Friday, September 6, 2013

Mistake Bank bookshelf: Paul Schoemaker's "Brilliant Mistakes" - mistakes as strategic assets

Kwame recently posted this comment: "No more mistake bank bookshelf? I am a huge fan of your work. supported kickstarter and would like to see more books that focus on mistakes." That was the impetus I needed to restart this segment. I have three mistake books in the reading queue, but for the moment I wanted to reshare a classic in the field, Paul Schoemaker's Brilliant Mistakes: Finding Success on the Far Side of Failure.

Schoemaker's book is a highly strategic look at mistakes. (He and a collaborator, Robert Gunther, originated the concept of "deliberate mistakes," which is to me the most counterintuitive and least-understood concept we've covered here) To Schoemaker, mistakes are tools for understanding the world, learning more quickly, and discovering deep insights.

I've had the opportunity to meet him and his book is a perfect reflection of his keen mind and curious soul. Brilliant Mistakes was my favorite book of 2011, and you should read it too.

From the book: Companies strive for error elimination, hiring advisers and relying on sophisticated management tools such as Six Sigma. It’s little wonder, then, that most decision-making books follow suit, encouraging you to focus narrowly on mistake avoidance today rather than provoking you to plan for the stream of decisions that you will face tomorrow.

No comments:

Post a Comment