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Failing Forward: Turning Mistakes Into Stepping... Review

He strips away the stigma. Failure isn't a character flaw; it’s an event.

Maxwell argues that the only difference between "average" people and "achieving" people is their perception of and response to failure. He breaks down the "Failure Quotient"—your ability to digest a setback, learn the lesson, and move on without losing your momentum.

The tone is classic Maxwell—encouraging, anecdotal, and very structured. It’s filled with stories of famous figures (like Edison and Truett Cathy) who failed spectacularly before they succeeded, making the concepts feel attainable. Failing Forward: Turning Mistakes into Stepping...

The book provides a 15-step roadmap to change your mindset, emphasizing that you should never let a mistake go to waste. If you're going to fail, do it fast and extract every bit of data you can from it.

Maxwell acknowledges the sting of disappointment but provides practical ways to detach your self-worth from your results. The Vibe He strips away the stigma

— A must-read for entrepreneurs, students, or anyone stuck in a rut of perfectionism.

If you tend to play it safe because you’re afraid of looking bad, this book is a necessary "kick in the pants." It doesn’t just tell you to "try again"; it teaches you how to . He breaks down the "Failure Quotient"—your ability to

In Failing Forward , John C. Maxwell flips the script on how we view mistakes. Instead of seeing failure as a dead end, he presents it as a mandatory pit stop on the road to success.