(This article is one of twenty-five(25)
contained in Tayo Solagbade’s Ebook titled "25
Articles/True Stories On Self-Development, Entrepeneuring
& Web Marketing To Help You Succeed More Often")
Too Many People Are Afraid Of
Failing Or Making Mistakes
They think it is better to play safe
by not taking any risks. What they fail to realize is that
they deprive themselves of the opportunity to “grow”
by their unwillingness to venture beyond the realms of what
they already know, or are comfortable with. They remain in
their “comfort zones”, and by so doing miss out
on valuable learning opportunities.
“I have made
mistakes, but I have never made the mistake of claiming I
never made one”
– James Gordon Bennett (1841 – 1918) Journalist
There is a saying that “you have
not failed until you give up trying to succeed”. When
you try to achieve a goal and things fail to work out, you
can try using this formula: W x
R(to the power of 3) i.e. Withdraw, Reflect, Refocus and Return.
Let’s take them one at a time:
Withdraw
– Step away. Take a break – maybe a stroll to
a quiet place where you can free your mind from the potential
worries about the problem. Alternatively, relax your mind
by reading a book or doing something else that has little
to do with the problem that occurred.
Reflect
– Analyse what happened and try to establish
what went wrong to cause your failure. You will need to be
honest with yourself here. (Maybe a close associate or confidant
might come in useful to help inject some objectivity into
the analysis. Note that I said "Maybe").
At the end of this process you should have identified (possibly
written out) specific aspects of your failed plan most likely
to have caused the problem.
Re-focus
– Here you will take the findings from the Reflect
stage and use them to decide on modifications that
will be needed to make your plan work when next you try to
achieve your goal. Again, here the benefit of input from other
“trusted” persons(close associates who share your
vision, and sincerely empathise with you) could be explored.
Just make sure that those you invite (as Napoleon Hill warned)
are people who DO NOT take defeat or failure seriously. You
should end this stage with a clear idea of what you need to
do differently or better when next you try out your plan.
Return –
You take your modified plan back to the real world and try
again to use it to achieve your cherished goal!
IMPORTANT
NOTE: Now, in all likelihood, as has been my personal
experience, this entire process can happen within a very short
period(hours, minutes or seconds even) depending on what the
problem is and how much experience you’ve had with it
previously – or the nature of circumstances under which
it has happened. As such, I expect that if at all you decide
to, you will adapt the above elements to suit your needs in
planning how you may deal with setbacks that come your way
when they do occur.
I will now share with you an actual
experience I had in which I applied an adaptation of the WR3
formula to turn a major blunder I made on my first night shift
duty into a career advancement opportunity two(2) months later.
A True Career Story
As a Trainee Brewer in Guinness Benin
Brewery, I went through a harrowing experience on my first
night shift as Brewer On Duty. Before then I had been attached
to senior, more experienced brewers who had put me through
on how to supervise the workforce, and do the various calculations
for managing the brewing process.
1. Some Background
During my training I had been particularly
uncomfortable with the use by the older brewers of calculators
in computing weighted averages for as many as nine(9) beer
parameters for each bottling tank to be blended. It was not
uncommon to see a duty brewer punching furiously at a calculator
while the operator waited for him to finish and pronounce
the quantities of beer and other additives to be used for
filling the next bottling tank.
There were times when to correct some
poor beer parameters, we had to blend mature beer from up
to four different storage vessels into one bottling tank to
produce beer with the right parameters for bottling. Can you
just think about what it must have been like using a calculator
to compute weighted averages for parameters of four (4) different
volumes of beer to get one set of nine(9) parameters for a
bottling tank? Pure drudgery I tell you!
What I found most difficult to accept
was the fact that despite the presence on the brewers’
desk of a desktop PC with Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet on it, the
brewers all kept using the calculator for this very complex
task. To be fair to them however, very rarely did any of them
make the kind of error I eventually did in their calculations.
I guess that was because they had become very good at it over
time.
For rookies like me however, the learning
curve was simply too(needlessly I thought) steep, and the
entire routine too prone to avoidable errors. I did not like
that one bit, and felt I could never get used to working that
way especially when a spreadsheet offering better value was
in the PC on my desk! So, I made a mental note to explore
using the spreadsheet to compute beer blending and make up
volumes whenever I was on duty. But for that first night shift,
since I was just starting, I settled for the calculator -
a decision I would later seriously regret.
2. The Fateful Day/Event
Here’s what happened. That day,
after reading the handover notes, I knew it was going to be
a long night. My department(Brewing) had been struggling to
keep up with the bottling lines which had been enjoying smooth
operations since the start of the day. We had only one full
tank of beer left, which was already being blended to two
bottling lines at the same time. I checked the combined speeds
of the lines, and estimated that it would take them another
hour and a half to empty it. If I was to avoid a beer outage,
I would have to ensure I got another full tank into the bottling
hall before that time.
Unfortunately we did not have comfortable
stocks of matured beer - with good parameters - ready for
blending. This was mainly because the centrifuges had been
acting up, failing to stop yeast from getting into the filtered
beer. To cut the long story short, I managed to send two half
tanks of beer to packaging. That should have bought us enough
time to send another full tank in within 2 hours.
But alas, it was not to be! By the
time the laboratory analysis came out, the beer color turned
out excessively high for both half-tanks – way beyond
what the company specifications permitted for bottling. I
was devastated, but nothing could be done at this stage, other
than to watch the two bottling lines run out the remaining
beer from the last tank!
