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Image Credit: LinkedIn |
LinkedIn is awash with articles and lists of how to be successful in business, but there is very little written about why falling flat on your ass can be a good thing. According to a recent article in Entrepreneur, we all need to start acting like scientists. To a boffin, failure is just another data point which will ultimately lead to the right solution, or as the author of the piece puts it:
"For the scientist, a negative result is not an indication that they are a bad scientist. In fact, it’s quite the opposite. Proving a hypothesis wrong is often just as useful as proving it right because you learned something along the way"
There is a school of thought that people who enter into a project with a fear of failure are actually more likely to do so because their negative mindset will affect the outcome. Firstly, you are closed off to creativity because anything innovative automatically carries a higher element of risk. If it hasn't been done before then it is, by its very nature, unproven and hence is more likely to go belly up. And secondly, if you do try something unique and it initially fails you are more likely to give up rather than try again and realize the full potential of the idea.
The real trick here is to teach yourself to accept failure, learn from it and move on. Dr. John C. Maxwell is a World expert on leadership and his key insight is very simple. It's all down to perseverance. He cites the example of Thomas Edison who was apparently asked, whilst developing the prototype for the light bulb, how he could keep going after continued failure. His reply:
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Image Credit: Quotes Gram |
Yet each and every one of them remained resilient and adhered to the 5 golden rules of making failure work in your favors:
1. Reject Rejection
Achievers know their self-worth and never consider themselves a failure even when things don't play out the way they wanted.
2. Take Blame
Never inculpate others, accept the situation for what it is, suck it up and set about making it right
3. Failure is Temporary
A huge chasm from which you can never get out or a stepping stone to something greater? Guess which route winners choose?
4. Realistic Expectations
We all fail from time to time. Nothing and no-one is perfect. Accept it.
5. Focus on Strengths / Diminish Weaknesses
Recognize your talents, focus on them and if you have flaws then try and work with people who can make up for your shortcomings.
Let's be honest, we've all been there at some stage. That hideous moment when something goes wrong and you simply want the ground to swallow you up. But the ones who go on to win are the ones who pick themselves up off the ground, dust themselves down and simply carry on. As Sir Richard Branson puts:
Let's be honest, we've all been there at some stage. That hideous moment when something goes wrong and you simply want the ground to swallow you up. But the ones who go on to win are the ones who pick themselves up off the ground, dust themselves down and simply carry on. As Sir Richard Branson puts:
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Image Credit:AZ Quotes |
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