Does it surprise you that only 400 cokes were sold the first year; Albert
Einstein's Ph.D. dissertation was rejected; Henry Ford had two
bankruptcies before his famous success; or Ulysses S. Grant was working as
a handyman, written off as a failure, eight years before becoming
President of the United States?
Rodin couldn't get into art school on three occasions yet became a great
sculptor; Abraham Lincoln lost seven elections before winning the
Presidency; Babe Ruth stuck out 1,330 times in route to hitting 714 home
runs; and Oprah Winfrey publicly failed several diet attempts before
becoming an inspiration for looking great after fifty.
Setbacks, disappoints, rejections and unsuccessful attempts were not
failures to these people. They were steps to their success. That's the
difference between people who are winning at working and people who
aren't. How you deal with your setbacks (big or small) will determine your
results. You see, failure is not the lack of success. Failure is staying
down when you trip or stumble. It's giving up, checking out, or shutting
down.
I wasn't a failure when I was fired from my first professional job,
although for awhile I felt like one, and I could have been if I'd lost my
confidence and given up on my career aspirations. I wasn't a failure when
I was passed over for a coveted promotion I'd worked years for, but I
could have been if I'd let that setback determine my future. And I wasn't
a failure every time I pitched an idea that got turned down, but I could
have been if I'd stopped pitching ideas.
You see, in twenty years in management, for every "yes" I've gotten in my
career that's visible, there's least five "no's" that aren't. For every
success I've achieved, there's at least as many misses. Yet when we look
at other people's successes, we miss the struggles, frustrations and
disappointments that came before them, so we think their success was easy.
How you view your disappointments, falls, and setbacks will impact your
success. Do you see them as stepping stones or brick walls? People who are
winning at working live Ralph Waldo Emerson's words, "Men succeed when
they realize that their failures are the preparation for their victories."
People who are winning at working don't blame others for what's happened
to them, and they don't use other people's definitions for success and
failure. They use their own. They know it's not failing to miss their
mark, change paths, re-assess goals, try something new or adjust
direction. To them, failure happens when they stop trying to achieve their
personal best.
(c) 2005 Nan S. Russell. All rights reserved.
About the Author
Sign up to receive Nan's free eColumn, Winning at Working, at
www.winningatwork.com. Nan
Russell has spent over twenty years in management, most recently with QVC
as a Vice President. Currently working on her first book, Nan is a writer,
columnist, small business owner, and instructor.