Most engineers don’t start their careers thinking, “I can’t wait to manage people.”
They want to build things. Tinker. Solve hard problems. See hardware fly.
In this episode, Brian Ippolito from Marotta Controls talks about what it’s been like to grow inside a third-generation aerospace company that grew from about 130 people to nearly 1,000 during his career.
We talk about the moment you stop being someone’s peer and become their manager, and how uncomfortable that shift can be. Brian shares what actually changes when you move from leading a team to leading leaders, and why simple advice like “hit the forward button more” is harder to put into practice than it sounds.
He also explains the very real “Bob from Valves” problem in manufacturing. When critical knowledge lives in one person’s head, it feels efficient until it becomes a risk. That’s part of the reason they built “Valve Camp,” an onboarding program that brings engineers, technicians, and even HR closer to the product so everyone understands the mission.
Throughout the conversation, Brian reflects on how Marotta has kept its family-company culture while competing in aerospace and defense for more than 80 years, building hardware that has flown from the Apollo era to today’s heavy-lift rockets.
If you are an engineer moving into management, leading technical teams, or trying to scale without losing what makes your company special, this episode is for you.
Marotta Controls continues to grow across engineering, manufacturing, and support roles. If you want to work on aerospace systems that go from design to flight, take a look at their open positions.
00:00 From engineer to leader inside a growing aerospace company
07:45 The “buddy to boss” transition
11:30 Why delegation feels uncomfortable at first
14:42 Finding purpose when you stop doing the hands-on work
19:19 The “Bob from Valves” problem
24:40 Why documenting the “why” matters more than the “how”
27:13 Valve Camp and building technical talent from day one
Brian Ippolito
Matt Gjertsen