Failure and Learning
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Failure and Learning
All about reflection, improvement, leadership, failing
Curated by Beth Kanter
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Critical Lessons from 5 Common Startup Mistakes

Critical Lessons from 5 Common Startup Mistakes | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
How to find inspiration in your failure, learn from your mistakes and come out better on the other side.Get the latest blog articles on business ideas and...
Beth Kanter's insight:

One of my favorite quotes comes from legendary auto entrepreneur Henry Ford. As a business owner, I appreciate it because it captures what our mistakesand failures really are: Opportunities.

"Failure is only the opportunity to begin again, only this time more wisely."

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CEP | Data Point: Foundations’ Information Needs vs. Nonprofits’ Needs | The Center for Effective Philanthropy

CEP | Data Point: Foundations’ Information Needs vs. Nonprofits’ Needs | The Center for Effective Philanthropy | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
Beth Kanter's insight:

We surveyed the 300 nonprofit leaders who comprise CEP’s Grantee Voice panel about some of the issues they face in performance management. In addition to the fact that most nonprofits do not receive any financial or non-monetary help for performance measurement, nonprofits also said that their funders are more interested in focusing on assessment information that is useful to foundations than information that would be helpful to nonprofits.

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MediaPost Publications Fail Fast Or Fail Smart? 01/31/2013

MediaPost Publications Fail Fast Or Fail Smart? 01/31/2013 | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
Fail Fast Or Fail Smart? - 01/31/2013
Beth Kanter's insight:

The bit that caught my eye:


The practice of being able to conduct quick, cheap and relatively painless tests, experiments or research exercises in order to gain invaluable insights, feedback, solutions to hypotheses and the like becomes vital in order to rethink, close the loop and ultimately “pivot” or change course based on integrating the new lessons into the model.

Does this idea sound familiar? It should. It originates from the very segment that now struggles to understand and implement it in its operations: the world of big business. One might argue that many of these precepts are in fact basic tenets of direct marketing and the “Test. Learn. Evolve” methodology.



Read more: http://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/192385/fail-fast-or-fail-smart.html#ixzz2Jf49P4Lx

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Why aren't people creative?

Why aren't people creative? | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
Corporate leaders often say they want employees to show creativity on the job, but few organizations do much to nurture it
Beth Kanter's insight:

What keeps organizations from being more creative?    Fear, Narcissism, too many rules, and second guessing.   Now, how do change that? 

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Let’s revisit the concept of failure-friendliness

Let’s revisit the concept of failure-friendliness | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
Eight years ago, I wrote a blog article about failure-friendliness in nonprofit technology.  It was very much inspired by my friend and colleague, Dan Scharfman.  Since Dan died this week, and this...
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Seth's Blog: Out on a limb

Seth's Blog: Out on a limb | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
This might not work. I didn't realize how tired I was until I started driving away from the Icarus launch event on Wednesday. Since June, I've been working flat out on creating the four books that were part of the...
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The Failure Bow: Matt Smith at TEDx Bellevue

Seattle improviser and auctioneer Matt Smith shows how altering our physiological response to failure can lead to transparency, availability, flexibility and...
Beth Kanter's insight:

This is a great message and technique to incorporate into a session about letting failure go.   The video is short and worth listening to all of it, but if you are impatient skip to minute 7 and listen to the last five minutes.


Inner Voices:   We all have inner negative headsets that we learned as kids.   It boils down to: 


Don't Make A Mistake
Don't Make A Mistake


Then there is the "mistake" moment.   We cringe ....   Think of your last mistake -- personal or at work.     Feel what your body does -- the cringe, the shame.  What does it feel like.    That's what is stopping us from learning from mistakes or failure.


Our body gives in to the mistake.  It's like gumby doing the bidding.   I made a mistake!


No matter you learned this as a child - in school or whatever.    As an adult, it probably still haunts you.   It keeps you from being creative, stops us, but here is a technique to get past it:  The failure bow.


Coming to Terms With A Mistake So You Can Learn


Trapeze artists do it, improvisers, gymnists


Don't go into cringe mode, do this:


(1)   Raise hands to offer it up and let it go

(2)   Dumb ass grin like a dog being trained and uses submission

(3)   Say thank you I failed and move on


Don't walk into a meeting late and raise your hands and shout this, but you can do it under the table


If you incorporate the failure bow,  you are not glorifying failure - but rewarding the transparency, being accountable, being in the present, and paving the way to innovation.


