By any traditional definition, failure is something to avoid. We are taught “explicitly and implicitly” that success follows a straight line: set a goal, execute the plan, achieve the outcome. My experience has been the opposite. The most meaningful progress in my career and personal life has come not from flawless execution, but from failing forward using missteps as leverage rather than liabilities.
Failing forward is not about celebrating mistakes or lowering standards. It is about extracting value from outcomes that did not go as planned and deliberately using that information to adjust direction. Over time, I have learned that failure is often the most honest form of feedback available.

Failure as a Strategic Asset
When something does not work, it exposes assumptions. It highlights gaps in skill, timing, or judgment that success often masks. Early in my career, I took paths that looked right on paper but failed in practice. Projects stalled. Ideas fell flat. Opportunities closed unexpectedly. Each time, the initial reaction was frustration. The longer-term result, however, was clarity.
Failure forced me to reassess what I was actually good at, what I merely tolerated, and what I needed to stop doing altogether. It shortened learning curves that would have taken years through incremental success alone. In that sense, failure became efficient.
Unwritten Paths That Emerge After Failure
What rarely gets discussed are the alternative routes that only become visible after something goes wrong. These unwritten paths are not found in job descriptions, career ladders, or long-term plans, but they often lead to more sustainable success.
1. The Pivot Path
Failure often reveals misalignment rather than incompetence. When a role, business model, or strategy fails, it can signal the need to pivot rather than quit. I have found that lateral moves into adjacent skills, industries, or responsibilities, often create more momentum than doubling down on a failing approach.
2. The Skill-Stacking Path
Some failures expose missing capabilities. Instead of abandoning the goal, the better move is often to acquire complementary skills. Learning sales after failing in operations, or communication after failing in leadership, creates a broader, more resilient professional profile that traditional linear paths do not encourage.
3. The Network Path
Failure has a way of humbling people, and humility opens doors. Asking for help, advice, or perspective after a setback often leads to relationships that would not exist otherwise. Several of my most valuable professional connections came from conversations that started with, “Here’s what didn’t work, what would you do differently?”
4. The Redefinition Path
Not all failures are meant to be corrected. Some are signals to redefine success entirely. Walking away from a goal that no longer fits can feel like failure in the moment, but it often leads to better alignment with long-term values, health, and purpose.
Why Failing Forward Works
Failing forward shifts the focus from ego to execution. It replaces fear of mistakes with curiosity about outcomes. Over time, this mindset builds resilience, adaptability, and better decision-making. It also reduces the paralysis that comes from trying to get everything right the first time.
From my perspective, success is not the absence of failure it is the ability to recover faster, learn deeper, and move smarter after each one.
The unwritten truth is this: most people who succeed did not follow a clean path. They followed a responsive one. And more often than not, that path only revealed itself after something went wrong.