Quote #201579
The successful man will profit from his mistakes and try again in a different way.
Dale Carnegie
About This Quote
This quote needs no introduction—at least for now. We're working on adding more context soon.
Interpretation
The line frames “success” less as flawless performance than as adaptive resilience. Mistakes are treated as information: the successful person extracts a lesson (“profit”) and then changes strategy rather than repeating the same approach. Implicitly, the quote rejects shame or paralysis after failure and emphasizes experimentation, iteration, and self-correction—an outlook aligned with modern ideas of growth mindset and continuous improvement. Its moral force lies in shifting attention from the setback itself to the response: what distinguishes success is not avoiding error but learning quickly and trying again with a revised method.



