SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 65
Download to read offline
Eat -Sleep -


Fail, Repeat.
How to Normalise & Embrace Failure.
John Griffin
Failure.
I have missed more than 9,000 shots
in my career. I have lost almost 300
games. On 26 occasions I have
been entrusted to take the game
winning shot, and I missed. I have
failed over and over and over again.
And that is why I succeed.
“
Michael Jordan
My Name Is John.
And I think our attitude


towards failure is broken.
Hi
How do we


define failure?!
fail.
to be unsuccessful in achieving your goal.


to neglect to do something.


to not succeed in what you are trying to achieve or are expected to do.


verb
Atychiphobia.
the abnormal and persistent fear


of failure, to the degree that it has negative
e
ff
ects on the pattern of one's life.
noun
At-ychi-phobia
Manifestations.
Failure
• Reluctance to try new things or get


involved in challenging projects.


• Self-sabotage – for example, procrastination.


• Low con
fi
dence – commonly using negative
statements like “This can’t be done!”


• Perfectionism – A willingness to try only those things
that you know you'll
fi
nish perfectly and successfully.
Failure, or the fear of it,
has the power to stop
our ideas in their tracks,
and can make us think
in harmful ways…
I believe…
According to a 2018 report from
the Global Entrepreneurship
Monitor, roughly one-third of
wantrepreneurs don’t start a
business because of fear of failure.
“
Fail Fast
Without the right
understanding, environment,
tools and support, the ‘fail fast’
approach is meaningless.
Clouds Judgement.
How Failure...
The Fable of the Fox and the Grapes by Aesop is


a powerful example of something called cognitive
dissonance.


The Fox desires a bunch of grapes hanging high
from its vine in a tree. After numerous failed
attempts to get the grapes he “decides” that he
doesn't want the grapes after all.


They are probably sour or not ripe.


The fox’s failure leads to him disassociating with


his desired goal, and rationalising his failure by
criticising or condemning what he set out to obtain.
We ignore the facts.
The Aesop’s fable of the Fox and Grapes.
The more we think, talk and plan around


an idea, the more we become naturally
attached.


The idea essentially becomes our ‘baby’.


This leads to us becoming protective of our
idea, and naturally we want to nurture and
grow it, rather than accepting it’s failed


and giving it up!
We become too


attached to our ideas.
Once we get settled on a particular idea,
and feel we’ve invested time, energy and
often money into something, it becomes
increasingly hard to stay open to new ideas.


We often become closed o
ff
to external
input, feeling the hard work is done.
We become less


open to new ideas.
These are all knock-on
effects of our fear of
failure, and obstacles
we need to recognise.
So, is there a‘fear of failure’ silver bullet?
a simple and seemingly magical
solution to a complicated problem.
Silver Bullet
Noun
=
+
+
Things won’t always go the way


we want, and we have to become
resilient to failure and learn to
embrace it as part of our work!
We have to change
our attitude to
failure because…
Not all failures


are created equal.
But...
Failure.
Types of...
Within organisations failure


can be categorised into 3 types…
Most failures in this category are considered “bad.”


They usually involve deviations from speci
fi
cations
and closely de
fi
ned processes.


With proper training, employees can follow


those processes consistently. When they don’t


inattention, or lack of ability usually results in failure.
Preventable
failures
in predictable operations.
1.
Toyota’s manufacturing processes are


in fact responsible for many of the


ways we work today.


They pioneered the lean philosophy


we all know, and introduced


concepts such as Kanban and Kaizen.
Accepting Failure.
Taiichi Ohno: Hero of the Toyota Production
Toyota’s culture does not stigmatise failure.


Failure is simply accepted as a way to
determine what can be improved by
cultivating workplaces where problems


can be found and corrected quickly.
Accepting Failure.
A particular combination of needs, people,
and problems that may have never occurred
before can cause this type of failure to occur.


For example a hospital emergency room,
responding to enemy actions on the
battle
fi
eld, and running a fast-growing start-
up all occur in unpredictable situations.
Unavoidable
failures
in complex systems.
2.
Failures in this category are considered “good”,
because they provide valuable new knowledge
that can help an organisation leap ahead of the
competition and ensure its future growth.


They occur when experimentation is necessary.
Intelligent
failures
at the frontier of new ideas.
3.
Failures.
Intelligent
Let’s focus on:
Intelligent Failure:


The term “intelligent failure” was coined


by Professor Sim Sitkin of Dukes University


in a Research article into Organisational Behaviour called:


“Learning Through Failure: The Strategy of Small Losses.”
The idea behind the concept is simple:


If your organisation can adopt the
concept of intelligent failure, it will
become more agile, better at risk


taking, and more adept at
organisational learning.
The 4 characteristics


of intelligent failure.
• It’s carefully planned


• The risks aren’t too great


• The downsides are controlled


• There’s a mechanism for sharing the learnings
The author and strategy leader Rita McGrath


goes on to de
fi
ne intelligent failure by these
characteristics:
Failure, if managed well,


can be a very useful thing.


