By Washington Chimuzu
At exactly 2:07 a.m. local time on April 11, 2026, the Artemis II Orion spacecraft carrying four astronauts returned to Earth with a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego, marking the successful conclusion of a historic 10-day mission to the Moon. For the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), this was a defining moment.
For project managers, the Artemis II mission offers powerful lessons on teamwork, diversity, and mutual commitment.
Launched on April 1 from Kennedy Space Center, Artemis II was the first crewed lunar mission in over 50 years, carrying Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen. The spacecraft, aptly named Integrity, travelled over 800,000 kilometres from Earth and executed a free-return trajectory around the Moon, demonstrating technical excellence.
Listening to the astronauts during their post-mission briefing, one could sense the deep chemistry they shared. Of particular interest were Christina Koch’s remarks describing their group not as a team, but as a crew: “a group that is in it all the time… stroking together every minute with the same purpose… willing to sacrifice silently for each other… gives grace and holds accountable.” This reflects what Bruce Tuckman described as the “performing” stage of team development, where trust is high, communication is seamless, and members operate with shared purpose.
This distinction is instructive. Many projects assemble teams, but few build crews.
Artemis II also highlights the power of diversity. The crew brought together different genders, races, nationalities, and professional backgrounds. This diversity was not symbolic; it was functional. It broadened perspectives, reduced groupthink, and strengthened problem-solving under pressure. In today’s complex environments, diversity must be understood not just as a social ideal, but as a strategic advantage.
However, diversity alone does not guarantee success. It must be supported by trust, inclusion, and strong communication. The Artemis II crew demonstrated high levels of empathy and psychological safety, enabling each member to contribute fully. Given the high-risk nature of the mission—especially during re-entry, where even minor errors carry significant consequences—communication had to be precise, timely, and purposeful.
Mutuality is another often overlooked lesson. In selecting team members, leaders typically focus on competencies—skills, experience, and qualifications. While essential, these do not tell the full story. We must also ask whether those selected would choose to be part of the team. Without mutual commitment, relationships can fall out of balance. Individuals may comply, but not fully commit. Over time, this erodes trust and performance. In contrast, when individuals believe in the mission and feel aligned with leadership, they bring their full selves to the project.
The Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK) reminds us that successful projects are built on effective teams. Increasingly, however, success is being redefined—not just in terms of time, cost, and scope, but by the value delivered and the strength of stakeholder relationships. High-performing teams, or crews, are central to this broader definition.
As Artemis II paves the way for future lunar exploration, its lessons extend far beyond space. For project leaders in Malawi and beyond, the challenge is clear: build not just teams, but crews that are diverse, committed, and mutually aligned towards one goal.
The success of Artemis II was neither by luck nor accident. Behind the four astronauts stood multiple teams across countries and sectors, building on lessons from past missions. Failure by any one of them would have led to a different outcome.