Space exploration may feel worlds away from IT, but the lessons that keep astronauts alive are the same ones that keep modern organizations resilient.
In this episode of the ManageEngine Insights Podcast, host John Donegan sits down with NASA astronaut Mike Massimino, a four-time spacewalker, two-mission Hubble veteran, the first person to tweet from space, and a professor who has spent decades studying how humans operate under extreme pressure.
Massimino isn’t just known for fixing the most complex telescope ever launched; he’s known for understanding the human side of engineering—how people think, how teams work, and why the right mindset matters as much as the right tools. From overcoming “impossible” challenges to combating impostor syndrome, red-teaming life-or-death missions, and keeping humans in the loop amid rising automation, his insights reach far beyond spaceflight.
If you lead teams, build technology, or simply want to understand what high performance really requires, this conversation offers field-tested lessons from someone who learned them hundreds of miles above Earth.
Listen to the full episode and level up your leadership, engineering, and resilience strategies, one insight at a time.
Agenda
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Why some people perform their best only when the stakes are highest
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Why some need a challenge to excel and whether that drive is rare or simply human
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The importance of human factors in engineering
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Building high-trust, high-performance teams
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Humor as a leadership superpower
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Overcoming impostor syndrome
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Red-teaming and failure planning
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Humans vs. machines in a world of rising automation
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Focusing only on what you can control
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Massimino’s most meaningful life lessons


