Search Smart Spending:

Learning from mistakes: A real-life example

Posted May 21 2008, 08:58 AM by Karen Datko
Rating:

This post comes from partner blog The Dough Roller.

Mistakes are a part of life. We all make them. But like turning lemons into lemonade, we can benefit from our mistakes and make the most of them, or we can run from them and pretend they don't exist.

This hit home for me recently in an e-mail exchange I had with a reader. In a recent post about peer-to-peer lending, I made a mistake.

I spelled principal (as in principal and interest) with a "ple" at the end. Talk about a dumb mistake for a personal-finance blogger who claims to know something about smarter money management. A kind reader sent me the following e-mail:

Very good analysis. However, she has paid off some principal on the loan, not principle (although we all agree that, in principle, it is a good idea to pay off some of the principal).

I was mortified. I immediately corrected the error, and because a reader pointed out the mistake, I didn't just delete the "ple," but crossed through it so future readers will see the change I made. I then responded to the reader thanking him for pointing out my mistake. His response became the motivation for this post. He wrote:

Hey, we all make mistakes. Otherwise we wouldn't be blogging; we'd be golfing or whatever it is that you'd like. You know, it is amazing how many times I find errors like that and how few authors accept the comment without getting all huffy over it. You got class.

The fact is that some of our best successes are born out of mistakes. I've made many mistakes with The Dough Roller, and most of them have allowed me greater success down the road. With one of my posts, I made a terrible mistake with the way I used search-engine optimization. I went from a No. 2 ranking and 500-plus search-engine visitors a day to virtually no ranking and about 20 visitors a day. But I learned several important and valuable lessons about SEO.

Of all the things we talk about on this site, learning from our mistakes is one of the most important. If you can learn from your mistakes, you can do just about anything. So here are a few suggestions on how to do that. (I've made seven writing mistakes in the list. Can you find them all?)

Acknowledge. The absolute first thing to recognize is that you will make mistakes. We all do. If you go into an investment or a business or anything without recognizing that mistakes happen, you'll be in for a big letdown. If you acknowledge that mistakes are one way we learn and improve, you'll be better able to take you're mistakes and turn them into opportunities.

Accept. I know folks who refuse to accept they've made a mistake. Unfortunately, I know some politicians who do the same thing. Deep down, I think its fear and pride that keeps many from accepting that they've made a mistake. Whether its fear of rejection, fear of failure, or just plain pride, failure to recognize when you've made a mistake prevents you from learning and improving. If I didn't learn from the mistakes I've made investing, I'd still own high-fee load mutual funds and would have no foreign investments.

Accept not. A corollary to accepting when you've made a mistake is not accepting responsibility for other's mistakes. As a manager, I believe one must accept responsibility for the mistakes of subordinates, but thats not what I'm talking about here. I've known people who seem to blame themselves for everything. Just like refusing to accept responsibility for your own mistakes will keep you from improving, so will blaming yourself for mistakes others have made.

Analyze. Once you accept that you've made a mistake, you need to analyze what happened as objectively as possible. It's difficult to be objective. I don't look at The Dough Roller objectively. How can I? I've poured countless hours into this site. But I can do my best to assess my mistakes as objectively as possible. And the same is true at work, in relationships, and with investing. Have you ever found yourself enamored with a stock pick you made, even if it turned out to be a mistake? Read this: Don't fall in love with your investments; they don't love you.

Acquire. This is critical: We can never stop acquiring knowledge. The most horrendous mistake is the one we don't realize we've made. That's why I was so grateful when a reader pointed out that I had misspelled "principal." It's the mistakes we don't realize we've made that can do the most damage. So we can never stop learning and acquiring knew information and knew skills. I'm constantly asking myself what I can learn when it comes to blogging, Internet marketing and SEO. Just this week I've learned new skills that I believe will make me a lot of money online. We shall see.

So what about my stupid principle/principal mistake? Well, that reader and I have exchanged e-mail since then. I got one from him just the other day. Had I ignored his correction, or worse, made the change in the article without acknowledging the mistake, I could have lost a faithful reader. I would have turned one mistake into several. That's a mistake worth avoiding.

And speaking of mistakes, did you find the seven I made in the list?

Other articles of interest at The Dough Roller:

 

"LifeLock: A review"

"How to earn a second income in your 'second life'"

"10 online budget tools"

Comments

 

you're, its, other's, knew & knew,.  That's about as far as I got before getting a headache. Am I right so far?

I counted nine mistakes.

A correction from a loved one can also provide a precious memory, ironically enough. When I was in college I wrote to my grandmother using the word "priviledge" (sic). She wrote back, correcting it to "privilege" (unlike, she added, the word "knowledge"), adding that she wanted me to know how to spell it for some day "when it might count against me" to misspell it.  I remember being a bit impatient with her at the time--why didn't she just appreciate that her granddaughter even WROTE to her, didn't she know how lucky she was?  But now, almost 35 years later, I *still* think of her every time I write "privilege".... after stopping, visualizing the note she hand-wrote me, remembering how to spell the word correctly, and mentally thanking her.

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):