The beer outage lasted over four hours.
It was painful – and embarrassing – to see the
idle men and machines waiting all night for me to get a new
stock of beer for them to continue the work they were paid
to do! Just before my shift ended the next morning, I was
able to send one full tank to packaging so bottling resumed
as the morning duty brewer took over. By then however, the
damage had been done. My inability to keep the lines going
had meant the brewery’s chances of meeting the bottling
volume target for the week had been severely jeopardized.
I shuddered at the thought of what my boss would say. He had
specifically told me to ensure we did not run out of beer.
I felt very bad for having let him down.
3. Applying An Adaptation Of The Formula
Downcast but still puzzled as to what
could have led to such gross miscalculation on my part, I
went back to the brewers’ office and checked the paper
I had used for my calculations again(this was the "Withdraw/Reflect"
stage ). That was when I noticed the error I made
in computing the amount of Guinness extract to be added to
the beer. In my rush to supply the needed figures to the operator,
I had inadvertently punched in a wrong volume of mature beer
to be added resulting in the calculator returning a much larger
volume of Stout flavouring extract than required.
As soon as I realized this, I could
not help instantly thinking that if I had been looking at
a computer screen with all the tank volumes and parameters
typed in, and formulas returning the estimated volumes to
be added, I would have had a better chance of discovering
my error earlier!
There and then I made up my mind to
develop a spreadsheet that would enable me accurately and
reliably calculate needed make-up volumes for beer, and additives
blending whenever I was on duty(this was the "Re-focus"
stage).
Over the next two night shifts, I began
building a Lotus spreadsheet(this was the "Return"
stage) for my calculations, gradually modifying it to accommodate
every possible scenario I could anticipate – including
documented occurrences I had been told about by my senior
colleagues.
4. Testing The Solution Developed
Eventually, after about a month, my
spreadsheet had become a close companion that helped me safely
plan for accurate beer blending for bottling whenever I was
on duty. I never bothered to tell anyone about it because
as I said earlier, my senior colleagues were mostly quite
comfortable using the calculator. Also, a few had scoffed
at the idea of totally converting all the calculator dependent
computations for process management and report generation
to PC spreadsheet format as I had proposed when I first joined
them. So I thought it would be easier and better to simply
use it for myself.
5. Solution Is Adopted By Entire Department(Success!)
As fate would have it however, my boss
- Greg Udeh - one day walked into the office and saw me using
the spreadsheet, which I had named “Beer Racking Projection
Table”(“Racking” being a term describing
beer make-up and transfer from the storage/maturation area
into bottling tanks).
He asked me what I was doing with the
spreadsheet. I demonstrated how it worked – including
how close(to +/- 2 units) the computed final results it gave
often were to those the laboratory returned by their analysis
of the blended tank. I had actually been carefully collating
the results from the lab and comparing them with the spreadsheet’s
computed parameters for each bottling tank that was filled.
The high degree of positive correlation between the computer
and lab results was glaring.
That benefit, in addition to over 90%
reduction in time taken to do weighted average calculations
for beer blended to packaging, and increased flexibility in
choice and number of storage vessels used for blending instantly
appealed to Greg.
Suddenly, it became obvious that brewers
could safely dispense with the exclusive use of calculators
for this task, as all nine(9) parameters for blending of up
to 4 mature beer tanks could be seen at once in a printable
on-screen (projection results table) format. Necessary adjustments
in volumes of beer, additives etc could also be easily made
to achieve the desired final beer parameter specifications.
At the next departmental meeting, Greg
announced the existence of the spreadsheet and asked me to
put all other brewers through on how to use it. From then
on, the entire department formally adopted the Racking Projection
Table. As you can imagine, I got noticed for this and other
similar solutions I would later develop for use by the department.
Summary
But if you recall how I began this
story, it was a very unpleasant first attempt at doing my
job the way it had always been done by those who taught me
to do it, that led me to find a better way of doing it myself.
If I had
simply given up and not challenged myself as I did, in order
to better equip myself to do a better job next time(and so
avoid making the same mistake again), it is unlikely that
I would have developed the spreadsheet that eventually became
useful to many others. The moral here is:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“It’s not what happens to you that’s important.
It’s how you deal with it”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
People may say “I told you so”
or laugh at you etc. Yes, you may have made a mistake. Maybe
you were overconfident. The important thing is not that you
have now fallen. No. What should matter to you is what you
get out of the experience. Do you know more to be able to
do better next time? If your answer is “Yes”,
then you have absolutely nothing to worry about.
No matter how sensational your failure
or mistake is, you can pick yourself back up, and try again
and again, more intelligently each time, till you succeed.
Let them laugh if they want - it would
not be the first time people who eventually achieve phenomenal
success get laughed at before they succeed!
There is a part of the lyrics of England’s
Manchester United Football club’s marching song(“Stand
Up For The Champion”) that I love so much. It goes thus:
“When I fall down, I have
to pick myself back up(2ce)”.
It does not say “If I fall
down”. It says “When”.
Periodic setbacks are inevitable, but when a true champion
falls, she picks herself up and tries again, and again UNTIL
she succeeds. In or out of paid employment, the principles
described in this article can be successfully applied to turn
a bad situation around for the better.
No special skill or talent is required. You only need to be
willing to try. 
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