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posted by janrinok on Wednesday October 02 2019, @03:44PM   Printer-friendly
from the try-flying-off-a-cliff dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Scientists at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management have established a causal relationship between failure and future success, proving German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche's adage that "what does not kill me makes me stronger."

The researchers utilized advanced analytics to assess the relationship between professional failure and success for young scientists. They found, in contrast to their initial expectations, that failure early in one's career leads to greater success in the long term for those who try again.

"The attrition rate does increase for those who fail early in their careers," lead author Yang Wang said. "But those who stick it out, on average, perform much better in the long term, suggesting that if it doesn't kill you, it really does make you stronger."

The study, "Early-career setback and future career impact," will be published Oct. 1, in Nature Communications[*].

The findings provide a counter-narrative to the Matthew Effect, which posits a "rich get richer" theory that success begets more success.

"It turns out that, historically, while we have been relatively successful in pinpointing the benefits of success, we have failed to understand the impact of failure," said Dashun Wang, corresponding author and associate professor of management and organizations at Kellogg.

[...]The research does not contradict the Matthew Effect, but rather suggests a complementary path for those who fail.

"There is value in failure," Dashun Wang said. "We have just begun expanding this research into a broader domain and are seeing promising signals of similar effects in other fields."

[*] Nature Communications Open Access Link: Early-career setback and future career impact.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 02 2019, @09:00PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 02 2019, @09:00PM (#902031)

    The researchers utilized advanced analytics to assess the relationship between professional failure and success for young scientists.

    Scientists. For young scientists who fail and try again, the long term prospects are greater than young scientists who don't fail. Got it.

    How that applies to other professions and demographic groups is entirely unclear. For instance, there are studies that show college graduates that graduate when the economy is bad (hard to find jobs), do worse in the long run than graduates who graduate when the economy is strong.