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This week Sharon discusses the importance of embracing failure. (Fail forward!) Gain distinctions about how to own your own story, what it means to be (and be a part of) a deliberately developmental organization, and our default reactions to failure. Sharon shares tips for how to get comfortable stepping into the Fail Forward! mindset and offers questions to prompt your own reflection on this topic. Plus she brings in perspectives from both the "Harvard Business Review" and the "Gilmore Girls." Enjoy!
Ideas Shared:2. Give it extreme importance and let it stop us in our tracks (e.g. Excuse me while I go climb back into bed.)
While it may be human nature to run away from failure, there is so much research out there that suggests that running towards failure can be a tremendously positive catalyst for individuals and organizations.
Tips for embracing a Fail Forward mindset:Name 3 times you have failed in your life. Notice for each one: What did it feel like to fail? What was at stake in not succeeding? Notice, without judgement, if you have any default tendencies when it comes to failure? (Rush ahead? Climb in bed?) What did you learn from these failures at the time? What new learning might today – with all the new experiences you have had – offer you about these past failures?
What are you afraid of that's keeping you in place? What might happen if you gave yourself permission not just to fail, but to celebrate your failures?
What are simple ways that you could begin failing forward today – this week – the month?
So true, Lorelei, so true.
Resources and Links:
By Point Road Studios5
4343 ratings
This week Sharon discusses the importance of embracing failure. (Fail forward!) Gain distinctions about how to own your own story, what it means to be (and be a part of) a deliberately developmental organization, and our default reactions to failure. Sharon shares tips for how to get comfortable stepping into the Fail Forward! mindset and offers questions to prompt your own reflection on this topic. Plus she brings in perspectives from both the "Harvard Business Review" and the "Gilmore Girls." Enjoy!
Ideas Shared:2. Give it extreme importance and let it stop us in our tracks (e.g. Excuse me while I go climb back into bed.)
While it may be human nature to run away from failure, there is so much research out there that suggests that running towards failure can be a tremendously positive catalyst for individuals and organizations.
Tips for embracing a Fail Forward mindset:Name 3 times you have failed in your life. Notice for each one: What did it feel like to fail? What was at stake in not succeeding? Notice, without judgement, if you have any default tendencies when it comes to failure? (Rush ahead? Climb in bed?) What did you learn from these failures at the time? What new learning might today – with all the new experiences you have had – offer you about these past failures?
What are you afraid of that's keeping you in place? What might happen if you gave yourself permission not just to fail, but to celebrate your failures?
What are simple ways that you could begin failing forward today – this week – the month?
So true, Lorelei, so true.
Resources and Links: