Fresher-Resume-Sample.pdf by Bipin Kumar
The
sweetest victory is the one that’s most difficult. The one that requires you to
reach down deep inside, to fight with everything you’ve got, to be willing to
leave everything out there on the battlefield—without knowing, until that
do-or-die moment, if your heroic effort will be enough.
Society doesn’t
reward defeat, and you won’t find many failures documented in history books.
The exceptions are those failures that become steppingstones to later success.
Such is the case with Thomas Edison, whose most memorable invention was the
light bulb, which purportedly took him 1,000 tries before he developed a
successful prototype. “How did it feel to fail 1,000 times?” a reporter asked.
“I didn’t fail 1,000 times,” Edison responded. “The light bulb was an invention
with 1,000 steps.”
Unlike Edison, many
of us avoid the prospect of failure. In fact, we’re so focused on not failing
that we don’t aim for success, settling instead for a life of mediocrity. When
we do make missteps, we gloss over them, selectively editing out the
miscalculations or mistakes in our life’s résumé.
“Failure is not an
option,” NASA flight controller Jerry C. Bostick reportedly stated during the
mission to bring the damaged Apollo 13 back to Earth, and that phrase has been
etched into the collective memory ever since.
To many in our
success-driven society, failure isn’t just considered a non-option—it’s deemed
a deficiency, says Kathryn Schulz, author of Being
Wrong: Adventures in the Margin of Error. “Of all the things we are wrong about, this idea of error
might well top the list,” Schulz says. “It is our meta-mistake: We are wrong
about what it means to be wrong. Far from being a sign of intellectual
inferiority, the capacity to err is crucial to human cognition.”
Life’s Greatest
Teacher
When we take a
closer look at the great thinkers throughout history, a willingness to take on
failure isn’t a new or extraordinary thought at all. From the likes of
Augustine, Darwin and Freud to the business mavericks and sports legends of
today, failure is as powerful a tool as any in reaching great success.
“Failure and defeat
are life’s greatest teachers [but] sadly, most people, and particularly
conservative corporate cultures, don’t want to go there,” says Ralph Heath,
managing partner of Synergy Leadership Group and author of Celebrating
Failure: The Power of Taking Risks, Making Mistakes and Thinking Big. “Instead they choose to
play it safe, to fly below the radar, repeating the same safe choices over and
over again. They operate under the belief that if they make no waves, they
attract no attention; no one will yell at them for failing because they
generally never attempt anything great at which they could possibly fail (or
succeed).”
However, in today’s
post-recession economy, some employers are no longer shying away from
failure—they’re embracing it. According to a recent article in BusinessWeek,
many companies are deliberately seeking out those with track records reflecting
both failure and success, believing that those who have been in the trenches,
survived battle and come out on the other side have irreplaceable experience
and perseverance. They’re veterans of failure.
The prevailing
school of thought in progressive companies—such as Intuit, General Electric,
Corning and Virgin Atlantic—is that great success depends on great risk, and
failure is simply a common byproduct. Executives of such organizations don’t
mourn their mistakes but instead parlay them into future gains.
“The quickest road
to success is to possess an attitude toward failure of ‘no fear,’ ” says Heath.
“To do their work well, to be successful and to keep their companies
competitive, leaders and workers on the front lines need to stick their necks
out a mile every day. They have to deliver risky, edgy, breakthrough ideas,
plans, presentations, advice, technology, products, leadership, bills and more.
And they have to deliver all this fearlessly—without any fear whatsoever of
failure, rejection or punishment.”
Reaching Your
Potential
The same holds true
for personal quests, whether in overcoming some specific challenge or reaching
your full potential in all aspects of life. To achieve your personal best, to
reach unparalleled heights, to make the impossible possible, you can’t fear
failure, you must think big, and you have to push yourself.
When we think of
people with this mindset, we imagine the daredevils, the pioneers, the
inventors, the explorers: They embrace failure as a necessary step to
unprecedented success.
But you don’t have
to walk a tightrope, climb Mount Everest or cure polio to employ this mindset
in your own life. When the rewards of success are great, embracing possible
failure is key to taking on a variety of challenges, whether you’re reinventing
yourself by starting a new business or allowing yourself to trust another
person to build a deeper relationship.
“To achieve any
worthy goal, you must take risks,” says writer and speaker John C. Maxwell. In
his book Failing Forward: Turning Mistakes into Stepping Stones for
Success, he
points to the example of legendary aviator Amelia Earhart, who set several records
and achieved many firsts in her lifetime, including being the first female
pilot to fly solo over the Atlantic Ocean. Although her final flight proved
fateful, Maxwell believes she knew the risk—and that the potential reward was
worth it. “[Earhart’s] advice when it came to risk was simple and direct:
‘Decide whether or not the goal is worth the risks involved. If it is, stop
worrying.’ ”
Of course, the
risks you take should be calculated; you shouldn’t fly blindly into the night
and simply hope for the best. Achieving the goal or at least waging a heroic
effort requires preparation, practice and some awareness of your skills and
talents.
Easing Into a
Fearless Mindset
“One of the biggest
secrets to success is operating inside your strength zone but outside of your
comfort zone,” Heath says. Although you might fail incredibly, you might
succeed incredibly—and that’s why incredible risk and courage are requisite.
Either way, you’ll learn more than ever about your strengths, talents and
resolve, and you’ll strengthen your will for the next challenge.
If this sounds like
dangerous territory, it can be. But there are ways to ease into this fearless
mindset. The first is to consciously maintain a positive attitude so that, no
matter what you encounter, you’ll be able to see the lessons of the experience
and continue to push forward.
“It’s true that not
everyone is positive by nature,” says Maxwell, who cites his father as someone
who would describe himself as a negative person by nature. “Here’s how my dad changed
his attitude. First he made a choice: He continually chooses to have a positive
attitude. Second, he’s continually reading and listening to materials that
bolster that attitude. For example, he’s read The
Power of Positive Thinking many
times. I didn’t get it at first, so once I asked him why. His response: ‘Son, I
need to keep filling the tank so I can stay positive.’ ”
Heath recommends
studying the failures and subsequent reactions of successful people and, within
a business context, repeating such histories for others. “Reward them and
applaud their efforts in front of the entire organization so everyone
understands it is OK to fail. So employees say to themselves, ‘I see that Bill,
the vice president of widgets, who the president adores, failed, and he is not
only back at work, but he is driving a hot new sports car. I can fail and come
to work the next day. Bill is proof of it.’ ”
Finally, Heath
stays motivated by the thought that, “if I become complacent and don’t take
risks, someone will notice what I am doing and improve upon my efforts over
time, and put me out of work. You’ve got to keep finding better ways to run
your life, or someone will take what you’ve accomplished, improve upon it, and
be very pleased with the results. Keep moving forward or die.”
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