
Einstein’s Favorite Mistake — and What It Teaches Us About Lean Thinking
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About this listen
The blog post
Albert Einstein once called the “cosmological constant” the biggest blunder of his life. But what if that so-called mistake actually holds timeless lessons for leaders today?
In this episode, Mark Graban explores Einstein’s “favorite mistake” — why he altered his equations to fit prevailing beliefs, what he missed in the process, and how the story connects directly to Lean thinking, Toyota Kata, and continuous improvement.
You’ll hear how Einstein’s cautionary tale mirrors what happens in organizations when:
Data contradicts long-held assumptions
Teams run pilots that outperform the old way, but leaders resist change
People hesitate to speak up because it feels unsafe to challenge the consensus
The conversation highlights the importance of scientific thinking, experimentation, and psychological safety — and why the real mistake isn’t being wrong, but failing to learn.
Whether you’re leading change in healthcare, manufacturing, software, or beyond, you’ll come away with practical insights to help you trust the data, encourage dissent, and model learning from mistakes.