Examine success as much as failure

5 Post author: gwern 31 March 2011 05:29PM

Harvard Business Review has posted something right up our alley: "Why Leaders Don't Learn From Success"

Also, the HBR essay links to a similar discussion of how Pixar avoids being brainwashed by its own success (something I had always wondered about - they seem too consistently successful): "How Pixar Fosters Collective Creativity".

Comments (5)

Comment author: nazgulnarsil 31 March 2011 05:52:44PM 4 points [-]

I disagree. I think there's too much focus on the ultra successful outliers, giving people little information on how the average person who achieved the goals they want to achieve went about doing it.

Comment author: Desrtopa 31 March 2011 07:49:13PM 5 points [-]

My impression is that people will frequently try to study the successes of others to try to imitate them, but as the article suggests, will less often study the factors that lead to their own success than factors that lead to their failure.

Comment author: David_Gerard 31 March 2011 07:46:07PM *  0 points [-]

As the linked article is actually saying: Inside businesses, there's a tendency to assume success is luck or "I'm just such a genius." The question "where did we go right?" is too infrequently asked. Perhaps it is luck or it is genius, but there's never a postmortem to answer which and thus better plan for the future.

Comment author: timtyler 31 March 2011 08:28:34PM *  0 points [-]

Examine success as much as failure

Usually it is better to examine failures more. This is partly due to the asymmetry between creation and destruction. Only the paranoid survive. This is also why people tend to have bad dreams.

Comment author: rhollerith_dot_com 01 April 2011 02:57:13PM *  0 points [-]

There is a big difference between a lucrative monopolistic position (created by intellectual-property law and the huge costs of designing and fabbing microprocessors) and many of the other situations firms find themselves in.