My University marketing professor was always repeating 2 sentences:
1. We must be wrong, because when we are wrong it means we are doing things
2. The only way for doing things is doing them
In my idea, AI is evolving so fast that when we believe that we have understood how to use AI at that stage, the stage is already changed it.
My attitude is about discovery. My mantra has always been "Tomorrow will be a better day because I will learn something new" but with AI is getting amazingly crazy ;-)
So let's appreciate being wrong if this is a way for doing and learning something
In my opinion, it's important doing things wrong, and accepting the fact.
Because if we make a mistake, we learn from that mistake. Even because we are human beings, and for this reason we may fail.
The problem is that the way leadership is taught frequently makes people become control freak, and when you are "programmed" to control everything, hardly accept to make errors....
So coming back to the main topic, it's natural being wrong in unexplored territories.
Hi Mike.
My University marketing professor was always repeating 2 sentences:
1. We must be wrong, because when we are wrong it means we are doing things
2. The only way for doing things is doing them
In my idea, AI is evolving so fast that when we believe that we have understood how to use AI at that stage, the stage is already changed it.
My attitude is about discovery. My mantra has always been "Tomorrow will be a better day because I will learn something new" but with AI is getting amazingly crazy ;-)
So let's appreciate being wrong if this is a way for doing and learning something
Thanks for sharing!
Your professor was "right". :)
In my opinion, it's important doing things wrong, and accepting the fact.
Because if we make a mistake, we learn from that mistake. Even because we are human beings, and for this reason we may fail.
The problem is that the way leadership is taught frequently makes people become control freak, and when you are "programmed" to control everything, hardly accept to make errors....
So coming back to the main topic, it's natural being wrong in unexplored territories.
I have seen it called intelligent failure when you make mistakes on the road to discovering something new.