Tag Archives: basketball

Failing Quickly

When coaching  do we slow a players development and/or impose a false ceiling on their potential  by teaching and encouaging them to avoid failure?  

Whether  intentional or not, teaching players to avoid failure through our words, body language or actions, will hamper a players development. Players must understand failure is a necessary part of their improvement process and they will experience  it during the development process. It should not be viewed as making them some how inferior rather it is a sign they are moving in the right direction. 

As Pixar director Andrew Stanton, director of Finding Nemo and WALL-E, describes this way of operating, “My strategy has always been: be wrong as fast as we can. Which basically means, we’re gonna screw up, let’s just admit that. Let’s not be afraid of that. But let’s do it as fast as we can so we can get to the answer. You can’t get to adulthood before you go through puberty. I won’t get it right the first time, but I will get it wrong really soon, really quickly.”

Failing quickly to learn fast is also a central operating principle for seasoned entrepreneurs who routinely describe their approach as failing forward. That is, entrepreneurs push ideas into the market as quickly as possible in order to learn from mistakes and failures that will point the way forward. This is an extremely well-known Silicon Valley operating principle. Howard Schultz’s experience building Starbucks illustrates the point. He and his colleagues had to try hundreds of ideas, on everything from nonstop opera music to baristas wearing bowties, to hundreds of different types of beverages before being able to define the Starbucks experience.

 Sims, Peter (2011-04-19). Little Bets (pp. 52-53). Free Press. Kindle Edition.

Avoidance of failure means avoiding reaching your fullest potential and often times the quickest way to reaching new levels of success is through failing quickly.

Know your strengths

Golf is a great test of one’s ability to focus on their strengths, as there are no reactions to opponents, it is you and you alone deciding the shot  you are going to attempt.  During a recent round I found myself again trying to hit a shot that I see many good players hit when facing the shot I was. I knew that was not the best shot for me as I am better at hitting a high flop shot than I am at hitting a bump and run into the side of the bank.  Yet I had this internal debate going in my head that if I play against conventional wisdom (which is playing to my strength) am I somehow lesser of a player.  Unfortunately, I displayed some mental weakness and attempted the conventionally wise shot and wound up making bogey, I should have played to my strengths. 

This experience got me thinking how this relates to coaching. As a coach am I trying to get a player to play like someone else or am I trying to help them become the best player they can be based on their unique giftings?  This is not to say that we don’t teach players fundamental skills, but as coaches we should not stifle creativity to do things a little differntly as that leads to innovation.  The game of basketball would look differently if Whitey Skoog, John Miller Cooper, or Ken Sailors  had not been allowed to take a jump shot as up to then it was believed that a set shot was most effective.

Good coaches don’t try to create cookie cutter players, they help players realize their strengths and how to maximize them within the team and the game.

Good coaches develop players to their fullest potential, not trying to force them mirror someone elses path to their fullest potnential. 

Creating change is coaching

Coaching is all about creating change.  As coaches we try to change skills, habits, behaviors, and mindsets to help players and teams achieve desired outcomes.

I have recently been reading the book Switch: How to Change Things When Change is Hard by Chip and Dan Heath and highly recommend it http://www.heathbrothers.com/switch/ if you haven’t read it. 

Here are a few examples of concepts covered that are key for coaches:

  • “We need to switch from archaeological problem solving to bright-spot evangelizing.”  -From Switch
    As coaches we need to focus our attention on identifying what is working and how we can do more of it; this starts by not letting something done right go unnoticed.  We need to spend less time deconstructing with players what went wrong; as that approach is not as effective at getting players to change.
     
  • “To provide movement in a new direction, you need to provide crystal-clear guidance.  That’s why scripting is important — you’ve got to think about the specific behavior that you’d want to see in a tough moment” -From Switch
    Unless you have prepared players with a clear action plan for dealing with adversity don’t expect consistent and positive responses to tough times.
  • “If you are leading a change effort, you need to remove the ambiguity from your vision of change. Granted, this asking a lot.  It means that you’ll need to understand how to script the criticial moves, to translate apsirations into actions.”  – From Switch
    The following link is to a great story on how coach Andy Fleming scripted out the moves to change his program http://www.coachad.com/pages/October-2011-Blueprint-For-Turning-Around-A-Struggling-Program.php