Alex Rascanu delivered the "Fail Forward, How to Turn Mistakes into Steps to Success" presentation at the Learning Enrichment Foundation on November 20, 2013. More details about the presentation can be found at http://www.alexrascanu.com/fail-forward-turn-mistakes-into-success.
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Turn Mistakes Into Steps to Success
1. Fail Forward
Turn Mistakes Into
Steps to Success
by Alex Rascanu
alex@alexrascanu.com
at the Learning Enrichment Foundation
November 20, 2013
2. To succeed, you need only 4 things:
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
Relationships (ability to get along with others)
Equipping (those closest to you influence your level of success)
Attitude (your attitude, more than you aptitude, determine your altitude)
Leadership (to be more effective, improve your leadership skills)
3. changing your
attitude about failure.
Today we’ll focus on
My intention is to help you turn mistakes into steps to success.
4. 4 steps to failing forward:
1. Realize there is one major difference
between average people and
achieving people.
2. Get a new definition of failure.
3. Remove the “you” from failure.
4. Take action and reduce your fear.
5. 1. The one major difference between average
people and achieving people
What makes the difference? Why do some people achieve so much? Is it…
• Family background? It’s something to be grateful for, but no. A high
percentage of successful people come from broken homes.
• Wealth? No, many great achievers come from households of below-average to
average means.
• Opportunity? Opportunity is in the eye of the beholder. Two people with
similar gifts, talents and resources can look at a similar situation, and one will see
opportunity while the other sees nothing.
• High morals? No. Both you and I know people with high integrity who achieve
little, as well as dishonorable people who are high producers.
• The absence of hardship? For every achiever who has avoided tragedy
there’s a Nick Vujicic who overcame extreme physical disabilities or countless people
who have survived great horrors.
6. The difference between average
people and achieving ones
is their perception of and
response to failure.
Nothing else has the same kind of impact on people’s ability to achieve and
to accomplish whatever their hearts and minds desire.
7.
8. “There is no doubt in my mind that there
are many ways to be a winner, but there is
really one way to be a loser and that is to
fail and not look beyond the failure.”
(Kyle Rote Jr.)
9. Some of the attitudes I’ve had about failure (have you had
similar experiences?):
1. I feared failure (“1 of 3 of you won’t make it”)
2. I misunderstood failure (it’s not a percentage or a
test, and it’s not a single event. It’s a process)
3. I was unprepared for failure (assessed as “not a
strategic thinker” when that is one of my biggest assets)
10. “People are training for success when they
should be training for failure.
Failure is far more common than success;
poverty is more prevalent than wealth; and
disappointment is more normal than arrival.”
(J. Wallace Hamilton, in Leadership Magazine)
11. Aim for success, but also learn to confidently look the
prospect of failure in the eye and move forward anyway.
The question is not if you will have problems,
but how you are going to deal with them.
Are you going to fail forward or backward?
12. Motivational speakers like to ask “If the possibility of failure
were erased, what would you attempt to achieve?” It’s an
interesting question that can prompt us to ponder upon our
lives’ possibilities. But it’s a bad question.
There’s no achievement without failure. The framing of the
question gives people the wrong expectation. Here’s a better
question:
“If your perception of and response to
failure were changed, what would you
attempt to achieve?”
(John C. Maxwell, leadership author and speaker)
13. Regardless of the type of difficulties you’re facing, the key to
overcoming them doesn’t lie in changing your circumstances.
It’s in changing yourself. Make a commitment to fail
forward.
Failing Backward
Failing Forward
Blaming others
Taking responsibility
Repeating the same mistakes
Learning from each mistake
Expecting never to fail again
Knowing failure is a part of progress
Expecting to continually fail
Maintaining a positive attitude
Being limited by past mistakes
Taking new risks
Thinking “I am a failure”
Believing something didn’t work
Quitting
Persevering
14. 2. Get a new definition of failure and success
“The difference between greatness and
mediocrity is often how an individual
views a mistake.” (Nelson Boswell)
Don’t quickly judge isolated situations in your life and label them as
failures. Keep the bigger picture in mind. Such a perspective leads to
perseverance, which gives you more opportunities for success.
15. How should you judge failure?
a. People think failure is avoidable – it’s not
Know that you’re going to fail and makes mistakes. Here are the Rules
for Being Human:
Rule #1: You will learn lessons.
Rule #2: There are no mistakes – only lessons.
Rule #3: A lesson is repeated until it is learned.
Rule #4: If you don’t learn the easy lessons, they get harder. (i.e. pain will be
your teacher)
Rule #5: You’ll know you’ve learned a lesson when your actions change.
16. How should you judge failure? (continued)
b. People think failure is an event – it’s not
Success isn’t a destination, it’s a journey you take. And whether you
succeed comes from what you do day to day. Success is a process. The
same applies to failure – it’s the process of how you deal with life along
the way.
John Maxwell provides a useful definition for success in his book “The
Success Journey”:
SUCCESS =
knowing your purpose in life +
growing to reach your potential +
sowing seeds that benefit others
17.
