a distance of 380 million kilometers (236 million miles) and yet… organisations still don’t trust their teams to do it just a few hours away from workplace… FABULOUS article and very inspiring material!
Speaker, Trainer, Coach in Interculturality, Diversity DEIB Inclusion, Communications, Leadership. Providing: experts in Psychological Safety, Cognitive Profiling, Wellness, Spirit, Systems Thinking, Spiral Dynamics
2 年Running Smart Coaching & Training Ltd with associates in four continents is a challenge, not the least with time zones, and previously living in one county and delivering in others , autonomy is essential but also having the psychological safety to know that you can contact without being fired is another