Visuals to incorporate

http://www.flickr.com/photos/cambodia4kidsorg/galleries/72157632309133445/










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The Power of Failure in the Nonprofit Sector

The Power of Failure in the Nonprofit Sector | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it


This is an excellent overview and summary of the fail fast idea in the nonprofit sector.


Taking a cue from Silicon Valley, nonprofits are learning to use their failures as an integral part of the process of innovation and, ultimately, progress.


  • Some nonprofits are tempted to hide their failures, partially for fear of donor reaction. But most acknowledge that transparency about what works and what doesn’t is crucial to their eventual success.


  • “In Silicon Valley, failure is a rite of passage,” said Vota. “If you’re not failing, you’re not considered to be innovating enough.” Silicon Valley investors, in turn, regularly reward entrepreneurs’ risk-taking behavior, though they know the venture may fail and they will lose their capital.
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The Most Efficient Die Early

The Most Efficient Die Early | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it

Key Point:


A healthier approach also means managing acceptable losses. That's different — and, ironically, much safer — than trying to prevent failures altogether, by over-relying on past data to try "managing" risks that are inherently unknowable. We need to see those losses not as failures but as investments in the future. To succeed, we have to make it cool to fail in the right places, as long as it's recoverable, and as long as we learn from the failures and adjust.

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Leadership lessons in how to fail well | SmartBlogs

Leadership lessons in how to fail well | SmartBlogs | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
Leaders need to think about failure as a process we go through rather than an event to avoid at all costs.
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What Africa & a Nonprofit Dev Summit Taught Me: Start with the User | Zerodivide

What Africa & a Nonprofit Dev Summit Taught Me: Start with the User | Zerodivide | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
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Why Great Entrepreneurs Take Big Risks And Sometimes Get Fired

Why Great Entrepreneurs Take Big Risks And Sometimes Get Fired | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it

These are the thoughts of Ben Smith, Founder of Merchant Circle, on the lack of risk-aversion of entrepreneurs.


"If you are going to be a serial entrepreneur, you are probably going to get fired. And you certainly are going to fail. So maybe you should think about:

  • Failing with grace.
  • Failing though persistence, not because you give up.
  • Taking ownership for failure, but not taking it personally. There is a fine line.
  • Accepting the risk and being ready for it. Have a base of relationships to support you when it happens.
  • Failing as a member of your team. But not failing your team.
  • Leading through failure. Don’t walk away."
Will you accept failing to succeed?

Via Guillaume Decugis
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To Change the World, Fear Means Go

To Change the World, Fear Means Go | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
You can't move away from what scares you.
Beth Kanter's insight:

It's exactly the advice your mother didn't give you, unless your mom was a rule-breaker like my mine. Fear means go. This was one of my mom's favorite principles. She said it when I was petrified to go to school for the first time; she said it when I was going to be on live television and was nervous I had nothing valuable to say. She believed fear was a compass — an indicator of the direction you should go in if you want to become the person you have the potential to be.


Next time you're afraid of something, instead of turning around, take these three steps.

  1. Acknowledge you're afraid. Instead of swallowing or hiding your fear, and pretending you don't have it, look at it. For instance, if you are continuously avoiding a particular activity or person, have the courage to ask yourself "why?" Doing this requires honesty, authenticity, and vulnerability.
  2. Determine what kind of fear it is. Ask yourself: Is this a healthy fear that I need to pay attention to (e.g., Is there a hungry bear on the path ahead of me?) Or is this a fear rooted in my own insecurities and self-doubts? It can be difficult to tell the difference at times, but if you really want to know the answer, pay close attention to what your gut says.
  3. Acknowledge it as a gift. If it is an insecurity-based fear, it could be one of the most powerful gifts you'll ever receive. These fears are like a compass. They tell you where you need to go — toward that which scares you.


Over the years, I've learned that fear is a great teacher. If we pretend it doesn't exist, we miss out on all of its lessons. We aren't able to improve, become stronger, and build our self-confidence. On the other hand, if we embrace it as a guide, it can help us move through life's challenges and come into our ultimate purpose — making us more fulfilled, and increasing the positive impact we have on the world.

