Fail Often to Quickly Succeed!

June 30, 2008 · Filed Under Best Practices, Value Analysis 

At our CVAL Training Course last week one of my students, a supply chain operation’s manager for a large system in the Mid-West, told me that he goes out of his way to let his value team members know that it is OK to stumble, falter or even fail on the projects that they are working on given that it will lead to even more successes more often and quicker than ever before.

 

I was very impressed with this operation manager’s attitude toward failure since it is one of the critical success factors in trying, evaluating, experimenting, and adopting or discarding products, services and technologies that you are investigating. More importantly, “rapid decision(s) and swift follow-through are essential to keeping an organization innovative” according to Dan Quinn, CEO of Rath & Strong Management Consulting. 

 

Unfortunately, too many healthcare organizations espouse “finger pointing” as their predominant management style which only stifles innovation, instead of encouraging rapid decision making. It should be your goal therefore, to encourage your project managers to “fail often to quickly succeed”, even if your management is preoccupied with the blame game.

 

As Thomas Edison once said about inventing the light bulb, “I haven’t failed; I just found 10,000 ways how not to make a light bulb”.  If Thomas Edison can fail 10,000 times before he succeeded in making a workable light bulb, then I think that your project managers should be able to fail often and quickly while on their way to million dollar savings success. 

Comments

2 Responses to “Fail Often to Quickly Succeed!”

  1. Sue Massey on June 30th, 2008 6:30 pm

    Thanks for posting the article, was certainly a great read!

  2. admin on June 30th, 2008 6:38 pm

    To “PLUS That” thought as Walt Disney would say, the buzz lingo going on in the business world is “if you are going to fail, fail fast.” So basically you know there are going to be failures along the way no matter what you do but if you can speed that process up so that if you ARE going to fail well then you will want to fail fast. This way you can move onto another project or initiative that you may have a better chance at succeeding at. Oh and pocketing all that great knowledge you learned from your previous failure(s).

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