Is the freedom to fail a myth at your
company? Can you name one person in your
organization that has had major visible failure? If so, is that person still employed
there? If they are, is their career
still on track? If your business culture
is risk adverse you may not be able to name even one person. Oh sure, you’ve read plenty of success
stories in which the protagonist had to “overcome challenges.” But I’m not talking about mere challenges
that surfaced in a situation that ultimately was marked as an accomplishment. I’m talking about when the lesson learned is “dismantle
that thing, it won’t work.” A
few years ago it happened to me, and quite frankly I thought I might be labeled
as damaged goods as a result. But that’s
not how this story ends. In the mid 90’s a major consulting firm
recommended to NCR Corporation that they create a professional inside sales
organization. Not just a call center or
telesales group, but actually transition field-based, complex solution selling account
management roles to a group that would not travel or engage in face-to-face
sales meetings. It sounds very easy now,
but this was before the Internet and NCR’s hard charging field-based sales culture
did not like the idea of being downsized.
I was asked to lead that initiative with a pilot program and after one
year was then directed to dismantle it.
It turned out to be an idea before its time, but I learned some good
lessons during that pilot and I wanted to document and share the experience
with the organization. That’s why I used
a “learning history” format for my final report.
Learning History
defined:
A learning history is a unique approach for helping an organization
learn from the experience and implications of its own learning and change
initiatives. All efforts to transform
organizations sooner or later run up against the challenge of proving their
value. Yet traditional assessment
approaches, reacting to everyday pressures, can easily undermine the original
learning effort. As people become aware
of being judged and measured, they seek to satisfy the evaluation criteria
instead of improving their capabilities.
The intrinsic motivation which drives learning is then supplanted by the
desire to look successful. Yet evaluation is vital to learning as a
feedback process that provides guidance and support. Learning histories were invented in response
to this dilemma.
Creating an environment where it feels
safe to fail is very difficult. I
suppose that’s why most business cultures are not really bent that way. When you combine that with the fact that most
of us are terrified of the prospect of individual failure it’s a wonder any
risks are taken. A learning history won’t
change that fear. But I can report that
if you approach your change initiative leveraging a learning history
point-of-view and format that the expression “experience is the best teacher”
will come to life. You and your
organization will actually capture some learning from the project, and that
helps take the sting out of failing. |