Organisations can’t possibly
undertake the risks necessary for
innovation and growth if they’re not
comfortable with the idea of failing.
“
Rita McGrath
Framework.
Failure friendly
Design Sprints
Hailing from visionary
Designers within Google
Ventures, Design Sprints are


a 5 day process for testing and
validating ideas in a rapid way.


The framework has been used
across the world in hundreds


of product companies.
Design Sprints
Solve big challenges in a week
Design Sprints
Fail ?
Design Sprint


= Intelligent Failure
• It’s carefully planned


You frame the challenge and do the research + planning at the start.
• The risks aren’t too great


You set the time limit of 5 days, things don’t creep into weeks and months.
• The downsides are controlled


You
fi
nd out if your idea is strong quickly, and if not, you can pivot fast.
• There’s a mechanism for sharing the learnings


You always end a design sprint with a de
fi
nitive way


to move forward and learnings to share.
FAILS.
Everybody
Case study
In 2004 Facebook grew from 1 million


to 6 million members.


Because of Facebook’s meteoric rise, the
persistent question from Silicon Valley venture
capitalists became “What’s your social strategy?”


In response, Net
fl
ix launched their


social powered feature Friends.
The concept behind the feature
was for friends to gain insights into
what each other liked to watch,
driving social engagement and a
delightful experience throughout
the platform.
But, after 6 years, trying to get Net
fl
ix
Friends to take o
ff
, the team realised that
they weren’t engaging enough customers,
and that it was time to call it a day.


They quietly retired the feature in 2010.
Small wins clouded judgement


The amount of users taking up the feature did grow, just not by enough.
Why did Net
fl
ix persist for so long?
CEO support was strong


The Net
fl
ix CEO really believed in the idea, and that was hard to ignore.
They thought execution was the issue, not the idea


There was so much belief in the idea, they assumed they just weren’t doing it right.
Lessons Learnt!
Focus on the idea, not the source


Because the idea had strong CEO support, it got more time and e
ff
ort applied.
Detach from your ideas / Kill ownership


Nobody likes to kill projects. However, passion and hope can cloud judgement.
Take o
ff
the blinkers & ignore sunk costs


Just because you’ve sunk a lot of time and budget into something doesn’t mean you should
carry on, take o
ff
the blinkers and let the facts validate whether you should continue.
So, how do we re-wire our
feelings towards failure?
FAIL


EXPERIMENT
Don't think of it as failure,
think of it as designing
experiments through


which you’re going to learn.
“
Tim Brown
Building your
Failure


Experiment
Toolkit
Not this…
Experiment more Ideas die if you never try them
out, experiment little and often!
• Tell people you’re doing an experiment


to relieve any pressure or expectations.
• Experiments can be very small and iterative.
• Think about how you can prototype an idea to test


with ‘smoke and mirrors’ rather than developing anything.
• Think about the
fi
delity of what you need
to test, how simple can you go?!
Change your failure narrative The stories we tell about
failure can be powerful.
• You need to craft the story of what happened,


giving it a beginning, middle and end.


• Talk about what the problem or challenge looked


like and how it was a
ff
ecting your customers.


• Think about what approaches you took


to help solve the problem.


• Think about how you can craft a narrative around


your failure including the value you learnt on the journey.
Risks.
Control your...
Control your risks To win without risk is to
triumph without glory.
• Don’t put it all on the line. Manage your risks closely.


• Work out how much time / budget / man power
you’re willing to throw at an experiment, and be strict.


• Be transparent about what’s on the line to make


sure everyone is comfortable with the stakes.


• Small risks are easier to manage


compared to bigger ones!
Fail together
• Build failure advocates from within your team.


• Align around your methodologies and create


‘fail friendly’ processes which become second
nature.


• Share your highs and lows and normalise
failure as you do so.


• A fail shared feels less personal,


own it collectively!
Foster a learning culture Create and reinforce a culture
that makes people feel
comfortable with failure.
• This is often down to leaders, but anyone in
a team can start a fail friendly movement!
• In order for failure to not be a taboo, it
needs to be spoken about often, and
supported from above.
• Think about ways learnings can be shared in a
positive way, without fear of blame and shame.
Your concept of failure
might not be too far
removed from the average
person’s idea of success.
“
JK Rowling
Happy Failing!
Thank you.
Thank you for taking the time
If you have any questions, please reach out.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-griffin-5733ab14
John Griffin

More Related Content

What's hot

Modern Business By Ahmed Saif
Modern Business By Ahmed SaifModern Business By Ahmed Saif
Modern Business By Ahmed Saif
Roû MahMoûd
 
Creativity 100910074135-phpapp02[1]
Creativity 100910074135-phpapp02[1]Creativity 100910074135-phpapp02[1]
Creativity 100910074135-phpapp02[1]
Mary Bolton
 

What's hot (20)

21 Successful Entrepreuneurs Share their Best Advice - 2016
21 Successful Entrepreuneurs Share their Best Advice - 201621 Successful Entrepreuneurs Share their Best Advice - 2016
21 Successful Entrepreuneurs Share their Best Advice - 2016
 
Learnings from startups
Learnings from startupsLearnings from startups
Learnings from startups
 
Love your work
Love your workLove your work
Love your work
 
Getting Results
Getting ResultsGetting Results
Getting Results
 
Ten ways to waste large amounts of public money on Social Change programmes...
Ten ways to waste large amounts of public money on Social Change programmes...Ten ways to waste large amounts of public money on Social Change programmes...
Ten ways to waste large amounts of public money on Social Change programmes...
 
