A revolutionary guide that will transform your relationship with failure, from the pioneering researcher of psychological safety and award-winning Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson.
You\'ll never look at failure the same way again..
With vivid, real-life stories from business, pop culture, history, and more, Edmondson gives us specifically tailored practices, skills, and mindsets to help us replace shame and blame with curiosity, vulnerability, and personal growth.
This is the key to pursuing smart risks and preventing avoidable harm.
She illustrates how we and our organizations can embrace our human fallibility, learn exactly when failure is our friend, and prevent most of it when it is not.
Outlining the three archetypes of failure--simple, complex, and intelligent--Amy showcases how to minimize unproductive failure while maximizing what we gain from flubs of all stripes.
In Right Kind of Wrong , Edmondson provides the framework to think, discuss, and practice failure wisely.
After decades of award-winning research, Amy Edmondson is here to upend our understanding of failure and make it work for us.
As a result, we miss the opportunity to fail well.
The trouble is that both approaches lack the crucial distinctions to help us separate good failure from bad.
Now, we\'re often torn between two failure cultures one that says to avoid failure at all costs, the other that says fail fast, fail often .
We used to think of failure as the opposite of success.
A revolutionary guide that will transform your relationship with failure, from the pioneering researcher of psychological safety and award-winning Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson