Youâve Made a Mistake. Now What?
How to recover gracefully.
by Amy Gallo
Anyone who has worked in an office for more than a day has made a mistake. While most people accept that slipups are unavoidable, no one likes to be responsible for them. The good news is that mistakes, even big ones, donât have to leave a permanent mark on your career. In fact, most contribute to organizational and personal learning; they are an essential part of experimentation and a prerequisite for innovation. So donât worry: If youâve made a mistake at workâand again, who hasnât?âyou can recover gracefully and use the experience to learn and grow.
For help getting back on track after a mistake, see the
Individual Development Plan at the end of this collection.
What the Experts Say
According to Paul Schoemaker, senior fellow at the Mack Institute for Innovation Management at the University of Pennsylvaniaâs Wharton School and author of Brilliant Mistakes, most people tend to overreact to their slipups. They âmake an asymmetric evaluation of gains and losses so that losses loom much larger than gains,â he explains. As a result, they may be tempted to hide their mistakes or, even worse, continue down paths that have proven unproductive. This âsunk cost fallacyâ can be dangerous and expensive. It is much better to accept mistakes, learn from them, and move on. âLook forward and base decisions on the future, not the past,â Schoemaker recommends. Christopher Gergen, CEO of Forward Impact, an Innovation and Entrepreneurship Fellow at Duke University, and coauthor of Life Entrepreneurs, agrees. The most useful thing you can do is âtranslate a mistake into a valuable moment of leadership,â he says. Here are a few guiding principles to help you turn your gaffes into gold.
For help preparing for this conversation, see the
Pre-Conversation Checklist at the end of this collection.
âFess up and acknowledge your mistake
First and foremost, itâs critical to be transparent and candid, and to own up to the error. Donât try to blame others. Even if it was a group mistake, acknowledge your role in it. In cases where someone was hurt, issue an apology. However, donât apologize too much or be defensive. The key is to be action oriented and focused on the future. How will your misstep be remedied? What will you do differently going forward?
Once youâve admitted your blunder, it may be appropriate to reframe it. Reframing is not making an excuse; it is a genuine effort to help people see the mistake in a different light. Poor decisions or flawed processes can sometimes lead to mistakes, but that doesnât mean that every bad outcome is a mistake. Gergen says itâs important to understand what was external and what was internal, what was in your control and what wasnât. Explaining in a nondefensive way what led to the mistake can help people better understand why it happened and how to avoid it in the future.
Change your ways
Mistakes play a critical role in leadership development. âThe best kind of mistake is where the costs are low but the learning is high,â Schoemaker says. If the error was the result of the poor decision, explain to your boss and other interested parties how you will avoid making a similar misstep in the future. You have to respond quickly before people make judgments about your competence or expertise. âYou need to get on top of it, get ahead of it, and deal with it,â counsels Gergen.
By demonstrating that youâve changed as a result of your mistake, you reassure your superiors, peers, and direct reports that you can be trusted with equally important tasks or decisions in the future. âIf you are going to pay the price for making the mistake, you need to get the learning,â Schoemaker says. This is far easier in a learning culture than in a performance-focused culture, in which mistakes are often viewed more harshly. But regardless of the office environment, you need to figure out âhow you can translate the mistake from a liability into an asset,â Gergen advises.
Rely on your support network
A strong support network can help you. âOur research shows that a healthy support network has three components: authentic, trusting relationships; a diverse range of perspectives; and reciprocity,â Gergen says. Ask current or former colleagues or people outside the organization for their perspectives on the mistake and what they believe you can do to recover. They are likely to have some useful advice about how to frame the error and restore your reputation.
Get back out there
It can be hard to rebuild confidence after slipping up. The key is to not let your errors make you afraid of experimentation. Once the mistake is behind you, focus on the future. If it made people question your expertise, put more data points out there to rebuild their trust. Remember that mistakes are not signs of weakness or ineptitude; recovering from them demonstrates resilience and perseverance. Both Gergen and Schoemaker emphasize that many employers look for people who made mistakes and came out ahead.
