To Succeed at Innovation, Define Failure Not Success
Posted by EdmontonPMNov 27
Live Webinar December 4th, 2018, 9:00 am – 10:00 am EST
Activity Type: Education – Course or Training 1 Hour 1 PDU
Provider: Gartner Webinars
It’s all well and good to say, “Fail fast! Fail forward! Fail often!” But you’re not a Silicon Valley start-up and you face stealthy, insidious organizational antibodies.
In most cases, there is an incompatibility between the failure required for successful innovation and the failure-phobia that inhabits corporate culture.
In this webinar Mary Mesaglio (LinkedIn profile, Gartner bio) explores the difference between good and bad innovation failure, and provides a way to get around the innovation assassins that lurk in every enterprise.
Discussion Topics:
- Great innovation requires failure (I know you know this, at least intellectually)
- Most humans—especially the corporate kind—are wired to avoid failure
- Not all failure is the same—some is good and some is bad
- To get comfortable with failure, define it and seek it in small doses—and avoid the word “failure”
Click to register for:
To Succeed at Innovation, Define Failure Not Success
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Technical Project Management | Leadership | Strategic & Business Management |
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