Aaron O'Leary

What have you learned the most from failure?

Failure is one of the best educators and whilst it hurts at the start it can really set you up for success. What have you learned from failure?
47 views

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Mike Pan
Learning from failure is extremely important to succeed in anything in life.  I had failed many times, lost money, lost my self-confidence, lost my closest friends, lost my business and I lost my motivation to work. But I never lost my ability to learn and eventually, I learned many lessons, which helped me to succeed in any financial venture I have undertaken. Ninja Warrior Mod Apk
Akriti Nayal
Never give up and keep on working hard towards your dream
Trisha Guru
Analyze the mistake you did, and come again tomorrow with a robust plan.
Karthik Kamalakannan
Two life-changing things: 1. Patience 2. Perseverance
Maria
Acceptance. I learned to accept situation and stay ego-less 😄
Restoration 1 of New York
Failure Can Be a Great Source of Motivation.
Sarvam Fating
Failure is Redirection for me. If I hadn't failed in my previous projects, I wouldn't have found better alternatives to it & made money with them. Failure's taught me more lessons than anything else. Primarily, it taught me how to keep going even when there's no one around.
Bob Ketterer
When you go through failure, this is basically the universe telling you that there is something you’re not doing right.
Michael Sieb
Get up and move on 💪
Ash Rahman 🎮
Your circle influence you a lot! I launched my first startup back in 2018. As a tech founder, most of my connections were from dev community. They used to talk and brag a lot about how cool their tech stacks are in their company or for a pet project. This is not a bad thing and this is how dev world works anyway. But I felt low as everyone was opposing my preferred stack (had 6 years of experience) and I didn't want to build my MVP on that. So I went with a new one, with relatively low experience, and without surprise it took months. I would have done it in weeks with the one I was comfortable with. Needless to mention it did not generate any significant revenue. As my network eventually changed from devs to founders and investors, I understood how wrong I was and how important it is to launch fast. Launched another product a couple months ago, used a no-code builder, and it started generating revenue from week 1.