Mike Mullane

Mike Mullane

Fighter pilot and astronaut, Mike Mullane was inducted into the International Space Hall of Fame and is the recipient of many awards, including the Air Force Distinguished Flying Cross, Legion of Merit and the NASA Space Flight Medal. Since his retirement from NASA, he has become an award winning author and speaker. Colonel Mullane has established himself as an acclaimed professional speaker and has thrilled tens of thousands of people with his inspirational, motivational and humorous descriptions of the astronaut experience.


Topics: Astronaut / Humor / Leadership / Motivation / Team Building
Fee Range: $10,001 to $15,000 Talent Travels From:NM

Colonel Mullane was born September 10, 1945 in Wichita Falls, Texas but spent much of his youth in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he currently resides. Upon his graduation from West Point in 1967, he was commissioned in the United States Air Force. As a Weapon Systems Operator aboard RF-4C Phantom aircraft, he completed 134 combat missions in Vietnam. He holds a Master's of Science Degree in Aeronautical Engineering from the Air Force Institute of Technology and is also a graduate of the Air Force Flight Test Engineer School at Edwards Air Force Base, California.

Mullane was selected as a Mission Specialist in 1978 in the first group of Space Shuttle Astronauts. He completed three space missions aboard the Shuttles Discovery (STS-41D) and Atlantis (STS-27 & 36) before retiring from NASA and the Air Force in 1990.

Mullane has been inducted into the International Space Hall of Fame and is the recipient of many awards, including the Air Force Distinguished Flying Cross, Legion of Merit and the NASA Space Flight Medal.

Since his retirement from NASA, Colonel Mullane has written an award-winning children's book, Liftoff! An Astronaut's Dream, and a popular space-fact book, Do Your Ears Pop In Space? His recently published memoir, Riding Rockets: The Outrageous Tales of a Space Shuttle Astronaut, (Scribner, hardcover), has been reviewed in the New York Times and on the Jon Stewart Daily Show.

Colonel Mullane has established himself as an acclaimed professional speaker and has thrilled tens of thousands of people with his inspirational, motivational and humorous descriptions of the astronaut experience.

Countdown To Teamwork, an inspirational and motivational teamwork/leadership program:

Countdown To Teamwork is a team-building /leadership program in which Colonel Mullane motivates the audience on their practice of these fundamentals of teamwork: guarding against a "normalization of deviance", responsibility, trust, courageous self-leadership, and courageous team leadership. This program is applicable to all teams everywhere. It has thrilled and inspired personnel in sales, manufacturing, production, safety?in ALL areas of company operations. It has been cheered by managers and blue-collar workers, by union and non-union teams. It has been enjoyed by men and women from every corner of corporate America?from perfume sales teams to nuclear power plant safety teams; from insurance company teams to medical equipment manufacturers; from beverage producers to record label teams.

Countdown To Teamwork is more than just a motivational and learning tool on the topics of teamwork and leadership. It is also an extraordinarily entertaining program. (Mike's programs are NEVER technical.) Colonel Mullane mixes his serious messages with hilarious never-before-heard astronaut stories and remarkable NASA video. The audience members will alternately find themselves roaring with laughter and sitting on the edge of their seats in suspense.

Countdown as been extremely successful at exceeding the expectations of meeting planners. Another indication of the popularity of Countdown To Teamwork is this fact?Astronaut Mullane has been a keynote speaker at events where other speakers included former President George Bush Sr., General Colin Powell and Tom Peters.

Countdown To Teamwork can be edited to fit the agenda of any event. Mullane's presentation is augmented with a PowerPoint program that includes spectacular video and slides.

Using video projected as part of his PowerPoint program, Colonel Mullane opens with a dramatic narration of a shuttle countdown and launch, leading the audience to this question, "If it was YOU on that rocket, what type of a team would you want holding your life in their hands?" Obviously you would want a team that's the BEST!

