The Wrong Turn
"Every project that fails is actually a diagnostic tool telling you exactly where to build next."
Why setbacks are the most valuable education a grassroots leader can receive.
Success is a lousy teacher, but failure is a masterclass. In the world of grassroots arts, we often treat a project that didn't meet its goals as a quiet catastrophe.
We hide the evidence, feel a sense of personal shame, and move on to the next thing as quickly as possible. But if we want to grow as creative leaders, we have to look directly at the wreckage. Losing a grant, seeing a low turnout at an opening, or having a technical disaster during a live performance isn't a sign that you should stop; it is a sign that you are actually doing the work.
If you never lose, you aren't pushing the boundaries of your resourcefulness. You are just playing it safe in the shallow end.
Why does this mindset shift matter so much for small organizations? Because our limited resources are our most precious asset, and we often think a failed project is a total waste of those resources. In reality, the only true waste is a project you do not learn from. For a scrappy leader, a setback is a diagnostic tool. It tells you exactly where your community’s needs are not being met or where your internal systems are brittle. Larger institutions can afford to be mediocre for years because they have the capital to mask their mistakes. You do not have that luxury, which means your learning curve is much steeper and your growth can be much faster. When you lose, you are essentially receiving a high-level education that no textbook could provide.
Applying this approach requires us to decouple our identity from our outcomes. You are not your project. When an event fails, you have not failed; the experiment simply yielded a negative result. This shift allows you to perform what we might call a scrappy post-mortem. Sit down with your team and ask: What did we assume that turned out to be untrue? Maybe you assumed people would travel to a venue that was actually too far away. Maybe you assumed a digital platform would be intuitive when it was not. These insights are the golden nuggets of information that will make your next project ten times more effective. You are looking for the gap between your intent and the impact.
Another strategy is to build failure into your timeline. Instead of one big high-stakes launch, plan for three low-fidelity rough drafts. This lowers the psychological stakes and turns a loss into a planned stage of development. If you know the first version is allowed to be messy, the sting of a wrong turn disappears. You start to value the process of iteration over the pressure of a perfect debut. This is how you build an organization that is resilient rather than fragile. You become a team that is not afraid to take risks because you know how to harvest the lessons from whatever happens.
Resilience is the most important tool in your kit. It is not about never falling; it is about how quickly you can translate that fall into a new direction. When things go wrong, take a deep breath, gather the data, and realize that you just received a very expensive education for the price of one difficult weekend.
You are not starting over from scratch; you are starting again with more information. Every wrong turn is just narrowing down the path to the right one.
Keep building, keep experimenting, and keep the faith that every setback is making you a sharper, more capable leader.
Northwestern Ontario Community Arts & Recreation
Rooted in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario Art Borups Corners advances arts, culture, and recreation programming that brings our rural communities together. Through hands-on creative workshops, local art exhibitions, youth arts initiatives, and inclusive cultural events, we champion Northern Ontario artists, strengthen community connection, and celebrate the diverse creative spirit of Northwestern Ontario.
As a community-driven hub for arts and recreation, Art Borups Corners delivers community-based arts programming, cultural gatherings, and collaborative creative projects that foster artistic expression, support youth engagement, and encourage sustainable growth in the northern arts sector. Our initiatives connect residents, empower emerging creators, and build lasting pride in local talent across rural Northwestern Ontario.
We gratefully acknowledge the support of the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects program and the Government of Ontario, whose investment strengthens innovative, community-driven arts initiatives and fosters creative collaboration across Ontario. Discover upcoming programs, community events, artist opportunities, and creative resources at Art Borups Corners.