Inscribed in my son's
school, this message is a brilliant motto as well as lesson of life. You can
find these treasures only in schools. That is why they say 'Go |Back to
School' to people who have long completed their formal education and are
somewhere lost in the waves of life. Perhaps this is why they also say 'School
of Thought' adding Old or New as a prefix to denote the obsolete and
contemporary. School in real terms tells one about the world and the life,
their meaning and philosophy.
Thomas Alva Edison
developed close to 10000 unsuccessful prototypes of bulb before he developed
the first commercially viable electric bulb. When asked about his so many
failures, Edison was quoted as saying - “I have not failed 10,000 times. I
have not failed once. I have succeeded in proving that those 10,000 ways will
not work. When I have eliminated the ways that will not work, I will find the
way that will work.”
Most people find it more
difficult to handle failure than success. However the truth is that success
seldom teaches you anything, although everyone including me will want success
to happen. Success can spoil people if it goes over their head. Failure on the
other hand always carries a lesson with it. Learning or not learning from that
is our choice, often determined by our attitude. So while success is a
milestone, failure in reality is the teacher.
Winston Chruchill had
once said - Success consists of going from failure to failure without
loss of enthusiasm.”
J.K. Rowling
the celebrated author of the famous series Harry Potter went through
personal trials and tribulations and rejection from over 12 publishers
before Harry Potter book saw the light of the day. The rest is history they
say!
Despite failure being
such a great teacher, it is seldom looked as one. Most people scorn those who
fail; write them off and like to align with the rising sun. The one who fails
often suffers from self-denigration and hopelessness. The failure turns into a
loss and the 'failed' eventually turns into a loser. That pretty much pulls the
curtains down.
Like most people most
companies are also scared of failing. So much so that they try too hard not to
fail at anything and if they do instead of learning from the same, try to take
their eyes off it. Often success makes us blind to failures and we do not even
want to acknowledge it.
Toyota, a name that
became synonymous to cars worldwide, became the victim of its own success. The
case of unintended acceleration in some of its car model that killed close to
100 people in America, was attributed to serious technical flaws in the car.
Toyota that prides itself for quality found it too difficult to admit that they
had failed at something they boasted all these years. However as the
investigation became more intense the results clearly showed that Toyota knew
about those defects and had in fact misled US customers. In 2014 Toyota agreedto pay a staggering $1.2 billion to avoid prosecution for covering up severe
safety problems with “unintended acceleration” and continuing to make cars with
parts the FBI said Toyota “knew were deadly", according to court
documents.
Toyota could have avoided
breach of trust to its valued customers, loss of public image and brand equity
and financial setbacks by plainly acknowledging failure and learning from it.
Wonder why a company that institutionalized continuous improvements
could not do so! Perhaps their overwhelming success in the past made them allergic to even the remotest idea that they had failed at something.
Aversion to learning from
failure and too much attachment to past success can make people as well as
companies risk averse and hence less creative.
On the other hand,
companies that see failure as an opportunity to learn something new and build
on the same foster a culture of risk taking, experimentation and creativity.
Google rewards failure, Intuit hold failure parties and our very own Tata set
up a 'best failed idea' award. The thought behind all these moves is very clear,
these companies want to convert failures into opportunities of learning and by doing
so they win more and succeed more.
While success can engage, learning from failure can be engaging too. That way no one loses ever.