18. How should you judge failure? (continued)
c. People think failure is objective – it’s not
You are the only person who can label what you do a failure.
Did you know that the average for entrepreneurs is 3.8 failures before
they build a successful company? (source: Tulane University professor Lisa Amos)
They don’t see setbacks as failures, so they overcome difficult odds and
become successful.
19. How should you judge failure? (continued)
d. People think failure is the enemy – it’s not
Most people try to avoid failure, but it takes adversity to create success.
“Failure is good. It’s fertilizer. Everything
I’ve learned about coaching I’ve learned
from making mistakes.” (NBA coach Rick Pitino)
Observe that high achievers don’t see failure as the enemy. Musicologist
Eloise Ristad said that “when we give ourselves permission to fail, we at
the same time give ourselves permission to excel.”
20. How should you judge failure? (continued)
e. People think failure is a stigma – it’s not
“Defeat may serve as well as victory to
shake the soul and let the glory out.”
(US Senator Sam Ervin Jr.)
Don’t let the mistakes you’ve made get you down. And don’t
let yourself think of them as stigmas.
Make each failure a step to success.
21. How should you judge failure? (continued)
f. People think failure is final – it’s not
Steps to success:
1. Afraid of being a fool
2. Looks like a fool
3. Fool
4. Successful entrepreneur
5. Genius
22. How can you learn a new definition of failure and develop
a different perspective on failure and success?
By making mistakes.
When you take on the next project, give yourself a
quota of mistakes to make and try to hit it before
bringing the task to completion. Even if you surpass it,
increase the quota.
Remember, mistakes don’t define failure. They’re just the
price of achievement on the success journey.
23. 3. Remove the “you” from failure
Tell yourself, “I’m not a failure. I failed at
doing something.” There’s a big difference.
All great achievers are given multiple reasons to believe
they are failures. But in the face of rejection and failings,
they continue believing in themselves and refuse to consider
themselves failures.
Give each project your very best. Regardless of what the
results will be, you’ll have a clear conscience.
24.
25. 7 abilities needed to fail forward:
1. Achievers reject rejection (take responsibility for your actions, but don’t
take failure personally)
2. Achievers see failure as temporary
3. Achievers see failures as isolated incidents (don’t let
incidents colour your view of yourself)
4. Achievers keep expectations realistic (goal <-> effort
required)
5. Achievers focus on strengths (focus on developing and maximizing
your strengths, but address a weakness if it’s a matter of character)
6. Achievers vary approaches to achievement
7. Achievers bounce back
26. Don’t wait until you feel positive to move forward. Take
action toward you goal and you’ll start feeling better.
27. 4. Take action and reduce your fear
3 forms of inaction when people are stuck
in a fear cycle:
a. Paralysis (people give up any hope of moving forward)
“The worst danger we face is the danger of being paralyzed
by doubts and fears. This danger is brought about those who
abandon faith and sneer at hope. It is brought on by those
who spread cynicism an try to blind us to the chance to do
good for mankind.” (US President Harry Truman)
28. b. Procrastination (‘opportunity’s natural assassin’)
c. Purposelessness (side-effects include self-pity, excuses, misused energy, and
hopelessness)
“A life spent in making mistakes is not online more
honorable but more useful than a life spent doing nothing.”
(playwright George Bernard Shaw)
You can’t avoid fear or wait for motivation to
get you going. To conquer fear, you need to
feel the fear and take action anyway.
29. “Every morning in Africa, a gazelle wakes up. It knows that
is must run faster than the fastest lion or it will be killed.
Every morning a lion wakes up. It knows that is must outrun
the slowest gazelle or it will starve.
It doesn’t matter whether you are a lion or a gazelle: when
the sun comes up you had better be running.” (African parable)
30. 4 steps to failing forward:
1. Realize there is one major difference
between average people and
achieving people.
2. Get a new definition of failure.
3. Remove the “you” from failure.
4. Take action and reduce your fear.
31. Sources
Main source and recommended reading: “Failing Forward: Turning
Mistakes into Stepping Stones for Success” by John Maxwell
Media sources:
Slide 7: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_Vg4uyYwEk
Slide 12: http://michaelhyatt.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/john-maxwell.png
Slide 17: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UizlkbS61mQ
Slide 19: http://www.celebritynetworth.com/articles/celebrity/what-does-rick-pitino-get-forwinning-the-ncaa-tournament/
Slide 20: http://www.golubphoto.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/01_Sam-Ervin.jpg
Slide 24: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y6hz_s2XIAU
Slide 27: http://www.mjfbc.com/uploads/6/2/3/8/6238837/9350612_orig.jpg?1 and
http://www.biography.com/imported/images/Biography/Images/Profiles/T/Harry-Truman9511121-1-402.jpg
Slide 29: http://guysneedhelp.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/lion-chasing-gazelle-quoteafrican-safari-pic.jpg