When Being Wrong Is Right
This article was written by Brian Milner.
When I started out as a developer, working with teams full of more experienced developers, the pressure to prove myself seemed immense. After all, I was the new guy. Everyone else on the team had proven themselves but I could barely even find the break room.
In that environment, I adopted a posture of never showing weakness. I thought that if I showed I didn’t know how to do something, everyone there would think they’d made a mistake in hiring me. They would never respect me. As a result, I likely wasted untold hours trying to figure things out on my own. How much faster would it have been if I’d only asked for help?
I wish I could say that this stopped as I climbed the ladder in various companies. Quite the opposite: as a manager the pressure often seemed even greater. I had been elevated and my team members had not, so I had to prove that I was the right person for the job and they hadn’t made a mistake promoting me.
After years of self-reflection and learning, I’ve come to understand that at the heart of this bluster was imposter syndrome: the fear that I wasn’t really worthy of the position I held and that some day, everyone would find out.
I know I’m not alone in this. Many others experience and cope with the same thing. Recognizing an issue is the first step to overcoming it, the “inspect” in inspect and adapt. Now that I help teams to reach their highest potential, I see even more clearly the need to counter the effects this syndrome can have on us all.
I believe the reason so many others experience the same fears I did is that we fail to create an environment where people see that being wrong is OK. Actually, it’s more than OK! Being wrong is a necessary part of learning and improving. If I only try things I am sure I can accomplish, how could I ever expand my abilities?
领英推荐
So, as leaders and innovators, we have a responsibility to welcome and encourage mistakes. We need to create cultures where people can proudly say, “I’m not sure how to do this,” or “I tried something that didn’t work out very well.” If a person is diminished in any way for making statements like that, you can bet they’ll never again admit room for growth in that organization.
How do we make uncertainty acceptable?
While imposter syndrome may never fully leave us, we can escape from its more sinister effects. Work is a lifelong journey of learning. The sooner we accept and model that we never arrive, never become perfect, the sooner we can inspire our teams to say those three simple and constructive words “I was wrong.”
Please leave your comments where this blog was originally published, on the Mountain Goat Software blog.
Socio Líder de CONSULTING (Business Transformation, Technology, Cybersecurity) @ KPMG AR ?? En CONSULTING ayudamos a nuestros clientes a TRANSFORMAR su NEGOCIO, integrando mejores prácticas, TECNOLOGíA y CIBERSEGURIDAD
3 年Thanks Mike Cohn for sharing and Brian Milner CST for writing the article. I guess most of us who have been in the software development world have had the imposter syndrome lurking behind us many times. I remember feeling like a god when I came up with a great design idea ... and a piece of, well you know what, whenever my idea failed miserably. Some of my imposter syndrome eased as I got older and matured :) In any case, we all make mistakes and it's key to reduce blaming behaviours. Also, having a little of sense of humor in the workplace also helps. Being able to laugh at your own mistakes makes things easier most of the time (as long as you end up fixing them, of couse! ??)
Agile Coach | Technology & Transformation | SAFe Agilist | RTE | PSM I | DevOps Enthusiast | Toastmaster???
3 年Thank you for sharing this Mike! It's important to foster these values of openness and the courage to embrace our failures without the fear of being blamed. Eventually we're all learning and growing each day & being wrong is OK.
Product Development | Digital Transformation | Coach | Trainer | Facilitator
3 年Thanks for sharing this Mike Cohn, very important topic in the agile world having courage, openness etc.. Totaly relate to the story, i guess we all have gone through those fears but you said after time we realise that fear does not take us anywhere. One thing i would emphasis over and over again, Leaders need to demonstrate this behaviour to the doers, to encourge more. How many times you hear your manager or senior management admitting to their mistakes? i have see some, and i must say those teams and business were thriving for suceess.
Agile Coach at ABB
3 年Very true. Admitting when we are wrong makes us credible, it enables people to be open without fear of being blamed. There's nothing wrong in being wrong.
Software Project Manager at National Renewable Energy Laboratory
3 年When you foster an environment of questions, people are less likely to be afraid of asking what they think others might find obvious. This does two things; it puts the answer out to be examined with transparency for everyone else afraid to ask, and it prevents others who thought they knew from going forward with wrong assumptions.