Many successful people have failed – a repeat performance

I wrote the following post about three years ago. I was reading about business failure today and was reminded of this post on failures of some very public figure. It still resonates.

Recently, my wife and I watched three separate music documentaries – the eight part series on Country Music, one on Motown and one on David Bowie. What I find interesting is how many artists had to fight failure to get a chance and gain eventual success. These failures reminded me of other similar stories I have been exposed to.

Garth Brooks, one of the biggest selling artists of any genre, was turned down by every studio in Nashville. The night of the most recent “no, thank you,” Brooks performed at a small venue and that same record producer was in the audience and saw something.

David Bowie made records and even albums, but they went nowhere for years. He never lost hope. After much experimentation, he came up with the idea about a man in space. “Ground control to Major Tom…” became the lyric that peeked our interest in “A Space Oddity.”

The Beatles intrigued a young record producer named George Martin, but he recognized the band needed to practice to learn how to play. Many people don’t know that a fifth Beatle named Stu Sutcliffe was very inexperienced. So, Martin sent them to Hamburg, Germany to play seven shows six nights a week. They had to learn new material.

The Supremes led by Diana Ross were called the “no-hit Supremes” for years as they could not break through. Eventually, Berry Gordy and his writers came up with the right song, “Baby, baby. Where did our love go…”

Michael Jordan is arguably the greatest basketball player of all-time. Yet, Jordan was cut from his high school basketball team before making the team the following  year. As Dean Smith, Jordan’s college coach would say defending his decision to start Jordan as a freshman, “I put him on the blue practice team and they won. I put him on the white practice team and they won. It did not take a genius to realize we had a better chance to win if he played.”

Steve Jobs was successful with the Apple, but failed to develop the next generation machine. Fortunately, while the team he led was failing, another Apple team plodded along and developed the Macintosh. Jobs took it over and it made history. We should also note, Jobs was later fired from his own company, but  returned to save them and launch the hand held I-series of devices.

Hewlett-Packard failed at its first business. It was a bowling alley scorekeeping system. Yet, they created an organization that allowed the development of new products and were hugely succesful with computers and printers.

Everyone fails at something or even more than a few things. The key is what do you do next. When life knocks you down, you have to get up, dust yourself off and move forward. Or, as Winston Churchill famously said, “When you are walking through hell, the key is to keep walking.”

13 thoughts on “Many successful people have failed – a repeat performance

  1. Your post proves again that it is always too early to give up. And it reminds me of a quote from Edison: “I never failed, I found thousands of ways that did not work.”

    • Erika, love the Edison quote. Thanks for sharing it. I remember a story of a CEO who made a $10 million mistake taking an undue investment risk. The Chairman who hired him walked in his office and said, “I paid you to take risks like that. Learn from it.” I thought that was great advice. He remained CEO for many years. Keith

  2. Note to Readers: Golf is a great metaphor for life as it is a game of managing mistakes. It is also a game where practice can have an obvious impact on results, especially when coached to practice the right things. When famous South African golfer Gary Player responded to a reporter about his question on a “lucky shot,” he said “I have learned the more I practice, the luckier I get.”

  3. Note to Readers: On a personal note, I once did self study of a class on Probability and Statistics over the December holidays to jump ahead to an advanced class on the subject in January. My first test grade in the advanced class was a 29 (out of 100). I thought “what have I done?” So, I had two choices – study more and get better or fail. I made an “A” in the course and passed a rigorous professional exam on Probability and Statistics in May. I felt like a boxer that had been knocked down, so I got up, dusted myself off and kept fighting.

  4. Or, as I’ve heard it said my entire life, “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.” The world is lucky that those people you mentioned tried and tried again, for they’ve given us some really great music!

    • Very true. But, the same would be true with authors who were turned down. You just reminded of the astronaut who took four tries to get in the program. When asked what he would do if he failed a fourth time, he said “I would have tried a fifth time.” Keith

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