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Why 90% of Startups Fail [INFOGRAPHIC]

Why 90% of Startups Fail [INFOGRAPHIC] | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
It seems like there's a hot new startup in the limelight more often than not, but the cold truth is 90% of tech start ups fail.
Beth Kanter's insight:

Ninety percent of startups fail, and that includes startups that generate huge buzz in their early days. "[S]ome fail due to a lack of vision and others have terrible timing. Ultimately, there is a lack of foresight which might have saved their companies," says a spokesperson for Allmand Law, which analyzed successful and failed startups for an infographic included in this article.

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Entrepreneurs Reframe Failure as Intentional Iteration - Forbes

Entrepreneurs Reframe Failure as Intentional Iteration - Forbes | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
Failure.  It’s a harsh word.  No one enjoys failure.  No one ever really says, “Hey, I really want to fail today so I can learn.”  Yet failure is an inevitable part of human existence and it plays a central...
Beth Kanter's insight:

Good definition of failure


Failure in the entrepreneurial vernacular is reframed as intentional iteration and experimentation.  It’s not failure in the catastrophic sense.  Failure is simply a portfolio of setbacks, false starts, wrong turns, and mistakes that are expected and tolerated because the entrepreneur purposefully iterates in order to gather new, relevant, and timely information.  Through iteration entrepreneurs seek not to kill an idea but to make it better, and this happens through an anticipated cycle of pivoting and adapting.


Don't use the F word, simply pressing and unimportant.


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Persistence, Possibility, And Whether You Can Cut It As An Entrepreneur

Persistence, Possibility, And Whether You Can Cut It As An Entrepreneur | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
The climate has never been better for entrepreneurs, but the startling reality is that for the past thirty years, the failure rate of new businesses hasn’t changed--and it’s pretty depressing.
Beth Kanter's insight:

The importance of learning how to "pivot" in the face of failure

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Struggle For Smarts? How Eastern And Western Cultures Tackle Learning : NPR

Struggle For Smarts? How Eastern And Western Cultures Tackle Learning : NPR | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it

Beth, I heard ths this story on the radio which aired Nov. 12 and thought there was a connection between a culture's attitude towards struggle and failure/success.

For the most part in American culture, intellectual struggle in school children is seen as an indicator of weakness, while in Eastern cultures it is not only tolerated, it is often used to measure emotional strength.

Beth Kanter's insight:

Great piece!

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Peter Sims

Peter Sims | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
Video Answers:  Peter Sims: What are two reasons you should build a company? Peter Sims is an award-winning entrepreneur and author.
Beth Kanter's insight:
to ask "why not?" when doing something new, and "why the hell am I doing this?" when doing something are doing or have done for a while
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How To: Roll Your Own FailFaire | FAILFaire

How To: Roll Your Own FailFaire | FAILFaire | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it

How to Steps for the failfaire methodology

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Placing Small Bets in the Arts Sector: Innovation Fund

Placing Small Bets in the Arts Sector: Innovation Fund | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it

California arts organizations conducted 28 experiments to achieve new relevance for audiences, communities and professional artists with support from The James Irvine Foundation. Here’s an overview of what they did and what they learned.

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Can Catering for Creativity Make Innovation Happen? | Innovation Management

Can Catering for Creativity Make Innovation Happen? | Innovation Management | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
Many firms tend to mix the terms and concepts of creativity and innovation. There is a view that catering for creativity automatically makes innovation happen.
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A question of courage | Aspire-CS

A question of courage | Aspire-CS | Failure and Learning | Scoop.it
 I never fully understood the negative impact of fear in the workplace until I had left it and could look at it as an outsider.
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JK Rowling: The fringe benefits of failure

At her Harvard commencement speech, "Harry Potter" author JK Rowling offers some powerful, heartening advice to dreamers and overachievers, including one hard-won lesson that she deems "worth more than any qualification I ever earned."...


Via axelletess
Beth Kanter's comment, October 27, 2011 12:11 AM
Thank you so much. G reat to find another curated list on failure ..
Guillaume Decugis's comment, November 29, 2012 3:38 AM
I love this speech!