Not all mistakes are created equal
Mistakes vary in degree and type, and some can be tougher to recover from than others. Schoemaker notes that group mistakes are often easier to get over because there is a diffusion of responsibility. Mistakes that involve breaking someoneâs trust can have lasting consequences, and contrition is critical. If your mistake has caused someone to lose trust in you, approach the person and offer a sincere apology. Ask what you can do to restore their trust. But be patientâforgiveness may take a long time.
Principles to Remember
| Do: | Donât: |
- Accept responsibility for your role in the mistake
- Show that youâve learned and will behave differently going forward
- Demonstrate that you can be trusted with equally important decisions in the future
| - Be defensive or blame others
- Make mistakes that violate peopleâs trustâthese are the toughest to recover from
- Stop experimenting or hold back because of a misstep
|
Advice in Practice
EXAMPLE 1
A supportive boss and colleagues speed up recovery
As the associate director of the Science and Environmental Health Network (SEHN), one of Katie Silbermanâs responsibilities was to manage the nonprofit organizationâs grant applications. In August 2009, Katie created a calendar to track important funding dates; it included due dates for current grant reports as well as deadlines to reapply for future funding. In late January, Katie emailed the foundation officer at one of the organizationâs primary funders to check in about their reapplication for 2010, thinking she was ahead of schedule. But the foundation officer replied that the 2010 deadline had just passed. Katie was shocked. She had a March deadline on her calendarâthat was when the report for the 2009 grant was due, and Katie expected they would talk about reapplying then. SEHN needed the foundation grant to make it through the year. âTo lose a funder in this environment isnât just badâitâs catastrophic,â Katie says. It turned out that each January someone at SEHN calls the foundation officer to discuss that yearâs cycle. Katie wasnât aware of this informal meeting, but it was her responsibility to know each funder relationship in and out and to ensure that the organization was on top of each funding opportunity.
Katie immediately called her boss, explained the mistake, and offered ideas about how they could secure new funding sources to keep the organization afloat. Because she was forthright, her boss and the rest of the SEHN team were extremely supportive, offering to join a team call and do whatever they could to help. The foundation officer had let Katie know that there was a deadline in May for a separate round of funding, so SEHN decided to submit an idea for a new project conceived at a recent retreat. Katie was optimistic they would get it funded.
Although Katie felt like she had made an enormous mistake, she learned from it. From then on, her calendar of deadlines also included âunwrittenâ ones and meetings in addition to the hard dates issued by funders.
EXAMPLE 2
Donât blame the economy, change your ways
In the late 1990s, Christopher Gergen, one of our experts from above, cofounded Smarthinking.com, an online tutoring service for high school and college students. Christopher and his partner raised their first round of financing in the spring of 1999. The company grew quickly: By the beginning of 2000, it had 30 employees and was ready to launch. Then the dot-com bubble burst. In a matter of weeks, the companyâs financing fell through. With six weeks of cash in the bank, Christopher and his cofounder were facing one of the biggest mistakes of their lives. Like many, they had failed to foresee the bubble bursting and had left the company and themselves exposed.
Christopher had prior experience with companies facing hard times and had seen leaders hide behind closed doors. He and his cofounder took a different approach. They brought their whole staff together and explained exactly what needed to happen to save the company. Emphasizing that they couldnât pull it off alone, they were clear about what each person and function needed to do.
They limped through that spring and summer but were able to raise a $5 million round of funding in the fall and winter. Although Christopher could easily have blamed the economy for what happened, he took full responsibility for putting the company in an overextended position. âAlthough outside circumstances were not in our control, the ability to manage through it was,â he says. Most important, he learned from the mistake and began to take a much more disciplined approach to cash flow. As a result of how Christopher and his cofounder handled the aftermath, the company indeed survived and developed a cohesive culture that had practically no turnover. It weathered the 2008â09 economic downturn with very few hiccups and enjoys continued success to date.
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