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WINNING LEADERSHIP MINDSET: THE KRANZ APPROACH TO BUSINESS

  • Christopher Adams
  • Nov 24, 2025
  • 2 min read

Updated: Nov 24, 2025

When Apollo 13 failed, Gene Kranz made NASA’s mission crystal clear: “I’ve never lost an American in space… and I sure as hell aren’t going to lose one now.” His clarity of purpose aligned every engineer behind the only acceptable outcome—bringing the crew home safely. Business is no different. There are no participation trophies, only success or failure. Winning organizations contribute to society; losing ones weaken communities. Leadership demands belief, accountability, and the courage to say, “We must make it happen.” Put smart people in the room, let them debate, choose the best path forward, and commit to winning. Are you ready to win?



Engineers collaborating over detailed technical blueprints on a worktable, symbolizing strategic planning, problem-solving, and high-performance teamwork.


Gene Kranz was mission director for the Apollo 13 mission. When the spacecraft failed and NASA scrambled to bring the crew home safely, Kranz addressed his team with absolute clarity: “I have never lost an American in space, sure as hell aren’t going to lose one now. This crew is coming home. You got to believe it. Your team must believe it. And we must make it happen.”


It was April 1970. The engineers immediately huddled around tables and consoles, conserving power, purifying oxygen, and engineering solutions with whatever the astronauts already had onboard. They created air filters out of spare materials. They tested power-down procedures. They debated and challenged one another. Only one outcome mattered: bring the crew home.


They succeeded. All three astronauts returned safely.


The Why Came First

Kranz made the mission’s why unmistakably clear: No one dies on my watch. Not now. Not ever. Once the why was anchored, the what naturally followed—do whatever it takes. That clarity is the foundation of a winning leadership mindset that drives people to act with urgency, accountability, and focus.


NASA engineers acted with urgency, precision, and full accountability. There were no participation trophies on the line. The mission would be either:

  • Success or Failure

  • Life or Death

  • Homecoming or Catastrophe


Business works the same way.


Winning Matters

Like sports, business is a win-or-lose game. If a company keeps losing, it eventually closes—and that helps no one. Jack Welch often reminded leaders: when a business wins, society wins.


A winning company means:

  • Employees Get Paid More

  • Charitable Giving Increases

  • Families Thrive

  • Communities Improve

  • People Feel Happier, Safer, and More Optimistic


But when a business loses:

  • Paychecks Stop

  • Giving Dries Up

  • Support Systems Weaken

  • Neighborhoods Decline


Society doesn’t thrive when organizations don’t succeed. Leaders Set the Standard.


Be like Kranz. Tell your team: “We must make it happen.”


Don’t accept “we’ll try.”

Don’t accept vague effort.

Make it clear that success is the standard.


But before you say those words, you must believe them. Teams can sense uncertainty. They can feel hesitation. They know when the leader is performing versus when the leader is committed. They need to hear both: hope, and accountability


They must know the mission isn’t a dream—it’s a requirement. Debate. Decide. Move. Put the smartest people in the room. Let them debate. Let them challenge one another. Let the best ideas win.


Then move.

Decisively.


That’s what leaders do.

That’s what winning organizations do.


Are you ready to win?



Intersecting life, luxury, and leadership,


CHRIS ADAMS


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