RSS

The value of failure

Article Date:  Feb 29 2008

Although attitudes are changing in this country, there is still a marked fear of failure. When people make mistakes, they don't own up to them, and even worse, many won't risk failing in the first place, writes Chris Ingram.

Thousands of executives in big companies have exactly that attitude. Once you get behind the façade, it’s difficult to figure out what it is they do. They’re very effective at stopping things from happening, but initiate absolutely nothing.

With entrepreneurs, there is a big difference in attitude – they’re desperate to make things happen so they’re prepared to take risks, although the image of the entrepreneur as a big gambler is wide of the mark. The successful entrepreneur is a controlled risk taker, doing everything to reduce the chances of failure in advance.

However, it is true that almost all entrepreneurs are optimists, so they rarely see the risk being as great as others do.

Personally, I always try to have a Plan B in reserve. This is something you must keep to yourself: if employees know that you have already planned for the failure of the venture it could well become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

John Maeda, a designer and computer scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, argues that ‘only those who are afraid of failure are ever truly creative’. But does it go deeper than that? How much success has, as its genesis, a humiliating experience or failure?

That my father regarded me as a failure because I didn’t pass O Level Maths at school will always be etched in my mind. I spent decades (literally) trying to impress him with my achievements in business. But his response was usually: ‘Son, when are you going to get a proper job?’ It’s sad, but I don’t think I would have achieved anywhere near as much if I’d had a more normal, caring and encouraging father. I’m sure I wouldn’t have been as driven.

Attitudes to failure in the US remain different. Eight years ago, I was briefly living in New York. I had arrived from London, having been trying to take my public company private. In the City, I had received a dozen or so elegant responses as to why this was not possible.

Within a month of being in New York, an investment banker approached me to say he not only wanted to take us private, but was going to provide a war chest of $2 billion (£1 billion). Since our market cap was under $300 million at the time, I kept pinching myself to see if it was a dream. In fact, I became nervous. In our roller-coaster ride on the stock market, things had not always gone smoothly – far from it. Hadn’t he realised?

I thought I’d better own up before things became embarrassing: ‘You do know we’ve screwed up a couple of times, don’t you?’ The elderly banker immediately replied: ‘Yeah, and I bet you’re a lot stronger for it!’ I could have hugged him.

The ability to bounce back is as important as the ability to be an out-and-out winner. Alex Ferguson, the most successful football manager this country has seen, said after the 2004/5 season when Manchester United won nothing after being close to winning a treble (Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League): ‘The test of any manager or player is how they handle adversity. We can reflect on what might have been as long as we like, but we have to look forward.’

Success and failure are strange bedfellows, and if you are to be a real winner you have to cope with both.

When I was a teenager, my sole interest in life was to run for England. I was in the Surrey Cross Country Championships and even though I had only just started training seriously, I found myself lying fourth out of a field of 90, immediately behind my club-mate, Robin Harwood. Then disaster struck – we went up the side of a hill and I seized up. By the time I got to the top I was 19th and never recovered. My club-mate was picked to run for the County while I looked on.

I decided I was a wimp who needed toughening up and I went out at nights when I got home in the winter months, looking for the toughest hills I could find. I hated hill running, but however I felt, I flogged myself up those hills chanting my team-mate’s name with every step: ‘Har-wood, Har-wood.’ I condensed my frustration into the very personal need to beat my outstanding club-mate. Although those nights seemed very long and miserable, it paid off spectacularly and within six months I was seventh in the South of England Championships.

This wasn’t just a (somewhat primitive) example of how to cope with failure, I learnt an additional lesson: really work on your weak points instead of continually polishing up your natural strengths. It works in business as much as in sport.

Chris Ingram has considerable experience of building and managing rapid-growth firms and is widely regarded as the father of the modern media agency. He started CIA in 1976 with three people and £10,000. It grew into Tempus Group and was sold to WPP for more than £430 million in 2001. He now runs The Ingram Partnership, a strategic brand-building and communications consultancy, and is a regular columnist for Business XL.

Comments 

There are currently no comments on this article

Sign up and get...

  • Regular GrowthBusiness newsletters
  • Post comments on articles
Sign up

Cut your speed to market and your costs!

FedEx Express has now created an account tailored perfectly for new small businesses. Instant account setup, online shipping, proof of delivery and an immediate discount of up to 15% off standard rates. Speed up your supply chain and gain the edge on your competitors! Visit: www.fedex.com/gb/smallbusiness

Looking to recruit?

