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You Can Recover From Stupid Mistakes

by Judy Carter

judy@judycarter.com

We all mess up sometimes—a meeting falls flat, you lose your temper with a co-worker or step on the gas instead of the brake and smash into someone’s house. Well, some mistakes are bigger than others.


Whether you are a salesperson who lost an account or an employee who just told off the boss, don’t start looking at the want ads yet. If you play your cards right, you, too, can get a do-over using something as simple of your sense of humor. Laughter breaks tension, changes the mood and creates an opening for a second chance. A little light-hearted self-deprecating humor makes you appear more human and likeable.

DO-OVER TIPS
I offer these four tips on how to get a do-over at work:


1. When caught, admit the mistake immediately.
If your mistake is obvious, rather than pretending it didn’t happen, diminishing its importance or defending it, admit fault without excuses and ask for the chance to rectify it. Lying about it will probably get you in more hot water than the mistake itself.

If you have already made a mistake, don’t make another one by lying—“I didn’t know that was company policy.” “I didn’t say that.” It will come back to haunt you. You don’t want to be left with a story that ends in “Officegate,” have to wear a security ankle bracelet preventing you from decorating cakes on your TV show or have Oprah really mad at you for lying in your book.

A good boss knows everyone makes mistakes, and a trustworthy employee fesses up.

2. Exaggerate your mistake.
What? Shouldn’t I make my mistake smaller? No! Take your boss’ words out of his or her mouth and exaggerate your mistake. For instance, if your mistake cost your boss a few hundred dollars, try saying, “What a huge mistake I made. I’m worse than Michael Jackson’s plastic surgeon. This is not good. You shouldn’t have people like me working for you.”

But don’t go overboard looking for a laugh. Be sincere. Taking an exaggerated view of your mistake will very often prompt your boss to put it in a more realistic perspective. “Well, what you did wasn’t that bad. If you just do this, ….” And the boss may even tell you how to correct the problem.

3. Do a preemptive strike.
When you know your boss is going to find out about your mistake, figure out a solution—your do-over—and then march in and say to your boss, “Boy I really screwed up. It’s a good thing I haven’t totally lost my brains because I figured out how to fix it.”

Then tell the boss what your do-over is. Catching your mistake before the boss finds out prevents him or her from having time to think about how stupid you really are.

4. Keep your sense of humor.
This happened to me and is where the power of humor can help you. A prospective corporate client, Chubb Insurance, asked me to write a proposal of how my corporate comedy training would work for the company. I erroneously thought the prospect was a weight loss company and wrote my proposal accordingly. The response was, “I can see by your proposal that you are a complete idiot.”

Well, it wasn’t exactly that harsh, but it was something to that extent. So, rather than defending myself or making excuses, I used a comedy technique—validate and exaggerate. It sounded something like this. “You are so right about that. And you are so smart—you figured out I was an idiot in three minutes. It usually takes people three months to figure that out about me.”

She laughed, which broke the tension and gave me some time to figure out how I was going to fix my mistake. “Now that my internet connection is back up, let me do some research about your company. I’m sure I can rise from idiot to mildly stupid.” Not only did I end up getting the job, but she referred me to other divisions of Chubb.

Keeping your sense of humor will help you keep your job.

Judy Carter, a motivational humorist and author of The Comedy Bible, has appeared on “Oprah,” “Good Morning America” and CNN. She works closely with large corporations across America developing ways to use comedy in the workplace. For more information, please visit www.corporatecomedyworks.com.

   
Copyright 2005 Judy Carter
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