Like it or not, we all fail. But knowing why can help stop it happening again. We creatives can be a fragile bunch. The harder we come with our ideas, the harder we fall when those ideas fail. And the agency world can be a ruthless arena, from interviewing for your first job to pitching a campaign to a CMO. Furthermore, in social media marketing, the consumer ends up being your harshest (and most valid) critic. When something you created for a brand fails on a social channel with 40 million followers, you feel the sting instantly. There’s no way to avoid failing creatively. It happens. It’s even encouraged. “Fail Harder,” says a big wall at Weiden+Kennedy. A client recently told me we weren’t doing our job if we didn’t “fail forward.” Where I work, “Get it wrong to get it right,” is one of our mantras. It’s all part of the process, but learning from those fails is critical to your morale and success in this business, as is fine-tuning your creative process to limit fails and increase wins. What follows are my top 5 reasons creative people fail — things I have done at least once in my career, and will probably do again…
01. You’re too focused on the industry

02. You’re taking yourself too seriously
It’s hard to tell creatives that they’re taking themselves too seriously. This is their Creativity™, dammit. Their juice. And to make matters more serious, this juice is the main ingredient in their own personal brand, dammit. Our industry is built on pitting one creative’s branded juice against another person’s branded juice. Bearing your teeth yet? But staying loose is critical to doing great creative work. The trick is tapping into the creative child inside that makes things simply, based on instinct and passion. To experiment and play, and to start each day with a smile. It’s really easy to get uptight with a deadline or pitch looming, but in the end we’re just using marketing as an artistic outlet (see point 1 above), so let’s try and have some fun with it.03. You don’t have a creative outlet outside of work

04. You don’t learn from your #fails
Fail Harder: then what? If you don’t look at your mistakes critically and make adjustments based on feedback, you haven’t just failed hard, you’ve failed bad. Agencies hang their hats on an ability to analyze work and change rapidly, especially in social media, where you have the luxury of making quick adjustments to strategy and pivoting based on consumer reactions. Stubborn creatives will stick to their ways of doing things regardless of what other people say. Those who look at their creative careers as a constant evolution and education will not only continue to grow, but have a long lifespan in this business. Which leads us to…05. Hellooooooo? You’re not listening!

Listening is a requirement for successListening is a requirement for success. A good idea, or a ground-breaking piece of feedback, can come from anywhere. Planners are our friends. Junior level creatives are our future. Criticism, as hard as it is for us artists to take, is an opportunity for growth. And who doesn’t want to grow creatively? The long and the short, by being aware of bad habits and creativity-stifling tendencies, creatives can approach their work with a fresh point-of-view.]]>