10 Ways Your Boss Kills Employee Motivation
10 Ways Your Boss Kills Employee Motivation10 Ways Your Boss Kills Employee Motivation
10 Ways Your Boss Kills Employee Motivation
 
Modern Business By Ahmed Saif
Modern Business By Ahmed SaifModern Business By Ahmed Saif
Modern Business By Ahmed Saif
 
Get comfortable breaking your product - Mind the Product 2018 conference talk
Get comfortable breaking your product - Mind the Product 2018 conference talkGet comfortable breaking your product - Mind the Product 2018 conference talk
Get comfortable breaking your product - Mind the Product 2018 conference talk
 
Procrastinationppt[1]
Procrastinationppt[1]Procrastinationppt[1]
Procrastinationppt[1]
 
Personal Effectiveness
Personal EffectivenessPersonal Effectiveness
Personal Effectiveness
 
BoS Conference USA 2019 Feedback Loop Workshop Slide Deck
BoS Conference USA 2019 Feedback Loop Workshop Slide DeckBoS Conference USA 2019 Feedback Loop Workshop Slide Deck
BoS Conference USA 2019 Feedback Loop Workshop Slide Deck
 
Enchantment
EnchantmentEnchantment
Enchantment
 
Creativity 100910074135-phpapp02[1]
Creativity 100910074135-phpapp02[1]Creativity 100910074135-phpapp02[1]
Creativity 100910074135-phpapp02[1]
 
Creativity
CreativityCreativity
Creativity
 
6 Cycles Remote Innovation - Pitch-Perfect
6  Cycles Remote Innovation - Pitch-Perfect6  Cycles Remote Innovation - Pitch-Perfect
6 Cycles Remote Innovation - Pitch-Perfect
 
Solopreneur Success Strategies Mindset Monday Being an Action Taker
Solopreneur Success Strategies Mindset Monday Being an Action Taker Solopreneur Success Strategies Mindset Monday Being an Action Taker
Solopreneur Success Strategies Mindset Monday Being an Action Taker
 
What's your advice for graduates starting their career?
What's your advice for graduates starting their career?What's your advice for graduates starting their career?
What's your advice for graduates starting their career?
 
When left brain is not enough
When left brain is not enoughWhen left brain is not enough
When left brain is not enough
 
Self Inflicted Wounds GDC Online 2010
Self Inflicted Wounds GDC Online 2010Self Inflicted Wounds GDC Online 2010
Self Inflicted Wounds GDC Online 2010
 
5 Cycles Remote Innovation - Systems
5 Cycles Remote Innovation -  Systems5 Cycles Remote Innovation -  Systems
5 Cycles Remote Innovation - Systems
 

Similar to John Griffin, Ford Credit Europe. Normalising failure and making way for success.

Johns hopkins innovation factory entrepreneur development program #5
Johns hopkins innovation factory entrepreneur development program #5Johns hopkins innovation factory entrepreneur development program #5
Johns hopkins innovation factory entrepreneur development program #5
Glenn Alpert
 
4.1 2014 bstdy strategizing
4.1 2014 bstdy strategizing4.1 2014 bstdy strategizing
4.1 2014 bstdy strategizing
ffiala
 

Similar to John Griffin, Ford Credit Europe. Normalising failure and making way for success. (20)

Failing Forward: Designing Intelligent Failure
Failing Forward: Designing Intelligent FailureFailing Forward: Designing Intelligent Failure
Failing Forward: Designing Intelligent Failure
 
(Revised)Overall Outlook-Kaizen -2023.pdf
(Revised)Overall Outlook-Kaizen -2023.pdf(Revised)Overall Outlook-Kaizen -2023.pdf
(Revised)Overall Outlook-Kaizen -2023.pdf
 
UXSG2014 Workshop (Day 2) - How to think like an entrepreneur (Trent Mankelow)
UXSG2014 Workshop (Day 2) - How to think like an entrepreneur (Trent Mankelow)UXSG2014 Workshop (Day 2) - How to think like an entrepreneur (Trent Mankelow)
UXSG2014 Workshop (Day 2) - How to think like an entrepreneur (Trent Mankelow)
 
10 ways to be high potential!!
10 ways to be high potential!!10 ways to be high potential!!
10 ways to be high potential!!
 
