A Fantastic "Failure"
I’m a bit of a space geek.?So last Thursday morning, I set my alarm and blocked 30 minutes on my calendar to turn to YouTube and watch Space X attempt to launch its Starship and Super Heavy booster.?I love watching Space X launches.?They are masters of the live feed and their launches never disappoint.?This one promised to be especially eventful as Space X was attempting to launch the largest rocket ever built, with twice the thrust of the Saturn V which took us to the moon so many years ago.??
Below is a link to the launch itself.?I’ve cut it to just before liftoff.??
The rocket’s launch and subsequent explosion kicked off a huge media debate about whether the launch was a success or a failure.?Clearly, it did not meet all of its objectives: Several of the 33 booster rockets failed, the launch pad was completely destroyed by the thrust, the second stage failed to separate, and ultimately, the rocket had to be destroyed. However, as a student of leadership, the media response is frustrating. Because if you follow Space X and watched the Space X live feed, you understand how fantastic the supposed "failure" is and how much it will help Space X continue to revolutionize space travel. The difference is a big part of what makes Space X so successful.??
From a leadership perspective, the most amazing part was the response of the crowd of employees AFTER the rocket blew up.?They cheered! Sure, there was sadness and disappointment for a short time after destruction but it was brief. It felt like a collective, "well crap." But following the pause, the crowd of employees began to cheer. Everything they'd worked so hard for so long just blew up -- hundreds of millions of dollars -- and they cheered.?
More than almost any company I know, Space X embodies the ethos of “fail fast.”?Space X has built a culture that is willing to push itself hard, try new things, and see what happens.?They are built to iterate fast and learn fast. Most amazingly, they are willing to do it very publicly. ??
When you are faced with a new and difficult problem, you have a choice.?You can sit at the table with tons of designers and engineers and attempt to plan for every scenario.?This will take huge amounts of people, time and money.?Option B is you build something, launch it, and learn.?Action is your buzzword.?You prepare to fail, learn and go again.??
Space X chose Option B.
I stand in awe.?I would love to tell you that I could do that. I’m not sure, but I think it is worth trying to emulate in some way shape or form.?Because the reality is that we are operating in an environment that is constantly changing.?We’re all dealing with technology.?With the pace of change across a number of fronts only speeding up — from carbon insets and offsets to services, to the myriad of technologies -- we need to capture some of the Space X pixie dust.??
What does a successful failure look like???
I think we get the notion of failure wrong.?We lump different types of “failures” together because they make great headlines.?But in doing so, we risk confusing our people too, failing to separate those who would fail from lack of vision, courage, and effort from those who fail because of boldness, daring, and creativity.?Doing something new and leading change is hard.?You are moving into the unknown.?You can't possibly get everything right and are very likely to fail along the way. We want people who have the vision and courage to move forward anyway.?Those are the very people we want.?Failure, under those circumstances, are not simply to be avoided but wholeheartedly embraced and celebrated.?And we’re not celebrating the “failure” but the courage and bravery and the learnings we know will come from it.??
Does this approach work??
It certainly has for Space X.?What began with the first rocket in 2006 is now the largest space launch company in the world.?In 2022, it carried over half the total weight to space globally.?It launches at a rate 10 times that of its nearest American competitor. They use many of those cheap launches to carry thousands of small satellites to orbit to provide global high-speed internet, which we use at two sites where land-based internet is not available.?As for the value of the company??From start-up to valued at $137B based on its latest round of funding.?And when the Super Heavy and Starship ultimately succeed it will revolutionize space travel more than anything else since the first human went to space.?
So go for it!?Be bold. Try something new.?Plan for it.?Lean into it.?Temper expectations. Make sure you (and we) can survive it.?Prepare to fail and prepare to learn.?Then do it again, and again, until you succeed.
Onward!
Jeff
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Real Estate Agent at Parker Real Estate Co LLC & DHCA CLL
1 年POWERFUL words!!
Agriculture Sales | Accounts Manager-Memphis, TN
1 年Awesome post Jeff! It pulled me in as a reader from the start (I love most anything space.) By the time I finished reading I not only gained mindset insight but also solidification that failure can = success. In my professional (and even personal) years, I can look back and see where I gained wisdom, perseverance, drive and humility from unsuccessful situations or events. Life is a continuous lesson. Thanks for sharing.
Risk | Investigations | Implementation | Audit
1 年I tend to think finding out what doesn't work is just another step closer to figuring out what does.
Advisory, Business Transformation using SAP solutions
1 年Love this. Failure is the best teacher.
Retail Real Estate Broker /Expert tenant and landlord representation, market expansion and leasing analysis for over 25 years.
1 年Society puts so much emphasis on failure to the point of it being a stigma that says one isnt intelligent, educated or prepared. Whereas at Space X none of those words can be used to describe their work or the the people who are employed there. Maybe this sort of "failure" should be reclassified as "a potential outcome that unfortunately materialized".