Balls bounced off the pitcherâs moundâothers skyrocketed to the outfield. Things were going from bad ⦠to worse. It happened years ago. The catcher on a baseball team suddenly couldnât throw the ball back to the pitcher. He had plenty of skill and physical abilityâbut with a lot of fans in the stands, he couldnât make even the simplest of throws. Then one day, while seated behind home plate, I heard someone singing, of all things, a nursery rhyme. âMary had a little lamb ⦠little lamb, little lamb â¦â When I turned my attention to home plate, I realized the singer was actually the catcher. And he was now making every single throw without an error! As it turned out, this young player had been advised by a former professional catcher to take himself out of the moment. And it clearly worked. All of us undoubtedly face our share of disappointments. To put them in perspective, we can find inspiration from an unlikely sourceâMajor League Baseball in the U.S., which starts a new season this week on opening day. [Black Korn Ferry logo JPG 400.png]() Balls bounced off the pitcherâs moundâothers skyrocketed to the outfield. Things were going from bad ⦠to worse. It happened years ago. The catcher on a baseball team suddenly couldnât throw the ball back to the pitcher. He had plenty of skill and physical abilityâbut with a lot of fans in the stands, he couldnât make even the simplest of throws. Then one day, while seated behind home plate, I heard someone singing, of all things, a nursery rhyme. âMary had a little lamb ⦠little lamb, little lamb â¦â When I turned my attention to home plate, I realized the singer was actually the catcher. And he was now making every single throw without an error! As it turned out, this young player had been advised by a former professional catcher to take himself out of the moment. And it clearly worked. All of us undoubtedly face our share of disappointments. To put them in perspective, we can find inspiration from an unlikely sourceâMajor League Baseball in the U.S., which starts a new season this week on opening day. Baseball, ultimately, is a game of failureâwhere a swing and a miss are far more common than hits, let alone those rare homeruns. Letâs put it this way: A batter who successfully gets a hit only once out of every three times at bat throughout their careerâor, to put it another way, fails 66% of the timeâis probably headed to the Hall of Fame. Or consider the words of basketballâs legendary Michael Jordan who said, âIâve missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. Iâve lost almost 300 games. Twenty-six times Iâve been trusted with the game-winning shot and missed. Iâve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.â Itâs called having no fear of failureâand itâs one of the most important leadership traits. On the wall of my home office is a beautiful, framed printâblack brushstrokes against an off-white backgroundâa treasured gift given to me a few years ago by colleagues in China. The translation, on a brass plaque at the bottom, reads: âThe Courageous have no Fear â Confucius (551 B.C.)â It is an expression of an ideal, with many translations, and it reminds me that itâs not about having âno fearâ but rather to âknow fear.â Weâre humanâwe all make mistakes. But hereâs the thingâwe learn far more from failure than we do from success. And thatâs what makes every dayâour opening day. As our firmâs research shows, the more comfortable we become with failure, we see that it isnât fatalâand itâs certainly not personal. Too often, when we fail at something, we see ourselves as failures. But who we are is not what we do, and failure can often beâand usually isâprogress in disguise. What looks like failure can open the door to the next opportunityâthat is, if we fail fast and learn even faster. After all, itâs never about what we do at the moment of failureâitâs what we do next that matters most. An executive confided to me how nimble his organization had been over the past few years amid much change and uncertainty. But now his concern was that people were slipping back to the old ways of doing thingsâtoo many task forces, less risk-taking, and more bureaucracy. My response? âWhatâs the attitude toward failure?â Donât get me wrong, nobody roots for failure. But our conversation shiftedâto the nuance of failureâand when it takes place, embracing it as a pathway to learning, rather than an impediment to progress. After all, our attitude is our altitude. When we are no longer held back by the possibility or even the probability of failing at times, we increase our ability to take risks. We know that the far bigger danger is not taking any risks. After all, trying to stay static in a rapidly changing world is futile, at best. Just like a great baseball player, none of us are going to get a hit every time or always make a perfect throw. Leadership, like life, doesnât work that way. What matters most is what we do next ... and the time after that ⦠and the time after that. Want to know more about elevating your leadership style? Check out our book, [Leadership U](). Also, our latest book, [The Five Graces of Life and Leadership](), offers imagery, emotions, and insights that capture the human side of leadership. Regards, Gary Burnison
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