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The Smart Techie was renamed Siliconindia India Edition starting Feb 2012 to continue the nearly two decade track record of excellence of our US edition.

September - 2009 - issue > Editor's Desk

Learning from Failure

Pradeep Shankar
Friday, September 4, 2009
Pradeep Shankar
India’s maiden moon mission launched on October 22 last year was abruptly terminated, as the radio contact with the Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft was lost last month. A mission life of two years lasted only for ten months. However ISRO scientists claimed that the mission was a great success and 95 percent of its objectives were completed.

Government has set up an assessment committee to look into the performance of the mission in totality. But what is more important for the team of Chandrayaan is to learn from the failure and bounce back with full vigor with the already announced Chandrayaan –II.
As Murphy’s Law states “Things will go wrong in any given situation, if you give them a chance.” Or more commonly, “whatever can go wrong, will go wrong.”

In the Indian context, it is a great challenge for the team from an emotional and social point of view since somehow failure is not respected in our culture. The social stigma and pressure attached to failure poses the biggest challenge. This is perhaps one of the biggest stumbling blocks in building a Silicon Valley in India.

As Randy Komisar, Partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers says, “What distinguishes the Silicon Valley is not its successes, but the way in which it deals with failures. The Valley is about experimentation, innovation, and taking new risks. Only a small business that can deal with failure and still make money can exist in this environment. It is a model based on many, many failures and a few extraordinary successes.”

Whether in profession, project or business, failures are bound to happen. By learning to bounce through repetitive process of success and failure, you will develop a resilience that will lead to the true business confidence that will ultimately determine our success.

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Reader's comments(1)
1:Indian sitting in Siicon Valley are not different from Indian sitting in India, only the setting is different. It is an English nation, more or less functioning on traditional English (British) communication systems. So the comment about how they react over there in Silicon Valley has to be understood as the success of the Enlish systems and not of the presons involved. At the same time, the failure of the Chandrayaan is not a failure of the the people of this area, but of the government babus!
Posted by: - 03rd Sep 2009
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