Effective leadership in an innovation-driven company isn't about being 'tough' but 'demanding' of high standards. The Novonesis CEO couples this with an explicit acceptance of failure as an inherent part of R&D, stressing the need to 'fail fast' and learn from it.
An innovation arm's performance isn't its "batting average." If a team pursues truly ambitious, "exotic" opportunities, a high failure rate is an expected and even positive signal. An overly high success rate suggests the team is only taking safe, incremental bets, defeating its purpose.
Koenigsegg's motto, "the show must go on," frames failures not as setbacks but as inevitable parts of innovation. This cultural mindset fosters immediate problem-solving and resilience, preventing paralysis when crises occur. It is an operational tool for teams pushing boundaries, ensuring constant forward momentum no matter the obstacle.
Drawing from Leonardo da Vinci, Nike's innovation philosophy combines "sfumato" (a mad scientist's willingness to fail) and "arte de science" (logical, scientific thinking). The fusion of these two opposing mindsets creates a "calculated risk"—the essential ingredient for meaningful breakthroughs.
Innovation requires psychological safety. When employees are afraid to speak up or make mistakes, they become "armored" and growth stagnates. To unlock potential, leaders must create environments where the joy of creation and contribution outweighs the fear of failure.
True innovation requires leaders to adopt a venture capital mindset, accepting that roughly nine out of ten initiatives will fail. This high tolerance for failure, mirroring professional investment odds, is a prerequisite for the psychological safety needed for breakthrough results.
Foster a culture of experimentation by reframing failure. A test where the hypothesis is disproven is just as valuable as a 'win' because it provides crucial user insights. The program's success should be measured by the quantity of quality tests run, not the percentage of successful hypotheses.
When an experimental campaign failed, Edelman's CEO Richard Edelman protected the mid-level employee responsible. He framed the mistake as a necessary cost of innovation in a new field, explicitly telling the team to "keep pushing boundaries." This response fosters a culture where calculated risks are encouraged rather than punished.
Rewarding successful outcomes incentivizes employees to choose less risky, less innovative projects they know they can complete. To foster true moonshots, Alphabet's X rewards behaviors like humility and curiosity, trusting that these habits are the leading indicators of long-term breakthroughs.
Diller’s process for navigating the unknown isn't about brilliance but relentless iteration. He describes it as taking "one dumb step" at a time, bouncing off the walls of bad ideas and mistakes, and course-correcting. This embraces looking foolish as a prerequisite for finding the right path.
When transitioning leadership, you must allow your successors to make mistakes. True learning comes from fixing failures, not just replicating successes. As the founder, your instinct is to prevent errors, but you must permit 'fuck ups' for the next generation to truly develop their own capabilities and own the business.