Innovation coach Diana Kander: Failure is an option

July 11, 2017  |  Diana Kander

Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone.
[divide]

Yes, you could fail, and it would be embarrassing. People would talk about it. People you know. But let’s be honest, they’re only trying to reassure themselves about the risk-averse choices they’ve made.

Yes, you could fail, and it could get you fired. I’m sure you’ve envisioned carrying your belongings in a cardboard box out the door in a walk of shame.  But don’t stress about it, because they don’t really let you go back to your desk after firing you these days; they usually just ship you your things to make sure you don’t steal that red stapler on your way out.

But can’t you see that playing it safe, blending in, appeasing everyone you work with is the real danger?  It doesn’t give anyone a reason to keep you around when times are tough.  It doesn’t give them the reason they need to promote you and give you more authority, more autonomy.

Yes, you could fail, but if you don’t, you’ll never get better! The world is changing at an ever increasing pace, and those individuals who will own the new economy are those that can continuously find new ways to evolve and provide new value to their boss, to their customers, to each and every one of their relationships.

And you can’t grow and develop without failing.  It’s just science.

Show me someone who’s seldom fallen while ice skating and I’ll show you a bad ice skater! The more you fall, the more opportunities you have to learn!  The more you learn, the better you get and the more value you create.

[divide]

Diana Kander is the founder of Leap Ventures, is a best-selling New York Times author and keynote speaker. Follow her on Twitter @dianakander.
Tagged ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        ‘Night Without Borders’ opens coffee house doors to honor heritage through harmony

        By Tommy Felts | October 7, 2025

        Culture transcends borders, said Danny Soriano, surrounded Friday night in a popular Crossroads coffee shop by music, dance, art, food, and drinks that all shared a common link: Latino flavor. “Whether it’s Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Argentina, we all come together as Latinos, as Hispanics, and celebrate our heritage,” said Soriano, who organized a…

        KC GIFT orders a full meal with $100K Wah Gwan grant: Job creation (with a side of inspiration)

        By Tommy Felts | October 7, 2025

        Young people on Kansas City’s east side need to see examples of what can be achieved when someone who looks like them works hard — and wins, said Tanyech Yarbrough, pledging to use her recent grant funding from KC G.I.F.T. to mirror entrepreneurship to her community, as well as expand her Troost eatery. Yarbrough’s Wah…

        GEWKC returning to familiar venue (but its new destinations might surprise ticket holders)

        By Tommy Felts | October 7, 2025

        When Global Entrepreneurship Week pulls into the station later this fall, Kansas City participants can expect a fresh experience inside one of the region’s most iconic landmarks, said Callie England, noting an intentional effort behind the scenes should help reroute the “best of the best” events onto custom agendas. “While you’ll see a few familiar…

        Wichita program drives highway of resources to more KC startups; founders tout who they met along the way

        By Tommy Felts | October 6, 2025

        Opening its doors to Midwest companies outside Kansas for the first time, a Wichita-based program that connects startups with the tools to better engage enterprise partners offered an added benefit to Kansas City entrepreneurs: a new ecosystem of support just a few hours from home. “The program’s Wichita location inspired us to broaden our outreach…