“In my experience, each failure contains the seeds of your next success if you are willing to learn from it”
— Steve Ballmer
Simplified Meaning:
When things go wrong or don't work out, they often hold the key to doing better next time. Imagine you're learning to ride a bicycle. If you fall, you figure out why you fell and try not to make the same mistake again. Maybe you wobbled because you weren't looking straight ahead. By noticing this, you can remember to focus on the road next time and balance better. This is true for other situations too. If you mess up on a school test, you can look at what you got wrong, study those areas, and do better on the next one. It means paying attention to what didn't work and using that knowledge to improve. In business, if someone’s product fails, they learn why customers didn’t like it, fix the problems, and come up with a better product. The main idea is to not give up when you fail, but to see it as a chance to learn and grow. Each failure helps you understand what to fix, so you’re more likely to succeed in the future.