Ed Gibson
About Ed Gibson :
For 21 years, Ed Gibson held the American record for time in space, having spent 84 straight days aboard America's first space station, Skylab, as the Scientist-Pilot. During that 1974 mission, Ed Gibson worked outside the space station for more than 15 hours during three different space walks.
During his 14-year career with NASA, Ed Gibson served on the support crew of the Apollo 12 mission and was the ground communicator with the flight crew as they explored the moon. Ed Gibson earned Air Force wings and logged over 2,200 hours in high-performance aircraft and 100 hours in helicopters.
Ed Gibson earned his bachelor's degree in engineering from the University of Rochester and a master's degree and doctorate in Engineering and Physics from the California Institute of Technology. After one year in industry, Ed Gibson was selected as one of six members of the first group of Scientist-Astronauts, edging out 2,000 other applicants.
After his NASA career, Ed Gibson excelled in program management and marketing with Booz, Allen, and Hamilton and TRW. He later served as the president of the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry and his own consulting company, Gibson International. Ed Gibson is recently retired as Senior Vice President and Contract Manager with Science Applications International Corporation.
Ed Gibson Topics: Leadership and Spaceflight
Late U.S. President John F. Kennedy launched America's determined pursuit to win the international race to space when he declared, "I believe we should go to the moon." What followed that simple, 8-word challenge was a frenzied, all-out effort by thousands of managers, engineers, and researchers to accomplish a seemingly insurmountable task. While most managers possess a reasonable level of administrative ability to accomplish tasks that flow from a declared goal, the qualities that distinguish true leaders are much less common, a situation as true today as it was in 1961 when President Kennedy issued his national challenge. Ed weaves absorbing descriptions of the experience of spaceflight into clear identifications of leadership qualities of the early pioneers who set the stage, the rocketry spearhead, the political leader who inspired a nation, astronauts who set the bar high, and dynamic heroes on the ground who compelled success in technical development and mission control. Ed shows how each of these leaders, driven by vision and courage, earned the respect and trust of the teams they led. As they tempered these qualities with empathy, they added a human touch to their greatness.
Management and Spaceflight Humankind's most ambitious and exciting venture — human flight to the moon — succeeded beyond all expectations. Adherence to the basic principles of good management guided by common sense led the way. The early management of the space program set the bar at unprecedented heights. However, in subsequent years, mediocrity crept in, lowered performance, and escalated costs as national leadership ignored the very principles that enabled earlier success. As Ed describes the triumphs of America's space program during the Apollo era, he identifies the seven basic principles of good management that led to success — principles that apply to any endeavor, public, private, or non-profit. Integrating personal experiences from liftoff and space walks to re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere, Ed illustrates the ability to initiate action, focus on the mission, organize lean, competent teams, motivate and properly support staff, and lastly, get out of the way. The presentation is enriched by Ed's ability to creatively put the listener's mind in the spacecraft to experience flight. Through humor and an insightful perspective into America's opportunities in space, he demonstrates how solid management can enable the U.S. to maintain and extend its leading role in space exploration.
Our Greatest Adventure: Spaceflight Just as explorers, and later settlers, sailed the seas and spread across our continent, humans now leave our planet and venture into space. From liftoff and space walks to re-entry into Earth's atmosphere, the audience is absorbed and entranced by a world that only a handful of humans have ever experienced. Gliding over Earth at a serene five miles per second, living months without gravity, and watching Earth's features become as familiar as the face of an old friend, Ed intrigues audiences with personal experiences gained during his 35-million-mile flight into space. With touches of humor, he puts the mind of the audience into the spacecraft to enjoy the sensations and emotions felt exclusively by those few humans who've led our outward thrusts into the universe around us — astronauts and cosmonauts. Now, as 14 nations around the world build another space station in Earth's orbit, the recounting of life onboard America's first space station, Skylab, and the medical challenges encountered upon return to Earth, are not just fascinating, but highly relevant. His intriguing presentation reflects on our current outward migration and the future of human space exloration.
|