
I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve seen brilliant people hold back or watched promising ideas fizzle, because no one wanted to risk getting it wrong.
I get it. Even in my own career, including my time leading teams at Adidas and Reebok, fear has cropped up in the quiet moments just before a big decision. That inner voice that whispers, “What if this doesn’t work?” can be powerful. It can slow your momentum, dull your instinct, and make you play smaller than you know you should.
But here’s the twist I’ve seen repeatedly: some of the most transformative advances, whether for individuals, teams, or entire companies, begin with a setback. What feels like failure in the moment often plants the seed for something far better.
Despite all the talk of innovation and agility, fear of failure still runs deep in organizations everywhere. Why? A few patterns come up consistently in my leadership conversations:
The paradox is that the same leaders trying hardest not to fail often end up limiting their greatest growth. When avoidance becomes a habit, creativity suffers, and teams stop asking, “What if we tried something different?”
Fear of failure doesn’t just stunt innovation; it subtly erodes confidence. Leaders who operate from fear tend to:
Over time, the organization becomes excellent at optimization but weak at imagination. That’s a dangerous place to be in a world moving faster than ever.
The most adaptive, forward-looking teams I’ve worked with share one essential trait: they treat failure as feedback, not final judgment. Here’s how they do it.
At McKinney Consulting, much of our work revolves around a principle we call Proactive Agility, the ability for leaders to anticipate, adapt, and act before circumstances force them to. But true agility depends on courage. If we fear failure, agility remains a slogan rather than a system.
The future belongs to leaders who can own their missteps, learn quickly, and keep moving. As one CEO client recently told me, “We stopped calling them mistakes. We call them early data points.” That mindset shift changes everything.
So, let me leave you with this question:
What’s one “failure” that ultimately led you—or your team—to a better outcome? Or perhaps, what’s one way you’ve helped your organization turn fear into focus?