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Why Great Teams Embrace Failure (and How To Do It)
Failure is feedback. And that maxim is nowhere more true than on teams. When individual team members or the whole team experiences a failure, how they respond can be the difference between a team that continuously improves and enhances performance, and a team that falls apart.
And research backs this up. One of the first studies of psychological safety focused on how teams responded to failure. Amy Edmondson examined the teams of nurses on various wards of a hospital and found that the teams with the highest rated leaders had a higher than average rate of reported medical errors. It wasn’t until looking further that she found the medical error rates were actually the same as other wards…but lower rated leaders who punished failures scared nurses away from reporting them. In other words, the great teams with great leaders embraced failure. And in doing so, they made it easier for everyone on the team to learn from mistakes and get better.
In this article, we’ll review three ways many great teams embrace failure on individual, team, and systemwide levels in order to learn, grow, and better perform.
Learning Moments
The first way great teams embrace failure is through learning moments. A learning moment is a positive or negative outcome of any situation that is openly and…