17 FROM 17: THE BEST BUSINESS BOOKS OF 2017
17 FROM 17: THE BEST BUSINESS BOOKS OF 201717 FROM 17: THE BEST BUSINESS BOOKS OF 2017
17 FROM 17: THE BEST BUSINESS BOOKS OF 2017
 
Johns hopkins innovation factory entrepreneur development program #5
Johns hopkins innovation factory entrepreneur development program #5Johns hopkins innovation factory entrepreneur development program #5
Johns hopkins innovation factory entrepreneur development program #5
 
15 Lessons from 15 Years in the Industry
15 Lessons from 15 Years in the Industry15 Lessons from 15 Years in the Industry
15 Lessons from 15 Years in the Industry
 
Entrepreneurship mindsets
Entrepreneurship mindsetsEntrepreneurship mindsets
Entrepreneurship mindsets
 
Learning from creativity, inc
Learning from creativity, incLearning from creativity, inc
Learning from creativity, inc
 
ImagineNation LAST Generating Creative Conversations Presentation
ImagineNation LAST Generating Creative Conversations Presentation ImagineNation LAST Generating Creative Conversations Presentation
ImagineNation LAST Generating Creative Conversations Presentation
 
4.1 2014 bstdy strategizing
4.1 2014 bstdy strategizing4.1 2014 bstdy strategizing
4.1 2014 bstdy strategizing
 
Time management
Time managementTime management
Time management
 
New Media Women Entrepreneurs Summit
New Media Women Entrepreneurs SummitNew Media Women Entrepreneurs Summit
New Media Women Entrepreneurs Summit
 
The next stages of your journey to agile performance management
The next stages of your journey to agile performance managementThe next stages of your journey to agile performance management
The next stages of your journey to agile performance management
 
Build a Culture to Encourage Learning, Creativity and Collaboration
Build a Culture to Encourage Learning, Creativity and CollaborationBuild a Culture to Encourage Learning, Creativity and Collaboration
Build a Culture to Encourage Learning, Creativity and Collaboration
 
How to fail
How to failHow to fail
How to fail
 
How to fail
How to failHow to fail
How to fail
 
How To Fail: 25 Secrets Learned through Failure
How To Fail: 25 Secrets Learned through FailureHow To Fail: 25 Secrets Learned through Failure
How To Fail: 25 Secrets Learned through Failure
 
Overcoming Project Failure
Overcoming Project FailureOvercoming Project Failure
Overcoming Project Failure
 
16 from 16: THE BEST BOOKS OF 2016 SUMMARISED
16 from 16: THE BEST BOOKS OF 2016 SUMMARISED16 from 16: THE BEST BOOKS OF 2016 SUMMARISED
16 from 16: THE BEST BOOKS OF 2016 SUMMARISED
 

More from IT Arena

Mada Seghete, Branch. Mobile Growth Trends
 Mada Seghete, Branch. Mobile Growth Trends Mada Seghete, Branch. Mobile Growth Trends
Mada Seghete, Branch. Mobile Growth Trends
IT Arena
 
Kostiantyn Bokhan, N-iX. CD4ML based on Azure and Kubeflow
Kostiantyn Bokhan, N-iX. CD4ML based on Azure and KubeflowKostiantyn Bokhan, N-iX. CD4ML based on Azure and Kubeflow
Kostiantyn Bokhan, N-iX. CD4ML based on Azure and Kubeflow
IT Arena
 

More from IT Arena (20)

Shalini Agarwal, LinkedIn. Engineering excellence: marathon, not a sprint
Shalini Agarwal, LinkedIn. Engineering excellence: marathon, not a sprintShalini Agarwal, LinkedIn. Engineering excellence: marathon, not a sprint
Shalini Agarwal, LinkedIn. Engineering excellence: marathon, not a sprint
 
Dave Karow, Split. Powering Progressive Delivery With Data
Dave Karow, Split. Powering Progressive Delivery With DataDave Karow, Split. Powering Progressive Delivery With Data
Dave Karow, Split. Powering Progressive Delivery With Data
 
Ihar Mahaniok, Angel Investor. Hunting unicorns for early stage investments
Ihar Mahaniok, Angel Investor. Hunting unicorns for early stage investmentsIhar Mahaniok, Angel Investor. Hunting unicorns for early stage investments
Ihar Mahaniok, Angel Investor. Hunting unicorns for early stage investments
 
Yuriy Zaremba, AXDRAFT. How to sell your startup
Yuriy Zaremba, AXDRAFT. How to sell your startupYuriy Zaremba, AXDRAFT. How to sell your startup
Yuriy Zaremba, AXDRAFT. How to sell your startup
 
Vitaliy Diatlenko, Uklon. Transforming your business with machine learning. T...
Vitaliy Diatlenko, Uklon. Transforming your business with machine learning. T...Vitaliy Diatlenko, Uklon. Transforming your business with machine learning. T...
Vitaliy Diatlenko, Uklon. Transforming your business with machine learning. T...
 
Chris Cassarino, SoftServe. Stop Fixating on Fixing – Solving the global enga...
Chris Cassarino, SoftServe. Stop Fixating on Fixing – Solving the global enga...Chris Cassarino, SoftServe. Stop Fixating on Fixing – Solving the global enga...
Chris Cassarino, SoftServe. Stop Fixating on Fixing – Solving the global enga...
 
Michael Labate, Intellias. EDI in the DNA: Why Equity, Diversity and Inclusio...
Michael Labate, Intellias. EDI in the DNA: Why Equity, Diversity and Inclusio...Michael Labate, Intellias. EDI in the DNA: Why Equity, Diversity and Inclusio...
Michael Labate, Intellias. EDI in the DNA: Why Equity, Diversity and Inclusio...
 
