
“Failure is simply the opportunity to begin again, this time more intelligently.” – Henry Ford True! But in recent years, failure has become glamorized. You might have seen article after article telling you to embrace failure, to fail forward, to fail quickly. The successful business owners you admire all have harrowing tales of epic screw-ups. But there’s an important distinction to be made: the failure itself isn’t the important part. In fact, failure by itself is never a good thing. It’s what happens after the failure that matters most. Failure presents a unique opportunity that’s often absent from success: it’s…