Failure
is a part of any endeavour.
If you're
not failing, you're not trying.
And if
you are waiting to start when you are sure you won't fail, then you would never
start
You can
choose to allow failure to affect your state of mind or you can choose to take
advantage of it.
The most
successful people get the most out of each failure.
Use failure to your
benefit.
Most of us have learned to avoid failure at all
costs. But failure is a wonderful way to learn and stretch yourself. All
innovation requires failure in the development process. Failing regularly gives the best chance of long-term
success.
Achieve greater levels of success by failing
effectively:
1. Fail
quickly.
If an
idea isn't going to pan out, you might as well figure it sooner rather than
later.
Avoid
spending too much time on a faulty premise.
It
doesn't make sense to invest time and money over 12 months only to realize that
an idea won't work if you could've reached the same conclusion in three weeks.
At the same time, it's
important not to fail too quickly. Give an idea a fair chance to be successful.
Some things take time more time than others do.
2. Ensure that
you're failing for the right reason.
Be
certain the necessary time and resources are utilized. If something has gone
wrong, determine carefully if it was the idea or the execution.
Have you considered every
possible need of your project?
Can your idea work if you
change your approach?
3. Fail differently
each time.
Many
people repeat their mistakes. Failing loses all of its value if you fail to learn
from it. Each time you fail in a new way, you have the opportunity to improve
your approach.
4. After
a failure, make a list of everything you learned.
What did
you learn? How can you apply that information in the future? What's the next
logical step?
Failing
isn't fun. Ensure you're getting the most out of it. Keep a failure journal to
record your discoveries and new ideas.
Create a plan for the
future that considers the new information you've acquired. This plan will
evolve over time.
5. Keep an accurate
perspective.
What is failure?
It's an undesired result. That's it. It's not a grading of your intelligence,
worth, or future. There's no reason to take it personally. It's simply an idea
that didn't work out.
Maintain
detached demeanour from your results and forge ahead.
The great coach, John
Wooden, stated that he hoped no one would be able to tell if his team had won
or lost based on the team's demeanour after a game. That's detachment.
Be resilient. Your
feelings of self-worth aren't dependent on your results. You can feel good
about yourself even when you don't achieve your desired outcome.
Be proud that you were
brave enough to fail and continue.
6. Keep failure and
fault separate.
We all
learned in childhood that admitting to mistakes resulted taking the blame.
Whether you're working on a self-improvement project or a project at work, keep
the blame to a minimum.
7. Failure
should bring you closer to an optimal solution.
The more
challenging the goal, the more times you can expect to fail before achieving
success.
8. Effective
failing creates new opportunities.
Many of
the most important inventions resulted from mistakes. For example, the glue
used in post-it notes resulted from an attempt to create a super-strong
adhesive.
Avoid feeling down about failing.
View each
failure as a step in the right direction.
There's
much to be learned via failure.
Embrace
failure.
Just be
certain to fail effectively!
Thank you for your teaching. I enjoy reading ur post
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