Are you afraid to fail (and talk about it)?
At a recent curated dinner, I asked leaders from a variety of industries to discuss a topic that doesn’t often enter first conversations: failure.
The most successful among us have failed, yet it is a subject riddled with anxiety and fear. We are afraid to be called out as a fraud, so we avoid talking about moments of doubt and insecurity. It is, in fact, the ability to screw up and fail that drives innovation, creativity, clarity, success, and more…
Brené Brown says moments of struggle and failure help us realize who we are.
Seth Godin received hundreds of rejection letters before finding that crack in the system.
Jason Russell and the Invisible Children team hosted countless school assemblies, rallying crowds and spreading their message long before the Kony 2012 video went viral.
Imagine if companies gave “Employee of the Month” awards to those who tried new initiatives and failed. The rule-followers and safe-players? They get pink slips.
Questions to consider:
1. How have failures contributed to the person you are today?
2. How are you encouraging those around you to fail more often?