Astronaut Mullane then establishes that teams achieve greatness when they practice certain fundamentals and he uses his experiences as an astronaut and Air Force flyer to develop these fundamentals:

Guarding against a "Normalization of Deviance"
Normalization of deviance is a long term phenomenon in which individuals or teams repeatedly accept a lower standard of performance until that lower standard becomes the "norm". Usually, the acceptance of the lower standard occurs because the individual/team is under pressure (budget, schedule, etc.) and perceives it will be too difficult to adhere to the expected standard. Their intention may be to revert back to the higher standard when this period of pressure passes. However, by "getting away" with the deviation, it is likely they will do the same thing when the same stressful circumstances arise again. Over time, the individual/team fails to see their actions as deviant.

Mullane uses the Challenger tragedy to make this point. Under tremendous schedule and budget pressures and over multiple launches, the NASA team accepted a lower standard of performance on the solid rocket booster O-rings until that lower standard became the "norm". By the dawn of Challenger, the NASA team had become so comfortable with seeing occasional O-ring damage and getting away with it, the original standard, in which ANY O-ring damage was defined as intolerable deviance, was marginalized. Disaster resulted.

The Columbia tragedy is another example of normalization of deviance and Mullane discusses the salient issue of that tragedy?that the NASA team grew so comfortable accepting occasional "hits" on the winged-orbiter by foam shedding from the gas tank, they lost sight of the criticality of the deviance.

Teams maintain their high standards of performance by "planning the work and working the plan"; connecting the dots (to insure multiple problems aren't just symptoms of a single normalization of deviance problem); and by considering the instincts of team members in the decision making process. With Challenger, some engineers had a gut feeling that an O-ring disaster loomed, but management refused to react to instincts. Leaders should investigate instinctual fears to determine if, in fact, they are rooted in reality.

Responsibility
The power of a team resides in the uniqueness of the team members, in their diversity of life experiences and insights. Everyone has a sacred responsibility to get their unique perspectives on the table for the leadership to consider. Leaders have a sacred responsibility to empower the voices of their people so they can gain access to those unique perspectives. "One person with courage forms a majority", is a quote by former President Andrew Jackson that Mullane will use in this discussion. He also uses an example of how a medical doctor at NASA (not an engineer or astronaut) had the best idea for a shuttle bailout system. This is an example of how great ideas can exist in the minds of people who are not considered the experts on a particular issue and this is why team leaders need to work on empowering every voice on their teams.

Trust
Trust is achieved through "need" fulfillment. We all look to our leaders to fulfill these fundamental needs: to be treated with respect as an individual; to get honest recognition for our work; to have a voice in matters that concern us. When leaders fulfill these needs, the bonds of trust strengthen and through this trust the true potential of the team is realized. Mullane draws from his experiences as a combat flyer in Vietnam to illustrate how need fulfillment by combat team leaders builds trust and through this trust the warrior potential of the combat team is realized. The same warrior potential exists in corporate teams and leaders can unleash this potential by identifying and fulfilling the needs of their people.

Courageous Self-Leadership
Mullane uses his life story to develop these points on self-leadership: self-leaders set very lofty goals, stay focused on what's important, and constantly do their best at every task. Mullane develops this philosophy of self-leadership: "Success isn't a destination. It's a continuous life journey of working toward successively higher goals."

Courageous Team Leadership
Again, Mullane uses aspects of his life story to develop this point...that truly courageous team leaders maximize the potential of their people through this leadership philosophy: "I want YOU, to be more successful than ME."

Most audiences are shocked to learn how ordinary Mullane was. People assume because he is an astronaut now, that in his youth, he was a super-child, destined for great success. That is not the case. Mullane uses slides and video to prove he wasn't a child genius. He wasn't a sports star. He wasn't popular. He didn't date the homecoming queen. Yet he realized a lifetime dream. His success occurred, as is does for all of us, because of leaders (parents, teachers, scout masters, bosses, etc.) who didn't see him as he was, but looked past that to his potential and worked to develop that potential through this courageous leadership philosophy, "I want YOU, to be more successful than ME".

