For every success, there are countless failures. Yet when we look at someone from the outside, especially someone who’s been particularly successful, we may not see the failures right away.

Scientist Melanie Stefan issued a challenge for academics to share their “CV of failures,” a formal listing of all the programs from which they were rejected, the funding they didn’t get, and the journal articles they wrote that weren’t published.

Here’s how she explains the idea:

“My CV does not reflect the bulk of my academic efforts — it does not mention the exams I failed, my unsuccessful PhD or fellowship applications, or the papers never accepted for publication. At conferences, I talk about the one project that worked, not about the many that failed.”

A Princeton professor, Johannes Haushoher, recently took the advice to heart and published an actual CV / resumé of some of his failures. Here’s a sample page:

[Full PDF here]

*In a category called “meta-failures,” Johannes noted that his CV of Failures has received more attention than his entire body of scientific work. Ha!

After reading about this interesting project, I thought back on my own academic failures. I hunted through my email archives and made my way to March 14, 2008, where I found an email from Princeton. I had applied to a series of Ph.D. programs in International Relations, and Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School was at the top of my list.

That week I received an email from their admissions office:

“Thank you for applying to our Graduate School for the 2008-2009 academic year. While I assure you that the materials you submitted were carefully reviewed by the faculty in the Woodrow Wilson School and by the Graduate School, I regret to inform you that the department did not recommend your admission for the coming year.”

It went on to explain the usual: competition is fierce, funding is limited, etc.

You want to know the scary thing? If I had been accepted, I likely would have gone. I would have committed to a three or four-year process of advanced research.

I could have been decent at it, and there’s more than one possible path in life, but I wouldn’t have been amazing.

It wasn’t the work I was born to do. @chrisguillebeau (Click to Tweet!)

More importantly, what I do now–the blog, the books, the community—would have been very different. At the time I thought I could do both, get the Ph.D. and start the new project. I like doing a lot of things, so I very well could have had a blog and traveled the world while doing a Ph.D. But I certainly wouldn’t have been able to give it my all.

So maybe that was a meta-failure of my own: get rejected from grad school so I could write for a small army of remarkable people.


Chris Guillebeau is the New York Times bestselling author of The Happiness of PursuitThe $100 Startup, and other books. During a lifetime of self-employment, he visited every country in the world (193 in total) before his 35th birthday. Every summer in Portland, Oregon he hosts the World Domination Summit, a gathering of creative, remarkable people. His new book, Born for This, will help you find the work you were meant to do. 
Connect with Chris on Twitter, on his blog, or at your choice of worldwide airline lounge.

Image courtesy of geralt.