Celebrating failure boosts creativity (What I learned at Holden, #4)
Marie Gettel-Gilmartin
Never be boring! | Award-winning writer, podcaster, and inclusive communicator and leader | Helping companies boost employee engagement, productivity, and thought leadership | Business and leadership coach
This article is #4 in a series about what I learned/relearned from a week in beautiful Holden Village in July 2024. Read the others here.
“I have not failed. I’ve just discovered 10,000 approaches that won’t be successful.” –Thomas Edison, after failing repeatedly while inventing the lightbulb
During the at Holden Village, we played a game called “I Failed.”
As author and improv actor Sara Carmer McMahon wrote in her “The Playdate Deck,”
“…Improvisation teaches us to view failure as a valuable opportunity. By embracing our mishaps, we can diminish the power that the fear of failure wields over us. One of the easiest ways to do this is to celebrate it!”
During “I Failed,” one person throws their hands up in the air and says, “I failed!” and the other cheers and applauds them. Then you switch turns.
Can you imagine if we all did that in the workplace instead of being ashamed of our failures?
It reminds me of two excellent books:
Failure becomes an opportunity for growth when we view it as an important element of creativity and success.
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For example, Airbnb initially struggled to gain traction. Instead of quitting, they experimented, continuously refining their business model. By constantly adapting and learning from their failures, Airbnb transformed into a global hospitality giant.
Here are some ways celebrating your failures will boost your creativity:
Failure fuels creativity and unlocks new levels of innovation. We might even achieve breakthroughs that seemed impossible before.
Caveat: Some failures are pretty enormous and can’t be undone. So perhaps not EVERY failure can be celebrated (for example, committing a crime or making a mistake that loses your company millions of dollars). But most are small ones and can be built on for success. And ALL failures can be life lessons.
We live in a culture where we constantly celebrate success. Social media feeds are filled with accomplishments and perfect photos. In the workplace, no one wants to admit their failures in case it blocks career advancement. But when people feel safe to admit failures without fear of retribution, you can create a culture of continuous learning and improvement.
The next time you make a mistake, think about throwing your hands up in the air with a partner, friend, or colleague and celebrating your failure together!
Reframing your failure as a learning experience will make you more resilient, innovative, and creative.
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I help professional services firms and organizations avoid BORING and boost employee engagement, productivity, and readership. I translate technical, complex, and lackluster language into accessible, dynamic, story-driven text.
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Co-Author of Go for No! | Speaker and Virtual Trainer. Reprogramming how people think and feel about rejection to sell, serve, and succeed in business and life. | Follow & Hit the ?? for NOtivation! #GoforNo
3 个月Love this Marie!
Accenture
3 个月So true, particularly when there's containment. Unfortunately, some failure can be seriously detrimental on many levels and often impossible to reverse. But without a doubt they all come with opportunity to learn, to be creative, adjust, adapt and grow ...often not with same associations.