Lessons from the Men Who Went to the Moon

It's a great thing for a man to walk on the moon. But it's a greater thing for God to walk on the earth. - Neil Armstrong

As we celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of Neil Armstrong’s famous “small step for a man, giant leap for mankind,” I picked up Basil Hero’s The Mission of a Lifetime: Lessons from the Men Who Went to the Moon.  Hero is an award-winning former investigative reporter with NBC News. From childhood, and throughout his career as a media entrepreneur and nonprofit executive, he has maintained a lifetime fascination with space exploration and the men who went to the moon.

Hero points out, “Space is making a comeback.  In 2017, 18,300 people applied to NASA for fourteen available astronaut slots… all of them hopeful that they might, one day, run their gloved fingers over the surface of another world.”

The men who went to the moon remain history’s most elite fraternity. Their extraterrestrial view of Earth from the moon changed them and the world.  They remind us that courage, quiet patriotism, and conquering fear—the real right stuff—all emanate from deeper sources: a commitment to the common good, and belief in something greater than oneself.

Their wish for all of us is to keep pushing the boundaries (as they did) and always, always live life with fierce optimism and faith that, like the moon shot, any goal—no matter the odds—is as achievable as your resolve to see it through.

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Leadership Lessons of Gregg Popovich

It's not about any one person. You've got to get over yourself and realize that it takes a group to get this thing done - Gregg Popovich

This is a big time of the year for the National Basketball Association (NBA) with the excitement of the playoffs and upcoming NBA Finals matchups, so it gives us a good reason to pause and learn some leadership lessons from the NBA’s winningest head coach.

Gregg Popovich took over as coach of the San Antonio Spurs in 1996.  With 23 years and counting, he is the longest tenured active coach in any of the major sports in the United States. Called “Coach Pop,”  he has led the Spurs to a winning record in every season, surpassing Phil Jackson for the most consecutive winning seasons in NBA history. During his tenure, the Spurs have won all five of their NBA titles; and Popovich is one of only five coaches in NBA history to win five titles.

A few years ago, Leadership Case Studies published The Leadership Lessons of Gregg Popovich: A Case Study on the San Antonio Spurs’ 5-time NBA Championship Winning Head Coach.

Click here for my summary of the book.