Beth Anne Katz, Microsoft. How to Product Manage Your Mental Health
Beth Anne Katz, Microsoft. How to Product Manage Your Mental HealthBeth Anne Katz, Microsoft. How to Product Manage Your Mental Health
Beth Anne Katz, Microsoft. How to Product Manage Your Mental Health
 
Vasyl Zadvornyy, Prozorro. The Future of Governance: Can a Script Replace the...
Vasyl Zadvornyy, Prozorro. The Future of Governance: Can a Script Replace the...Vasyl Zadvornyy, Prozorro. The Future of Governance: Can a Script Replace the...
Vasyl Zadvornyy, Prozorro. The Future of Governance: Can a Script Replace the...
 
Godard Abel, G2. The SaaS Trust Crisis
Godard Abel, G2. The SaaS Trust CrisisGodard Abel, G2. The SaaS Trust Crisis
Godard Abel, G2. The SaaS Trust Crisis
 
Zeb Evans, ClickUp. From $0 to $20M ARR in 2 Years: Bootstrapping to Natural ...
Zeb Evans, ClickUp. From $0 to $20M ARR in 2 Years: Bootstrapping to Natural ...Zeb Evans, ClickUp. From $0 to $20M ARR in 2 Years: Bootstrapping to Natural ...
Zeb Evans, ClickUp. From $0 to $20M ARR in 2 Years: Bootstrapping to Natural ...
 
Namir Anani, ICTC. Economic Resiliency in The Face of Adversity
Namir Anani, ICTC. Economic Resiliency in The Face of AdversityNamir Anani, ICTC. Economic Resiliency in The Face of Adversity
Namir Anani, ICTC. Economic Resiliency in The Face of Adversity
 
Mada Seghete, Branch. Mobile Growth Trends
 Mada Seghete, Branch. Mobile Growth Trends Mada Seghete, Branch. Mobile Growth Trends
Mada Seghete, Branch. Mobile Growth Trends
 
Julia Petryk, MacPaw. Product PR: a how-to guide
Julia Petryk, MacPaw. Product PR: a how-to guideJulia Petryk, MacPaw. Product PR: a how-to guide
Julia Petryk, MacPaw. Product PR: a how-to guide
 
Yaroslav Ravlinko, Intellias. You don’t need Kubernetes. You need to understa...
Yaroslav Ravlinko, Intellias. You don’t need Kubernetes. You need to understa...Yaroslav Ravlinko, Intellias. You don’t need Kubernetes. You need to understa...
Yaroslav Ravlinko, Intellias. You don’t need Kubernetes. You need to understa...
 
Yaroslav Novytskyy, Anton Vasylenko, N-iX. Migrating to the cloud: options an...
Yaroslav Novytskyy, Anton Vasylenko, N-iX. Migrating to the cloud: options an...Yaroslav Novytskyy, Anton Vasylenko, N-iX. Migrating to the cloud: options an...
Yaroslav Novytskyy, Anton Vasylenko, N-iX. Migrating to the cloud: options an...
 
Kostiantyn Bokhan, N-iX. CD4ML based on Azure and Kubeflow
Kostiantyn Bokhan, N-iX. CD4ML based on Azure and KubeflowKostiantyn Bokhan, N-iX. CD4ML based on Azure and Kubeflow
Kostiantyn Bokhan, N-iX. CD4ML based on Azure and Kubeflow
 
Alexandra Motulskaya, Exadel. ML1: Creating a machine learning powered plugin...
Alexandra Motulskaya, Exadel. ML1: Creating a machine learning powered plugin...Alexandra Motulskaya, Exadel. ML1: Creating a machine learning powered plugin...
Alexandra Motulskaya, Exadel. ML1: Creating a machine learning powered plugin...
 
Marty Kaszubowski, Old Dominion University. Oops!... Another Startup Did It A...
Marty Kaszubowski, Old Dominion University. Oops!... Another Startup Did It A...Marty Kaszubowski, Old Dominion University. Oops!... Another Startup Did It A...
Marty Kaszubowski, Old Dominion University. Oops!... Another Startup Did It A...
 
Alexandr Galkin, Competera. Customer Development – the founding story and pra...
Alexandr Galkin, Competera. Customer Development – the founding story and pra...Alexandr Galkin, Competera. Customer Development – the founding story and pra...
Alexandr Galkin, Competera. Customer Development – the founding story and pra...
 

Recently uploaded

Challenges and Opportunities: A Qualitative Study on Tax Compliance in Pakistan
Challenges and Opportunities: A Qualitative Study on Tax Compliance in PakistanChallenges and Opportunities: A Qualitative Study on Tax Compliance in Pakistan
Challenges and Opportunities: A Qualitative Study on Tax Compliance in Pakistan
vineshkumarsajnani12
 
Jual Obat Aborsi ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan Cytotec
Jual Obat Aborsi ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan CytotecJual Obat Aborsi ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan Cytotec
Jual Obat Aborsi ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan Cytotec
ZurliaSoop
 
Mckinsey foundation level Handbook for Viewing
Mckinsey foundation level Handbook for ViewingMckinsey foundation level Handbook for Viewing
Mckinsey foundation level Handbook for Viewing
Nauman Safdar
 
