The night of 6th September was one to remember. Millions
of eyes glued to the television post midnight to witness history. All went well
until a communication loss with the moon-lander Vikram doomed a deep silence of
uncertainty that literally snatched the “hurray” from everyone’s mouth.
Anxieties soared as speculations started filling the minds,
did ISRO miss it? Did WE miss it? Well, everything went pretty well as planned,
but not everything ended as planned.
What happened next is
all that we know. But what most of us might already know and what each of us must
know is how ISRO came to be what it is today.
With humble beginnings in a newly independent nation, where
economic challenges were too intense even to provide for social commitments,
lest funding a space agency, ISRO has come a long way achieving milestones that
were never thought of. Through PSLV, GSLV and launching numerous satellites,
ISRO kept scaling new heights before finally reserving its seat in the elite
club of Mars explorers, hitherto claimed only by the developed nations. Being
the fourth nation to reach Mars, first one in Asia and also the first to taste
success in maiden attempt was a giant leap for ISRO. What could galvanize it more than the record
launch of 104 satellites in a single rocket, making it the most cost efficient
exercise that the whole world witnessed and admired?
The vision of the likes of Vikram Sarabhai, and the
leadership of the likes of APJ, has scaled an organization to the levels ISRO
stands now, nurturing some of the finest brains on earth that work relentlessly
to create wonders.
What ISRO missed this time, is minuscule to what it
achieved. Their success is not limited to just successfully placing Chandrayaan
2 in the moon’s orbit, but goes beyond what they might have planned. ISRO made the
entire nation stand tall and stay awake late that night, purely in solidarity
to the cause that matters the most to the nation at this time. Heightened
expectations can, at times become a burden, not for the weak ones to carry
through. ISRO taught us the way, the calm faces and composed expressions of the
mission team evidently boasted of their tenacity.
The entire episode further unveiled a series of tacit
lessons in corporate management and ideal parenting. Like a catalyst, that
itself doesn’t undergo a change but accelerates a chemical reaction, it was PM
Modi playing the right man, at the right place, at the right time, doing the
right thing.
Modi’s speech personified an ideal parent who would even notice
and appreciate her kids’ efforts, rather than reward the results alone. Modi
went ahead in expressing his confidence in ISRO’s potential, when he mentioned
having come to them to draw inspiration rather than to console them. An
explicit expression of confidence is necessary to build a strong support system
when your team / kid needs it the most.
Understanding and empathizing the team in a non-judgmental manner
was another tenet that surfaced through his speech. Modi stood tall by his
team, like an ideal leader and parent should, to motivate them for a larger
leap. And finally the pat on the back and the consoling arms around ISRO chief,
non-verbal expressions that spoke louder than everything else.
Even the finest brains of the world can fail, only to unlearn and relearn to emerge wiser than before, why on earth do we refrain our kids from trying and failing? This probably is the biggest take-away from the recent ISRO episode.
Even the finest brains of the world can fail, only to unlearn and relearn to emerge wiser than before, why on earth do we refrain our kids from trying and failing? This probably is the biggest take-away from the recent ISRO episode.