Failure
refers to the state or condition of not meeting a desirable or intended objective, and may be viewed as the opposite of success. Product failure ranges from failure to sell the product to fracture of the product, in the worst cases leading to personal injury, the province of forensic engineering.
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FAILURE TICKETS
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Criteria for failure
The criteria for failure are heavily dependent on context of use, and may be
relative to a particular
observer or
belief system. A situation considered to be a failure by one might be considered a success by another, particularly in cases of direct
competition or a
zero-sum game. Similarly, the degree of success or failure in a situation may be differently viewed by distinct observers or participants, such that a situation that one considers to be a failure, another might consider to be a success, a qualified success or a neutral situation.
It may also be difficult or impossible to ascertain whether a situation meets criteria for failure or success due to ambiguous or ill-defined definition of those criteria. Finding useful and effective criteria, or
heuristics, to judge the success or failure of a situation may itself be a significant task.
Types of failure
Failure can be differentially perceived from the viewpoints of the evaluators. A person who is only interested in the final outcome of an activity would consider it to be an
Outcome Failure
if the core issue has not been resolved or a core need is not met. A failure can also be a
process failure
whereby although the activity is completed successfully, a person may still feel dissatisfied if the underlying process is perceived to be below expected standard or benchmark.
#Failure to
anticipate
#Failure to
perceive
#Failure to carry out a task
Loser
is a derogatory term for a person who is (according to the standards of the observer) in general unsuccessful.
Commercial failures
A
commercial failure
is a
product that does not reach expectations of success.
Most of the items listed below had high expectations, significant financial investments, and/or widespread publicity, but fell far short of success. Due to the subjective nature of "success" and "meeting expectations", there can be disagreement about what constitutes a "major flop."
- For flops in computer and video gaming, see List of commercial failures in computer and video gaming
- For company failures related to the 1997–2001 Dot-com bubble, see Dot-com company
- See also Vaporware
Internet memes
"Fail" is the name of a popular
Internet meme where users superimpose a caption, often the word "
fail
" or "
epic fail
", onto photos or short videos depicting unsuccessful events or people falling short of expections.
[1] In July 2003, a contributor to
Urban Dictionary wrote that the term, "fail", could be used as an interjection, "when one disapproves of something," citing the example: "You actually bought that? FAIL." This most likely originated as a shortened form of "You fail" or, more fully, "You fail it," the taunting "game over" message in the late
1990s Japanese video game
Blazing Star, notorious for its fractured English.
[2] [3] [4]
The term "
miserable failure" has also been popularized as a result of a widely known "
Google bombing", which caused
Google searches for the term to turn up the White House biography of
George W. Bush.
[5]
See also
- Cascading failure
- Debugging
- Fail-safe
- Failure analysis
- Failure rate
- Failure mode
- Forensic engineering
- List of military disasters
- List of railway disasters
- Murphy's law
- New product development
- Non-event
- Planned obsolescence (also built-in obsolescence)
- Power outage
- Product
- Product management
- Single point of failure
- Structural failure
- Tensile strength
- White elephant
- System accident