by Jonathan Jones
A business can transform its culture by applying the core ideas from Carol S. Dweck’s book, “Mindset,” particularly the shift from a fixed mindset to a growth mindset. At its core, this means moving from a culture that values being right to one that values learning.
In a fixed mindset culture, employees may avoid challenges, fear failure, and resist feedback because mistakes feel like personal shortcomings. This can quietly limit innovation and accountability. By contrast, a growth mindset culture encourages the belief that skills and abilities can be developed through effort, feedback, and persistence.
This shift starts with leadership. Owners and managers must model growth mindset behaviors—openly admitting mistakes, asking for input, and demonstrating a willingness to learn. When leaders normalize learning, it creates psychological safety for others to do the same.
Language also plays a powerful role. Simple changes—like praising effort, strategy, and progress instead of just results—can reshape how employees view their work. For example, instead of saying “You’re a natural at this,” say “Your preparation and persistence really paid off.” This reinforces the idea that success is built, not innate.
Additionally, small businesses can embed growth mindset into daily operations by reframing failure. Instead of asking “Who’s responsible?” ask “What can we learn?” Regular debriefs, team reflections, and after-action reviews help turn setbacks into learning opportunities.
Finally, hiring and development practices should align with this philosophy. Look for curiosity, coachability, and resilience—not just experience.
Over time, these small but intentional shifts create a culture where people take initiative, embrace challenges, and continuously improve—fueling both individual growth and business success.
Jonathan Jones (Jonathan.jones@vistagechair.com or 314-608-0783) is a CEO peer group chair/coach for Vistage International.