Most technical teams think they have a technology problem.
They usually don’t.
In this episode, Dr. Thomas Zurbuchen, former head of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, talks about what actually goes wrong after overseeing dozens of missions and tens of billions in spend.
We get into why canceling missions isn’t failure. It’s what makes risk possible in the first place. If you don’t kill things, one bad bet can quietly consume everything around it.
He also breaks down something that feels backwards at first. Constraints are what make teams better. Not more time. Not more people. Not more budget. Constraints.
There’s a moment where he talks about realizing he could actually destroy teams by giving them more funding. That shift from “provide resources” to “protect focus” shows up again and again in how he thinks about leadership.
We also get into what happens as organizations scale. How they drift toward safety. How bureaucracy creeps in without anyone intending it. And why speed is usually the first thing you lose.
On the team side, we talk about why adding people when you’re behind often makes things worse, not better. And how much of leadership is just making sure the right people are in the right roles, not trying to turn everyone into something they’re not.
There’s also a really practical piece on creating a culture where ideas get challenged hard, without people feeling attacked. What that actually looks like in a room, and why most teams get that balance wrong.
And probably the biggest takeaway: It’s not the technology. It’s the people system around it.
If you’re leading engineers, running complex projects, or trying to move faster inside a system that keeps slowing you down, this one will feel very familiar.
00:00 Why canceling missions enables risk
06:40 How organizations drift toward safety
12:05 Constraints vs resources
18:20 Why adding people slows you down
24:10 Getting the right people in the right roles
29:30 Attacking ideas not people
34:45 The real reason projects fail
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zurbuchen/
Website
Website: https://www.bettereverydaystudios.com/