Instead of just declaring a "fail fast" policy, BetterRx CEO Ben Clark integrated it into the company's core value of "there's always a better way." This reframed experimentation and small failures as an expected part of the continuous improvement process, encouraging rapid testing and learning across the organization.
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.
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.
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.
Much like a failed surgery provides crucial data for a future successful one, business failures should be seen as necessary steps toward a breakthrough. A "scar" from a failed project is evidence of progress and learning, not something to be hidden. This mindset is foundational for psychological safety.
Instead of stigmatizing failure, LEGO embeds a formal "After Action Review" (AAR) process into its culture, with reviews happening daily at some level. This structured debrief forces teams to analyze why a project failed and apply those specific learnings across the organization to prevent repeat mistakes.
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.
Supercell's culture redefines failure. Instead of punishing unsuccessful projects, they are treated as learning experiments. The company literally celebrates killing a game with champagne, reinforcing that learning from a false hypothesis is a valuable outcome.
To foster an innovative team that takes big swings, leaders must create a culture of psychological safety. Team members must know they won't be fired for a failed experiment. Instead, failures should be treated as learning opportunities, encouraging them to be edgier and push boundaries.
A sophisticated learning culture avoids the generic 'fail fast' mantra by distinguishing four mistake types. 'Stretch' mistakes are good and occur when pushing limits. 'High-stakes' mistakes are bad and must be avoided. 'Sloppy' mistakes reveal system flaws. 'Aha-moment' mistakes provide deep insights. This framework allows for a nuanced, situation-appropriate response to error.
To foster psychological safety for innovation, leaders must publicly celebrate the effort and learning from failed projects, not just successful outcomes. Putting a team on a pedestal for a six-month project that didn't ship sends a stronger signal than any monetary award.