Al Mizhar Dubai Escorts +971561403006 Escorts Service In Al Mizhar
Al Mizhar Dubai Escorts +971561403006 Escorts Service In Al MizharAl Mizhar Dubai Escorts +971561403006 Escorts Service In Al Mizhar
Al Mizhar Dubai Escorts +971561403006 Escorts Service In Al Mizhar
allensay1
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Marel Q1 2024 Investor Presentation from May 8, 2024
Marel Q1 2024 Investor Presentation from May 8, 2024Marel Q1 2024 Investor Presentation from May 8, 2024
Marel Q1 2024 Investor Presentation from May 8, 2024
 
HomeRoots Pitch Deck | Investor Insights | April 2024
HomeRoots Pitch Deck | Investor Insights | April 2024HomeRoots Pitch Deck | Investor Insights | April 2024
HomeRoots Pitch Deck | Investor Insights | April 2024
 
Dr. Admir Softic_ presentation_Green Club_ENG.pdf
Dr. Admir Softic_ presentation_Green Club_ENG.pdfDr. Admir Softic_ presentation_Green Club_ENG.pdf
Dr. Admir Softic_ presentation_Green Club_ENG.pdf
 
Katrina Personal Brand Project and portfolio 1
Katrina Personal Brand Project and portfolio 1Katrina Personal Brand Project and portfolio 1
Katrina Personal Brand Project and portfolio 1
 
Challenges and Opportunities: A Qualitative Study on Tax Compliance in Pakistan
Challenges and Opportunities: A Qualitative Study on Tax Compliance in PakistanChallenges and Opportunities: A Qualitative Study on Tax Compliance in Pakistan
Challenges and Opportunities: A Qualitative Study on Tax Compliance in Pakistan
 
Call 7737669865 Vadodara Call Girls Service at your Door Step Available All Time
Call 7737669865 Vadodara Call Girls Service at your Door Step Available All TimeCall 7737669865 Vadodara Call Girls Service at your Door Step Available All Time
Call 7737669865 Vadodara Call Girls Service at your Door Step Available All Time
 
Jual Obat Aborsi ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan Cytotec
Jual Obat Aborsi ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan CytotecJual Obat Aborsi ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan Cytotec
Jual Obat Aborsi ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan Cytotec
 
Berhampur CALL GIRL❤7091819311❤CALL GIRLS IN ESCORT SERVICE WE ARE PROVIDING
Berhampur CALL GIRL❤7091819311❤CALL GIRLS IN ESCORT SERVICE WE ARE PROVIDINGBerhampur CALL GIRL❤7091819311❤CALL GIRLS IN ESCORT SERVICE WE ARE PROVIDING
Berhampur CALL GIRL❤7091819311❤CALL GIRLS IN ESCORT SERVICE WE ARE PROVIDING
 
Mckinsey foundation level Handbook for Viewing
Mckinsey foundation level Handbook for ViewingMckinsey foundation level Handbook for Viewing
Mckinsey foundation level Handbook for Viewing
 
UAE Bur Dubai Call Girls ☏ 0564401582 Call Girl in Bur Dubai
UAE Bur Dubai Call Girls ☏ 0564401582 Call Girl in Bur DubaiUAE Bur Dubai Call Girls ☏ 0564401582 Call Girl in Bur Dubai
UAE Bur Dubai Call Girls ☏ 0564401582 Call Girl in Bur Dubai
 
Al Mizhar Dubai Escorts +971561403006 Escorts Service In Al Mizhar
Al Mizhar Dubai Escorts +971561403006 Escorts Service In Al MizharAl Mizhar Dubai Escorts +971561403006 Escorts Service In Al Mizhar
Al Mizhar Dubai Escorts +971561403006 Escorts Service In Al Mizhar
 
Nashik Call Girl Just Call 7091819311 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Nashik Call Girl Just Call 7091819311 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableNashik Call Girl Just Call 7091819311 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Nashik Call Girl Just Call 7091819311 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
PHX May 2024 Corporate Presentation Final
PHX May 2024 Corporate Presentation FinalPHX May 2024 Corporate Presentation Final
PHX May 2024 Corporate Presentation Final
 
Kalyan Call Girl 98350*37198 Call Girls in Escort service book now
Kalyan Call Girl 98350*37198 Call Girls in Escort service book nowKalyan Call Girl 98350*37198 Call Girls in Escort service book now
Kalyan Call Girl 98350*37198 Call Girls in Escort service book now
 
PARK STREET 💋 Call Girl 9827461493 Call Girls in Escort service book now
PARK STREET 💋 Call Girl 9827461493 Call Girls in  Escort service book nowPARK STREET 💋 Call Girl 9827461493 Call Girls in  Escort service book now
PARK STREET 💋 Call Girl 9827461493 Call Girls in Escort service book now
 
Phases of Negotiation .pptx
 Phases of Negotiation .pptx Phases of Negotiation .pptx
Phases of Negotiation .pptx
 
