Learning from Failure: July 2004 Archives

Rob at BusinessPundit suggested a post at The Occupational Adventure about failure. It is worth a look. Failure, or the fear of failure, is what has kept many a potential entrepreneur on the sidelines. Failure is something we all have learned from along the way if we let ourselves take some risks. It reminds me of the first time I really got tackled hard in Junior High football. I was really afraid of how it would feel, and although it really did hurt (the guy was the star line backer of the eighth grade team), I learned from it (stay away from his side the rest of the game and go out for cross country next fall).

We can all learn from our own failures. That is an important part of entrepreneurial learning. We can also learn from the failures and mistakes of others (I picked that up and a young age being the youngest of four boys--thanks for all the lessons on what not to do Tom, Scot and Steve). Some of my best lectures center around mistakes and failures I had in business and how I tried to learn from them going forward.

2008 Top 25 Best Undergrad Schools for Entrepreneurs

Books by
Dr. Jeff Cornwall

Bootstrapping
Bootstrapping

Bringing Business to Life
Bringing Business to Life

cornwallbook1.jpeg
From the Ground Up: Entrepreneurial School Leadership

cornwallbook2.bmp
Entrepreneurial Financial Management

cornwallbook3.bmp
The Entrepreneurial Educator

Get RSS Feed

Powered by Movable Type 4.1
Financial Analysis Worksheets
Non-Profit Spreadsheet
Service Company Spreadsheet
Product Company Spreadsheet

Blog Categories

Archives

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Learning from Failure category from July 2004.

Learning from Failure: September 2005 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.