Monday, September 12, 2011

Adapting

What's Best Next:  Why Success Often Starts with Failure

A helpful article from the 99%.

Here’s the first part:
“Few of our own failures are fatal,” economist and Financial Times columnist Tim Harford writes in his new book, Adapt: Why Success Always Starts with Failure. This may be true, but we certainly don’t act like it. When our mistakes stare us in the face, we often find it so upsetting that we miss out on the primary benefit of failing (yes, benefit): the chance to get over our egos and come back with a stronger, smarter approach. 
According to Adapt, “success comes through rapidly fixing our mistakes rather than getting things right first time.”

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