Idea in Brief

The Problem

Though leaders know that they must tolerate and even embrace failure in the pursuit of innovation and growth, most will still do anything they can to avoid it.

The Solution

Increase acceptance of failure by improving your return on it: Rigorously extract and document the benefits of blown projects, including insights about customers, markets, the team and people involved, future trends, and the organization’s structure, processes, and culture.

Adding Value

To magnify the return, ensure that those lessons are shared across groups and divisions and routinely review your overall approach to failure to make sure you’re achieving the right balance.

One of the most important—and most deeply entrenched—reasons why established companies struggle to grow is fear of failure. Indeed, in a 2015 Boston Consulting Group survey, 31% of respondents identified a risk-averse culture as a key obstacle to innovation.

A version of this article appeared in the May 2016 issue (pp.88–93) of Harvard Business Review.