Continuing
on our theme, 'Fear of Failure', it seems that in our society, it is considered
a bad thing to fail. From our earliest memory, we are all taught to succeed at
what we try. It does not matter if it is taking a few steps on wobbly legs or
negotiating an international merger of two huge organizations, we are
conditioned that success is the goal and failure is anathema. Through this
conditioning, we are taught to feel great when we succeed and to feel awful
when we fail.
Take
away the stigma of the word, and a failure is simply an attempt to do something
that did not work out as planned. In the learning process, we obtain more
information, momentum, resolve, inspiration, insight, and knowledge when we
fail than when we succeed. To succeed is to get something done, but we have not
learned very much. For example, without the corrective adjustments by ourselves
and our parents, we would never learn to walk or talk. It is the constant
reshaping of previous attempts that cause our forward progress.
People
need to embrace failure and to stop feeling bad about it. What we need in life
is more 'at-bats' rather than more home runs. Each time we go for something
new, we risk failure, but not taking that risk is a bigger problem, because we
block our own advancement.
The
most often-quoted example of this theory is the story of Thomas Edison, who
found that carbonized bamboo filaments worked well for his light bulb. To
re-cap his most famous quotation: “I have not failed, I have just found 10,000
things that won’t work.” He also acknowledged that by being creative while
simultaneously inventive, he was able to develop things that seemed like
serendipity, but they were really the culmination of a lot of hard work and
numerous failures. He once said, “Just because something doesn’t do what you
planned it to doesn’t mean it’s useless.”
The
key to embracing failure is to let go of the stigma and seek out the learning
potential in every activity. They ought to teach a course on failing in schools.
Kids should be introduced to the concepts of failure - as long as something was
learned - as the route to eventual success. Instead, we hammer home the idea
that to fail is to not live up to expectations. Children learn to fear rather
than embrace failure. That attitude permeates our society, and it has a
crippling effect on every organization.
Another
aspect of failure is the idea that we never really fail until we quit trying.
As long as we are stretching to achieve a goal, we have the potential for
success. I love the quotation from Vince Lombardi who said, “We never lost a
game, but sometimes we just ran out of quarters.”
I
believe there needs to be good judgment when deciding how long to persevere. I
do not think Winston Churchill was right when he said “Never, never, never,
quit.” At some point, it is time to learn a lesson and leave the battlefield.
It is okay to have a discarded scheme or to recognize a blind alley and cut
your losses. It is important to recognize when we have run out of quarters, but
it is wrong to quit trying prematurely. I think the difference between those
two mindsets is the difference between genius and mediocrity.
I am
not advocating that we fail on purpose. Doing things right should always be the
objective. What I want to champion is that the only thing to avoid is making
the same mistake over and over again. Some people focus on being busy just to
have something to do. Thomas Edison had a quote for that too. He said, “Being
busy does not always mean real work.”
Institute
an “Experience Award” at work for daring to risk. Honor people who stretch and
try but fail, as long as they learn from the experience. It may seem unorthodox
and “over the top” to many stuffy managers who will not tolerate things that
are irregular. Too bad these managers are leaving real creativity off the
table.
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