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In Pursuit of Failure

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Lorne Fultonberg

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Lorne Fultonberg
Writer"

Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

Writer"

303 871-2660

At Denver Startup Week, Daniels professor preaches learning by doing 鈥 doing it wrong, that is

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Rosanna Garcia
Rosanna Garcia

While entrepreneurs scramble to find the next big idea that will work, associate marketing professor prefers to focus on the things that don鈥檛. Garcia, who holds the Walter Koch Endowed Chair of Entrepreneurship in the is an expert on 鈥渞esistant innovation.鈥 In other words, she studies the things that turn consumers off.

On Sept. 26, she was in front of an audience for delivering a on how to develop a product that is efficient and effective, as well as popular with consumers and sustainable for the environment.

After her lecture, Garcia hopped on a bus to her next engagement and answered a few questions from the 快活app Newsroom. (Note: Some answers have been edited for clarity and brevity.)

You introduced yourself today as someone who studies why things don鈥檛 work. How did that become your interest?

My philosophy 鈥 and I believe the philosophy at Daniels 鈥 is that I encourage my students to fail. It鈥檚 true that in failure you learn so much more. It鈥檚 a puzzle. And the very first puzzle I wanted to figure out was looking at why do American wineries not use screw caps [instead of cork]? And why won't consumers adopt the screw cap? That was like a new puzzle to me. And that鈥檚 how my research started forming around these puzzles and why people don't do what we think.

Are businesses thinking this way: What am I doing wrong instead of what can I do right?

No, they don鈥檛. I think we do live in a society where it鈥檚 not OK to fail. That鈥檚 actually what I like about entrepreneurship: It is OK to fail and that鈥檚 what investors will often look for. They ask: How many failures did you have before this one? You have to have learned along the way, and this is not your first time out of the gate, so you know what the reality is.

But of course you can鈥檛 fail all the time.

No. Not continually. But having that one or two out of the gate and you succeed better if you fail and it won't be held against you.

What鈥檚 standing in the way of a culture that celebrates failure?

Our biggest thing is time. We鈥檙e a capitalist economy, and that鈥檚 my greatest concern, actually, for what we teach in business schools, what the perspective is. As soon as business schools start changing that perspective, that鈥檚 when we鈥檒l start to see changes.

[This] is what I love about sustainability: Sustainability says we can鈥檛 be just profit-driven. We have to have that triple bottom line [meaning an equal focus on profit, people and planet]. Many resources are not renewable, and if a firm doesn鈥檛 think about that, it鈥檚 not going to be around in 100 years. If they want something to be around in 100 years, start designing that now. Firms need to think that way.

How would you evaluate the state of entrepreneurship in Denver?

It鈥檚 growing. It鈥檚 hopping. It鈥檚 an exciting time for our startups here in Denver, and that鈥檚 just because of the growth of the region. I think companies, not just startups, are seeing that growth that is happening, so they鈥檙e coming to Denver also. Catalyst HTI is an example. You have companies that are interacting with startups, and that鈥檚 really helping to drive things. It鈥檚 not just a startup company, but it鈥檚 a broader mindset of sharing technologies and working together.

What else are you working on right now?

There is a large underrepresented population in entrepreneurship. Women are a big part of that. Minorities are a big part of that, and it鈥檚 really important to know that entrepreneurship is open to everybody.

The research I鈥檓 doing right now happens to be on entrepreneurship in women. When I was working with women, they told me they don鈥檛 identify as entrepreneurs. They identify as business owners and they do tend to have smaller companies with fewer employees. And I think the business schools are doing a disservice by selling 鈥渆ntrepreneurship programs,鈥 because [women] are not relating to entrepreneurship. They鈥檙e business owners. Just make it clear and knowing.