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Learn from Others’ Mistakes as Much as Your Own

We’ve all heard that you learn the most from mistakes and failures. Picking yourself up after setbacks builds grit and character. Overcoming challenges expands your limits.

But while failures undoubtedly provide invaluable learning opportunities, preventing major mistakes in the first place is obviously ideal. An overlooked truth exists – you can learn just as much, if not more, from others’ mistakes and failures before making the same errors yourself.

The Inherent Paradox of Learning from Mistakes

Mistakes and failures provide essential chances to analyze what went wrong, why it occurred, and how to improve systems and behaviors to prevent recurrence. This commitment to continuous improvement is key to growth at both individual and organizational levels.

But significant mistakes and failures also often incur real damage – to budgets, schedules, capabilities, relationships, reputation, morale, and more. As leaders, we want to minimize mistakes and failures where reasonably possible.

Herein lies an inherent paradox – to maximize growth, we need sufficient learning experiences that test our limits. Yet we want to avoid the pain, disruption, and consequences of major mistakes and failures, especially when repeated frequently.

Learn Without Pain Through Empathetic Listening

An elegant solution to this paradox exists – learn from others’ mistakes first through empathetic listening, before making the same errors yourself.

By taking time to truly understand someone else’s missteps, errors, and oversights from their perspective, you gain many benefits:

  • Insight into the nuanced root causes of complex failures from an inside view, not just superficial speculation

  • Increased psychological safety for people to share mistakes, be vulnerable, and ask for help without fear of punishment

  • Increased awareness of subtle unintended consequences that can emerge in hindsight after the fact

  • More nuanced appreciation of how good intentions can sometimes lead down an incorrect path despite best efforts

  • The opportunity to ask thoughtful questions free of defensiveness to unpack lessons learned

  • Increased humility regarding our shared human fallibility and tendency for oversights

  • Greater compassion and emotional intelligence about the feelings evoked by failures

In short, by opening our hearts and minds to learn from each other’s missteps, we turn painful individual mistakes into collectively owned wisdom.

Practical Tips for Learning from Others’ Failures

Here are some practical tips to maximize learning from others’ failures and mistakes:

  • Ask open-ended, thoughtful questions without judgment to understand their experience

  • Listen first to understand, not simply react or provide your own solutions

  • Share your own relevant mistakes and lessons learned to reassure them and create openness

  • Discuss what, in hindsight, could have been done differently or improved

  • Unpack the influence emotions and mindsets played on perceptions and decisions

  • Analyze the organizational context and external factors at play that enabled the failure

  • Maintain compassion – “but for the grace of God go I” - we all make mistakes

  • Follow up on how insights will alter your own approach going forward

The more we can share our falls, the more we all rise together. Nobody wants to see colleagues and teammates suffer. But mistakes, while often painful in the moment, provide fertile soil for collective learning and growth.

An empathetic culture focused on learning transforms painful missteps into powerful shared wisdom for the future. We all move forward.

Coaching to Develop Empathetic Leadership Skills

Effectively applying empathy to unpack others’ failures and extract lessons requires strategic listening abilities, emotional intelligence, communication skills, and systems thinking.

If you want support developing yourself or your team’s capacities in these areas to create a culture of psychological safety where people help each other learn from setbacks, executive coaching services can help unlock these critical skills.

Please don’t hesitate to reach out if you see opportunity for our shared humanity to enable collective growth. The road ahead comes into focus when we look back together.

The Power of Listening: How to Make Your Team Feel Truly Heard

The Power of Listening: How to Make Your Team Feel Truly Heard

As a leader, one of the most important skills you can develop is the ability to listen deeply and make your team members feel genuinely heard and understood. When employees feel their perspectives are valued, engagement and morale improve. But when people feel ignored or dismissed, resentment builds and performance suffers.

Why Feeling Heard Matters

Human beings have a fundamental need to feel heard and validated. When people sense you are truly listening to them, without judgement, they relax and open up. This builds trust and psychological safety on your team.

However, if you frequently interrupt, ignore opinions, or impose your own solutions, people get the message that their thoughts don't matter. This leads to frustration, lack of motivation, and higher turnover.

The Dangers of Not Listening

Failing to listen can have serious consequences, including:

  • Loss of talent, as ignored employees seek opportunities where their views will be respected

  • Lack of innovation, as people stop sharing ideas and insights

  • Poor decisions, when leaders miss out on valuable perspectives and input

  • Low morale and resentment, as team members feel marginalized and disrespected

Clearly, not making people feel heard takes a real toll on engagement, collaboration, and performance.

Cultivating Deep Listening

So how can you demonstrate to your staff that you are genuinely listening? Here are some tips:

  • Maintain eye contact and give your full attention when others are speaking. Avoid distractions and multitasking.

  • Ask thoughtful follow-up questions to show your interest, not just to push your own agenda.

  • Paraphrase key points back to the speaker to ensure you understand correctly.

  • Express empathy and acknowledge the emotions behind what is being said.

  • Thank people for sharing their views, even if you don't agree with them.

  • Consider ideas and solutions raised by your team, rather than dismissing them out of hand.

  • Give feedback on how employee input influenced your thinking and decisions.

Essentially, listening is about curiosity, not criticism. When you approach conversations with an open and non-judgmental mindset, people will feel respected and valued.

Bringing People Along, Even in Disagreement

Making your staff feel heard doesn't necessarily mean endorsing every idea or avoiding hard decisions. But when you do have to move forward without consensus, you can still acknowledge employee concerns and perspectives.

  • Explain your reasoning while affirming that you heard their input.

  • Commit to reviewing the decision down the line.

  • Solicit ideas to improve implementation of the plan.

  • Schedule one-on-ones to provide support.

  • Thank the team for sharing candid feedback.

With empathy and transparency, you can build trust and inclusiveness, even amidst disagreement.

Listening to Lead

At the end of the day, leadership is about inspiring people to bring their best selves to work. When employees know their voices matter, they are more engaged, collaborative and innovative. By truly hearing your team, you not only make them feel valued, but gain access to insights that can drive your organization forward. Listening is a muscle - the more you practice it, the better you will become.

If you are interested in developing your leadership abilities, executive coaching can be invaluable. Feel free to reach out to discuss how I can help you hone your listening skills and lead through influence, not just authority. Investing in your growth is an investment in your team.