SEO Case Study: How I Increased SEO Traffic & Ranking by 50-60% in 6 Months
SEO Case Study: How I Increased SEO Traffic & Ranking by 50-60%  in 6 MonthsSEO Case Study: How I Increased SEO Traffic & Ranking by 50-60%  in 6 Months
SEO Case Study: How I Increased SEO Traffic & Ranking by 50-60% in 6 Months
 
Getting Real with AI - Columbus DAW - May 2024 - Nick Woo from AlignAI
Getting Real with AI - Columbus DAW - May 2024 - Nick Woo from AlignAIGetting Real with AI - Columbus DAW - May 2024 - Nick Woo from AlignAI
Getting Real with AI - Columbus DAW - May 2024 - Nick Woo from AlignAI
 
Berhampur 70918*19311 CALL GIRLS IN ESCORT SERVICE WE ARE PROVIDING
Berhampur 70918*19311 CALL GIRLS IN ESCORT SERVICE WE ARE PROVIDINGBerhampur 70918*19311 CALL GIRLS IN ESCORT SERVICE WE ARE PROVIDING
Berhampur 70918*19311 CALL GIRLS IN ESCORT SERVICE WE ARE PROVIDING
 
Buy gmail accounts.pdf buy Old Gmail Accounts
Buy gmail accounts.pdf buy Old Gmail AccountsBuy gmail accounts.pdf buy Old Gmail Accounts
Buy gmail accounts.pdf buy Old Gmail Accounts
 

John Griffin, Ford Credit Europe. Normalising failure and making way for success.

