“If you’re anything like me,” writes Erik Kessels in his new book Failed It!, “you’re called an idiot at least once a day. And that’s OK”.
For Kessels, co-founder of communications agency KesselsKramer, failure is vital to the health of the creative mind; mistake-making is an intrinsic part of being different from the norm, of being new and exciting.
Wrongs are more than “mere learning experiences,” he says, they are themselves “early brushes with success”.




Billboard, image found online
Billboard, image found onlineFound photographs showing classic ‘mistakes’, collected by Erik Kessels; online imagery, shown in spread at top of post

But what does this mean in the real world, where success and failure is so often measured in quantitative terms?
Fail enough times in your job and, somewhere along the path of wanton experimentalism, your employer will no doubt have something to say about it.
Yet this reading is to miss the point: it’s failure in and of itself that can, as Kessels suggests, also become the success story. “Avoiding mistakes by not taking risks might not draw the wrath of your boss or client,” he says, “but it also doesn’t draw excess praise."