I believe it is important to separate good failures from bad
failures. Good failures happen when, even though you made the correct
decision, you still lost. Bad failures happen because you made bad
decisions, or worse, didn’t make a decision at all. Although the two
feel the same, they have a completely different long-term impact.
I’m a novice poker player. One of the first things I learned was that
there were good wins and bad wins. Good wins were because you had a
sound strategy of betting where the odds were in your favor. Bad wins
happened when you just got lucky. Going all-in on a 2-7 off-suit might
win the hand. But it doesn’t mean you’re a good poker player.
Good Failures
Mentally separating good failures from bad failures takes work. Poker
is a simple game where the laws of probability are cleanly defined.
Real life is a lot messier. It takes more effort to decide which
failures were because of a bad decision and which were just the
unintended side-effects of the best choice available.
Although it can be difficult to separate the two, there are benefits
to making two piles instead of just one. By separating the two types of
failures, it is easier to persevere through good failures. It may hurt
to have your business proposal shut down for the fifteenth time, but it
isn’t necessarily a bad failure.
By separating the two, you can also avoid more bad failures. If you
fail because of laziness, indecision or poor planning, you can quickly
correct those in the future. Knowing the difference between good and
bad failures keeps you from repeating stupid mistakes.
Types of Good Failures
I’ve found that there are several categories of good failures. These
are the kinds of failures you might actually seek out. Since they come
from good, not bad, decisions, they are the best way to fail.
1. High Upside, Low Downside
There are many areas of life where the upside is far greater than the
downside. When I write an article, it takes about 90 minutes of work.
If nobody comments or responds to that post, then I’ve just wasted 90
minutes.
However, if the article becomes popular, it can bring in thousands of
visitors to my website. Those thousands of visitors translate into new
readers who can get value from the website. In addition, the extra
traffic often results in a higher monthly income for me.
Writing blog entries is an example where failure is cheap and winning
can be huge. I’d gladly take a dozen or two dozen failures for a big
hit. A post that doesn’t get attention is a good failure.
2. Breaking Through Your Limits
The only way you can know your limits are to go past them.
Occasionally I’ve committed myself to more work than I can handle. The
result is stress and, in extreme cases, complete burnout. Doing more
than you can handle on a regular basis is a recipe for a nervous
breakdown.
However, if you don’t test those limits and occasionally go past
them, you can never improve. You’ll always go slightly below your
capacity, never reaching your possible potential. I don’t enjoy an
exhausting schedule, but occasionally facing one ensures my productivity
muscles stay strong.
3. Embarrassment and Smart Risk-Taking
There are some situations where failures and successes can’t be
separated. There is no action that will guarantee you only get success.
In these cases, it can be useful to ignore the losses since the wins
will make up for it.
Public speaking is a great example. Any chance you get to speak in
public runs you the risk of embarrassment. You might say something
stupid. The audience might not like your speech. But if you don’t face
those failures, it’s impossible to deliver a fantastic speech.
4. Staying Inside Your Comfort Zone
The only way to have a bad failure is to stay put. If you are
constantly experimenting and pushing beyond your daily routine, any
result is a good result. Avoiding the things that scare you doesn’t
make you safe, it makes you weaker.
Over a year ago I took dance classes. For a self-proclaimed geek,
this was definitely a step outside my comfort zone. I loved the class.
Even though it was outside of my comfort zone, I had a great time and
learned something valuable. This wasn’t a failure, but it just as easily
could have been. It’s better to discourage laziness than occasionally
stumbling.
5. Taking on Too Big a Challenge
More than a few times I’ve set goals that were nearly impossible to
accomplish. I didn’t have enough time to reach the deadline and I had no
idea what I was doing. Although setting extremely difficult challenges
results in a lot of failures, it keeps you sharp.
The ideal challenge level is where success is possible, but only if
you work incredibly hard. Unfortunately, finding this sweet spot means
you’ll end up making some goals too hard and others too easy. If you
never fail at a big challenge it probably means most of your goals have
been set too easy.
Just as there are good and bad failures, there are good and bad wins.
I’d rather have a good failure than a bad win. A bad win might feel
nice in the short term, but it is damaging over the big picture.
Do you have a personal example of a good failure? Please share it in the comments below.
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