Learning From Mistakes

“We got it,” Roland said. “This was very painful, to examine the sequence of events that caused our last project to fail. It cost us a lot of money, wasted energy and almost got us sued. But, I think we know how it happened. Expensive lesson.”

“So, you are trying to learn from your mistakes?” I replied with a question.

Roland nodded in agreement. “I think it is important, part of our debrief, a post-mortem.”

“It’s valuable to look at your mistakes,” my nod matched Roland’s nod. “What did you miss?”

“It’s a very tough client. They had an unreasonable timeline, very demanding, put us under a lot of pressure,” he replied, as if his team had been tortured.

“I assume you knew this client?” I stared. “I assume you looked at the project schedule, and agreed to it. You knew what the stakes were. These are NOT things you missed. What did you miss?”

“I was just trying to tell you why it was such a difficult project for us,” Roland pushed back. “Final analysis, I don’t think we missed anything.”

“People always tell me they learn from their mistakes. Mistakes are rarely that instructive. The reason we don’t learn from our mistakes is that we fail to examine our own contribution to the problem. You are going to have difficult customers, with unreasonable demands inside a high pressure project with tight deadlines. All of that was known before you signed the contract. What you missed, your failure in the project was not due to the project. The failure was your assessment of your internal capability, or lack of capability. Your contribution was that you ran out of talent.”

2 thoughts on “Learning From Mistakes

  1. Kendall

    Breathless…this is probably the most important blog blurb I have ever read. I have had this feeling that too often we claim we learn…but then we don’t. That is even observable.
    I have often (as I have internalized and as I consult) been willing to point the finger at the leader (even myself)…but didn’t know why.

    The view as “what did you contribute” is the key that has unlocked the clarity. This is it. and its probably capacity of talent. It may not help, but it is the steely-eyed look at what the problem is that has to happen before we can even ponder what might help. Thank you, Tom

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