Whichever role you are looking to fill you can be sure that Adecco only selects those candidates with a 'Can Do, Will Do, Will Fit' attitude. Better visit the people finding the people for London 2012.

Want help meeting your business objectives?

The Open University allows your staff to develop quickly, while causing minimal disruption to business operations. We can create solutions that help you to develop talent, increase professional skills and resolve business critical matters. Click to find out more.

Research

  • From video games developers to firms of architects, creative businesses of all kinds struggle to get adequate financing due to a misconception that they cannot be analysed systematically, claims a new report. The study comes from the Centre for Creative Business (CCB), a joint venture between London Business School and University of the Arts London.

Directors' Pay on AIM 2008

What is the average AIM company paying its chief executive? Who are AIM’s highest- and lowest-paid chief executives?

Global Technology Review 2008

Who are the world’s 200 most influential IT companies across sales, revenue growth, profits and net margins? Read more in the Global Technology Review 2008

More

Events Calendar

Investor AllStars 2009

23rd September, London Hilton, Park Lane

The CANACCORD Adams Media Magnate Awards 2009

26th March, Vinopolis, London

Rosenblatt New Energy Awards 2010

25th February, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD

More

More Analysis: Leadership & Management

Reinventing the media

These are testing times for media businesses. GrowthBusiness catches up with the winners of the Canaccord Adams Media Magnate Awards to find out how they are handling the various challenges they face. 

Save the world, quit your job

The global economy needs people like you to lead it out of recession, writes Simon Cook, CEO of venture firm DFJ Esprit.

The alpha leader in turbulent times

Forceful ‘alpha’ types are good at overcoming obstacles to get things done: perfect in a recession, you would have thought. But tough times can also bring out the ugly side of their dominant personalities.

Advertisement

Poll

Are you seeing green shoots?



Have your vote on current issues

People who read this also read

  • Qualities of great leaders

    Effective business leadership doesn’t just happen – it’s the result of careful work and learned skills, writes Tony Price, interim CEO of chief executives' organisation Vistage International. Some MDs and CEOs adopt a controlling style, others prefer a “hands-off” approach, and most of us fall somewhere between the two.
  • Mastering motivation

    If you want to flourish, it’s vital you understand what makes people tick.
  • Surviving a recession

    A recession can be like a volcano: to survive you have to move fast. As the economy becomes increasingly volatile, Ken Jacobson gives his take on what MDs, CEOs and owner managers need to do to keep their companies safe.
  • Q&A: Tax implications when selling a business

    I own 25% of a company that I have worked for for the last 6 years.
  • Know your strengths

    It’s assumed that entrepreneurs make good leaders, but I’m not so sure, writes Michael Jackson.

White Papers

12 Key Points to Consider When Selecting a Network Scanning Solution

Discover the 12 key points your company should consider before you evaluate and select a vulnerability assessment solution.

15-Minute Guide to Elevating the Customer Experience Through Statements

This guide focuses on the importance of customer statements, in particular the vital role they can play in marketing an organization's products and services, building and maintaining brand awareness, and reducing customer service costs.

15-Minute Guide to Intelligent Capture

Intelligent capture enables organizations to cope with enormous volumes and varieties of documents, accelerate information time to value, and reduce the IT burden of supporting multiple point solutions.

More

Take part in our competition and win a laptop

Growthbusiness.co.uk has teamed up with Insurantz.com to find out from you the secret of your business's longevity.

– Is it having a knack for hiring the right people or knowing that if you want something done properly, you need to do it yourself?

– Are you adept at reacting to changing market conditions and going the extra mile for your customers?

– Have you always had a keen eye for the numbers or made sure you have someone on board who does?

If your business has proven itself over a number of years, or if you know of a great local business and think it should be entered, then we want to hear about it!

A judging panel will draw up a shortlist of entrants for you to vote on to decide who will become the Growth Business Local Legend.

The winning company will receive computer equipment worth up to £500, plus £1,000 of business insurance (or free business cover up to an annual premium of £1,000 for larger businesses) all courtesy of our partners at Insurantz.com.

All shortlisted businesses will receive marketing collateral to promote your entry and encourage support from your customers and business associates. Everyone who enters the competition will automatically receive a 10% discount voucher code off insurance products bought from Insurantz.com.

To access the discount voucher code, please complete the survey.

At Insurantz..com, we encourage entrepreneurship, so start-up businesses are not charged extra when other insurers may decline or charge more. Insurantz.com offers a double-the-difference price guarantee on premiums where a better deal is found within 14 days of the cover start date.

Terms and conditions apply

Click here to enter the