Project Management Lessons from the Manhattan Project
Lessons on taking risks and being decisive in the face of uncertainties and limited information.
My curiosity about the Manhattan Project started in my college days. I had my first introduction lectures on Physics over 35 years ago. Now, as an engineer, Iโm always keen on the history of science, technology, and applied engineering. I read this book in December 2015 while traveling to Abuja for my PMIยฎ Project Management Professional certification examination.
The duo of the late General Leslie Groves (1922โ1970) and Robert J. Oppenheimer (1904โ1967) were the midwives of the first atomic bomb and the nuclear age. My interest was in how the scientific, technical, and project management challenges were confronted and overcome. For project managers and business leaders, the lessons from how this feat was pulled off are still as relevant today as when the book was first written.
General Leslie Groves as one of the main actors of those times penned a book that is unbeatably interesting and highly educating. As a project manager, I found the story riveting from the first to the last page
Unparalleled leadership and management efforts were needed to guide this monumental project to successโโโin terms of its aims. Many of the theoretical concepts needed for this task were as of then still nascent and unproven. Moving from concepts to practical reality took a relatively short time.
This is not a belated celebration of the unquantifiable material and physical damages and the wasting away of millions of invaluable lives resulting from World War II (or any war for that matter). But this feat was and still is a testament to American ingenuity that a bomb that was decisively important towards winning and ending the war was not yet completely assembled or tested just about three weeks before it was first deployed on the war front. And yet, it worked on the first try.
As stated by the author, the first gun-type atomic bomb was dropped in combat without a prior test to ascertain if it would work, โNevertheless, the indications for success were strong enough so that no one urged us to change our plans of dropping the first gun-type bomb in combat without prior test.โ
From the book, it is clearly evident that it was World War II that made the development of atomic bombs and atomic energy possible. It would have been very difficult for any nation (America included) to contemplate and commit to such a costly project (about $23 billion in 2019) in a time of peace. Realizing that feat in peacetime in a relatively short time would have been more daunting.
In spite of present-day challenges, I agree with the author that the world is a better place today and is still what it is because America was the first nation to create the atomic bomb and also developed and mastered nuclear energy. One can only imagine what would have happened if such powers has fallen first, into the hands of Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany, or to Josef Stalin in the heydays of the Soviet Empire.
The bombing of the World Trade Center in New York on September 11, 2001, the Paris massacres of November 2015, the bombings in Brussels of March 2016, and many others were unimaginably evil. Heinous as they were, these atrocities would have paled to mere children's plays in comparison to what these terrorists and their at times state-backed sponsors would have done if they ever got access to these weapons of calamitous destruction first before any other nation.
Why do I think this book still matters today? The reasons as adduced by the author are as practical now as when the book was first written over 60 years ago. These same reasons if followed through will greatly increase the odds of success for every person, individual, or organizations involved in projects.
Key takeaways
At the bedrock of any successful project is a clearly defined, unmistakable specific objective. As a project leader, manager, or frontline worker, you must tailor your actions towards the accomplishment of your project.
Every part of your project must have a specific task carefully allocated and supervised. This will result in unprecedented unmatched operational efficiencies for you and the entire organization.
As the leader, you should provide positive, clear-cut, unquestioned leadership and direction at all project levels. Any ambiguity of focus will fritter away your much-needed resources.
Project managers should make maximum use of already existing agencies, facilities, and services โ governmental, industrial, and academic. With a finite and well-defined objective, project organizational resources cannot and must not be designed to operate in perpetuity.
Full backing of the organizational leadership is a must for the success of your project. The Manhattan Project enjoyed the full backing of the American government. Combining this with the nearly infinite potential of American science, engineering, and industry coupled with the almost unlimited supply of people endowed with ingenuity and determination was what made this feat possible.
Notable Quotes
โฆnothing would be more fatal to success than to try to arrive at a perfect plan before taking any important step.
โI suggested that the time was fast approaching when we should begin to make plans for the bombing operation itself, even though we still had no assurance that the bomb would be effective.โ
โโฆa nuclear war could never be fought on this earth without bringing disaster to all mankind.โ
โโฆ if we played it safe, we could never hope to win; chances had to be taken.โ
โWhen man is willing to make the effort, he is capable of accomplishing virtually anything.โ
Source
Copyright 1962 by ยฉGeneral Leslie Groves, Now It Can Be Told โ The Story of The Manhattan Project, Da Capo Press, Inc.
The author has previously published this article in Illumination.
If you enjoy this piece, support my writing by chipping in to buy me a Substack subscription, here.