Transcending Binary Success Delusion
Dr. Paul Cooper
Portfolio Career - digital healthcare content author, course developer, professional event moderator, educator, consultant and digital health advocate
In recent times, I've observed an increasing tendency, especially in media and political discussions, to frame events and achievements in starkly binary terms: success or failure, with blame or praise duly assigned. This reductionist view seems at odds with the multifaceted nature of real life.
The concept of success, particularly when viewed through the simplistic binary lens of success or failure, is limiting and pervades Western media narratives, promoting a distorted view of reality that I believe warrants a critical reassessment. This binary perspective fails to accommodate the rich spectrum of human experience. I propose the term 'Binary Success Delusion' to encapsulate the misleading and overly simplistic categorisation of outcomes as either total successes or total failures and I think living life through such a binary lens is limiting and unwarranted.
Let me explain. Take, for example, the recent lunar endeavor by Intuitive Machines, a small Texas company. This mission, under commercial contract to NASA marked the first landing by a private entity fifty years after the Apollo landings, and was actually quite a monumental step given that previously only nation states had landed on the Moon. However, the aftermath of the landing, marred by technical hitches and communication missteps, ignited a frenzy of binary judgments. This situation exemplifies the delusion of binary success: a groundbreaking achievement was overshadowed by an oversimplified narrative of triumph versus failure.
This incident serves as a microcosm of a larger issue: the reduction of complex outcomes to binary results: the Binary Success Delusion. Such simplification can fuel anxiety and dissatisfaction, distancing us from a more balanced and realistic understanding of progress and achievement.
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Going beyond endeavors like space exploration, adopting a more nuanced approach in my experience can lead to healthier, more constructive outcomes. The Pareto Principle, or the 80:20 rule, suggests that often the majority of benefits come from a fraction of the effort, and in practice this means recognising and celebrating partial successes and incremental achievements rather than adhering to an all-or-nothing mindset.
In personal goal-setting and professional environments alike, I advocate for a nuanced approach. For instance, in digital health education and corporate strategy, employing models like rubrics or the Japanese concept of Ikigai (what you love, what you're good at, what the world needs, and what you can be paid for) can foster a more comprehensive understanding of success with goals for achievement along the journey of life - not just a binary success or failure.
Ultimately, in my view redefining success on a graded scale, reflective of the diverse and complex nature of human endeavors, can lead to a more balanced and fulfilling life. Let’s redefine success together, embracing the nuances and the journey, rather than fixating solely on the destination.
I encourage others to share their perspectives and experiences in transcending the Binary Success Delusion.
Strategy| Business Transformation | Designing for Impact | Project Management
8 个月Thanks for introducing me to the concept of Ikigai. That really resonates.
Non Executive Chairman
8 个月Thanks for this insight Paul. Maybe with this mindset, there might also be less anxiety and depression in the world.
Mentor, results-oriented Project Professional. I bring experience managing, influencing, negotiating, and supporting project teams and stakeholders for over 25 years: telco, banking and finance, fed & state govt.
8 个月This is a wonderful and much-needed observation Dr. Paul Cooper: great wisdom, as always. Not only is any nuanced observation immediately shut down; there is no room for possibility, for "what if", why not" and "why" conversations. These conversations invite engagement and exploration about what is possible and even available beyond the measured results and outcomes. This is what being human is all about, after all.
Project Manager, Interaction Insights & Performance
8 个月I think you are right Paul to highlight the limitations of black & white thinking. Many people have rigid & unrealistic expectations about (everything) along with a very short-term perspective. They therefore have effectively no ability to recognise and take advantage of opportunities that might arise. A negative attitude towards what is perceived as a failure effectively shuts off the situational awareness that is needed to leverage the opportunities that may be present.