Countdown To Teamwork is remarkably inspirational. The audience will come away from the program with a renewed sense of their potential and the potential of their teams.

 

The Lighter Side Of Spaceflight, a wildly entertaining and educational program on the astronaut experience:

In his program, The Lighter Side of Spaceflight, Astronaut Mike Mullane will take the audience on a uniquely revealing, captivating and hilarious space journey. Using spectacular video and slides he will answer everybody's space questions: What does a shuttle launch feel like?...How does an astronaut deal with the incredible fear of launch?...How do you sleep, bathe, eat, drink, etc.?....What do you see from space?...And, of course, he will answer the top two questions that astronauts are ever asked:

Number 1: How does the space toilet work? (When the audience hears how astronauts train to use the toilet they will be convulsed with laughter.)...and...

Number 2: Have astronauts seen any UFOs or aliens?

The answers to these questions and many, many more are lavishly wrapped with inside, hilarious stories and supported with amazing video. The audience will not only be thoroughly entertained by The Lighter Side of Spaceflight, but will also feel privileged to have been given an insight into the astronaut experience that few people ever get to experience.

(CBS News) CHANTILLY, Va. - There were cheers and some tears as the shuttle Discovery made its final flight on Tuesday.

It took off at sunrise from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, flying piggyback on a 747. Later it flew over Washington, past the monument and the Capitol, as thousands looked up in wonder.

Discovery landed at Dulles Airport in Virginia, near its new home at the Smithsonian annex. CBS News correspondent Chip Reid reports.

Space Shuttle Discovery flies final mission

On Monday generations of astronauts came by Florida's Kennedy Space Center to say goodbye to an old friend - the shuttle Discovery.

"Pleasure to meet all of you. We know the secret discovery handshake, right?" laughed Mike Mullane.

If anyone knows the "secret Discovery handshake" it's Mullane. Discovery's maiden voyage in 1984 was also his first trip into space, a memory that's still vivid.

As the main engines started, Mullane said he remembers thinking, "Well, whatever happens, I'm goin' now."

"When you climb into a rocket for a launch into space there are two fundamental emotions that are gripping you," Mullane said. "One is gut fear. You do fear for your life. The other is boundless joy, because it's a lifetime dream come true."

His dream began as a child with homemade rockets.

"My capsule was a Maxwell house coffee can, my tubing was a piece of my mother's vacuum cleaner tubing," Mullane said.

He flew three shuttle missions and Discovery made 39 trips into space. But the shuttle program has faded into history, the stuff of historical documentaries.

"I wanted to be an astronaut as soon as I heard the word. I was a child of the space race," he said.

Reid: "How would you describe the mix of emotions you were feeling today when you saw Discovery back up?"

Mullane: "It tugged on my heartstrings and my soul to see it."

He still feels the joy he says but also deep frustration that the shuttle program ended before a new manned spacecraft was developed. It will be five years or more before a new American ship is ready.

"The United States of America, the premier space-faring nation in the world, has to buy rides on a Russian rocket to take Americans into space," Mullane said, "and that definitely makes me mad."

So, too, does the fact that his 15-year-old grandson Sean has no manned space program to dream about.

Reid: "Your grandson is obviously interested in space."

"He's a science geek," Mullane said.

Reid: "Exactly. But he can't be an astronaut."

Mullane: "I am very disappointed, and angry, frankly, that the youth of this nation, including my grandson - don't have that inspiration that has been provided by NASA in the past with the manned program."

Still Mullane looks forward to one day visiting his old friend discovery at the museum.

"I'll see the people milling around and in my mind I'm gonna be thinking, 'I got to ride that. I flew this thing into space,'" Mullane said.

A dream that came true for him and that he only wishes could come true for his grandson's generation.


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