  • 1. Eat -Sleep - Fail, Repeat. How to Normalise & Embrace Failure. John Griffin
  • 2.
  • 4. I have missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I have lost almost 300 games. On 26 occasions I have been entrusted to take the game winning shot, and I missed. I have failed over and over and over again. And that is why I succeed. “ Michael Jordan
  • 5. My Name Is John. And I think our attitude towards failure is broken. Hi
  • 6. How do we define failure?!
  • 7. fail. to be unsuccessful in achieving your goal. to neglect to do something. to not succeed in what you are trying to achieve or are expected to do. verb
  • 8. Atychiphobia. the abnormal and persistent fear of failure, to the degree that it has negative e ff ects on the pattern of one's life. noun At-ychi-phobia
  • 9. Manifestations. Failure • Reluctance to try new things or get involved in challenging projects. • Self-sabotage – for example, procrastination. • Low con fi dence – commonly using negative statements like “This can’t be done!” • Perfectionism – A willingness to try only those things that you know you'll fi nish perfectly and successfully.
  • 10. Failure, or the fear of it, has the power to stop our ideas in their tracks, and can make us think in harmful ways… I believe…
  • 11. According to a 2018 report from the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor, roughly one-third of wantrepreneurs don’t start a business because of fear of failure. “
  • 13. Without the right understanding, environment, tools and support, the ‘fail fast’ approach is meaningless.
  • 14.
  • 16. The Fable of the Fox and the Grapes by Aesop is a powerful example of something called cognitive dissonance. The Fox desires a bunch of grapes hanging high from its vine in a tree. After numerous failed attempts to get the grapes he “decides” that he doesn't want the grapes after all. They are probably sour or not ripe. The fox’s failure leads to him disassociating with his desired goal, and rationalising his failure by criticising or condemning what he set out to obtain. We ignore the facts. The Aesop’s fable of the Fox and Grapes.
  • 17. The more we think, talk and plan around an idea, the more we become naturally attached. The idea essentially becomes our ‘baby’. This leads to us becoming protective of our idea, and naturally we want to nurture and grow it, rather than accepting it’s failed and giving it up! We become too attached to our ideas.
  • 18. Once we get settled on a particular idea, and feel we’ve invested time, energy and often money into something, it becomes increasingly hard to stay open to new ideas. We often become closed o ff to external input, feeling the hard work is done. We become less open to new ideas.
  • 19. These are all knock-on effects of our fear of failure, and obstacles we need to recognise.
  • 20. So, is there a‘fear of failure’ silver bullet? a simple and seemingly magical solution to a complicated problem. Silver Bullet Noun
  • 21.
  • 22. = + +
  • 23. Things won’t always go the way we want, and we have to become resilient to failure and learn to embrace it as part of our work! We have to change our attitude to failure because…
  • 24. Not all failures are created equal. But...
  • 25. Failure. Types of... Within organisations failure can be categorised into 3 types…
  • 26. Most failures in this category are considered “bad.” They usually involve deviations from speci fi cations and closely de fi ned processes. With proper training, employees can follow those processes consistently. When they don’t inattention, or lack of ability usually results in failure. Preventable failures in predictable operations. 1.
  • 27. Toyota’s manufacturing processes are in fact responsible for many of the ways we work today. They pioneered the lean philosophy we all know, and introduced concepts such as Kanban and Kaizen. Accepting Failure. Taiichi Ohno: Hero of the Toyota Production
  • 28. Toyota’s culture does not stigmatise failure. Failure is simply accepted as a way to determine what can be improved by cultivating workplaces where problems can be found and corrected quickly. Accepting Failure.
  • 29. A particular combination of needs, people, and problems that may have never occurred before can cause this type of failure to occur. For example a hospital emergency room, responding to enemy actions on the battle fi eld, and running a fast-growing start- up all occur in unpredictable situations. Unavoidable failures in complex systems. 2.
  • 30. Failures in this category are considered “good”, because they provide valuable new knowledge that can help an organisation leap ahead of the competition and ensure its future growth. They occur when experimentation is necessary. Intelligent failures at the frontier of new ideas. 3.
  • 32. Intelligent Failure: The term “intelligent failure” was coined by Professor Sim Sitkin of Dukes University in a Research article into Organisational Behaviour called: “Learning Through Failure: The Strategy of Small Losses.”
  • 33. The idea behind the concept is simple: If your organisation can adopt the concept of intelligent failure, it will become more agile, better at risk taking, and more adept at organisational learning.
  • 34. The 4 characteristics of intelligent failure. • It’s carefully planned • The risks aren’t too great • The downsides are controlled • There’s a mechanism for sharing the learnings The author and strategy leader Rita McGrath goes on to de fi ne intelligent failure by these characteristics:
  • 35. Failure, if managed well, can be a very useful thing. Organisations can’t possibly undertake the risks necessary for innovation and growth if they’re not comfortable with the idea of failing. “ Rita McGrath
  • 37. Design Sprints Hailing from visionary Designers within Google Ventures, Design Sprints are a 5 day process for testing and validating ideas in a rapid way. The framework has been used across the world in hundreds of product companies.
  • 38. Design Sprints Solve big challenges in a week
  • 40. Design Sprint = Intelligent Failure • It’s carefully planned You frame the challenge and do the research + planning at the start. • The risks aren’t too great You set the time limit of 5 days, things don’t creep into weeks and months. • The downsides are controlled You fi nd out if your idea is strong quickly, and if not, you can pivot fast. • There’s a mechanism for sharing the learnings You always end a design sprint with a de fi nitive way to move forward and learnings to share.
  • 42. In 2004 Facebook grew from 1 million to 6 million members. Because of Facebook’s meteoric rise, the persistent question from Silicon Valley venture capitalists became “What’s your social strategy?” In response, Net fl ix launched their social powered feature Friends.
  • 43. The concept behind the feature was for friends to gain insights into what each other liked to watch, driving social engagement and a delightful experience throughout the platform.
  • 44. But, after 6 years, trying to get Net fl ix Friends to take o ff , the team realised that they weren’t engaging enough customers, and that it was time to call it a day. They quietly retired the feature in 2010.
  • 45. Small wins clouded judgement The amount of users taking up the feature did grow, just not by enough. Why did Net fl ix persist for so long? CEO support was strong The Net fl ix CEO really believed in the idea, and that was hard to ignore. They thought execution was the issue, not the idea There was so much belief in the idea, they assumed they just weren’t doing it right.
  • 46. Lessons Learnt! Focus on the idea, not the source Because the idea had strong CEO support, it got more time and e ff ort applied. Detach from your ideas / Kill ownership Nobody likes to kill projects. However, passion and hope can cloud judgement. Take o ff the blinkers & ignore sunk costs Just because you’ve sunk a lot of time and budget into something doesn’t mean you should carry on, take o ff the blinkers and let the facts validate whether you should continue.
  • 47. So, how do we re-wire our feelings towards failure?
  • 49. Don't think of it as failure, think of it as designing experiments through which you’re going to learn. “ Tim Brown
  • 51.
  • 53. Experiment more Ideas die if you never try them out, experiment little and often! • Tell people you’re doing an experiment to relieve any pressure or expectations. • Experiments can be very small and iterative. • Think about how you can prototype an idea to test with ‘smoke and mirrors’ rather than developing anything. • Think about the fi delity of what you need to test, how simple can you go?!
  • 54.
  • 55.
  • 56. Change your failure narrative The stories we tell about failure can be powerful. • You need to craft the story of what happened, giving it a beginning, middle and end. • Talk about what the problem or challenge looked like and how it was a ff ecting your customers. • Think about what approaches you took to help solve the problem. • Think about how you can craft a narrative around your failure including the value you learnt on the journey.
  • 58. Control your risks To win without risk is to triumph without glory. • Don’t put it all on the line. Manage your risks closely. • Work out how much time / budget / man power you’re willing to throw at an experiment, and be strict. • Be transparent about what’s on the line to make sure everyone is comfortable with the stakes. • Small risks are easier to manage compared to bigger ones!
  • 59.
  • 60. Fail together • Build failure advocates from within your team. • Align around your methodologies and create ‘fail friendly’ processes which become second nature. • Share your highs and lows and normalise failure as you do so. • A fail shared feels less personal, own it collectively!
  • 61.
  • 62. Foster a learning culture Create and reinforce a culture that makes people feel comfortable with failure. • This is often down to leaders, but anyone in a team can start a fail friendly movement! • In order for failure to not be a taboo, it needs to be spoken about often, and supported from above. • Think about ways learnings can be shared in a positive way, without fear of blame and shame.
  • 63. Your concept of failure might not be too far removed from the average person’s idea of success. “ JK Rowling
  • 65. Thank you for taking the time If you have any questions, please reach out. https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-griffin-5733ab14 John Griffin