graph TD
A["⚠️ Knowledge from Failure"] --> B["🔎 Sources of Insight"]
A --> C["🚧 Cultural Barriers"]
A --> D["🛠️ High-Reliability Practices"]
A --> E["📋 ISO 9001 Compliance Hooks"]
B --> B1["❌ Nonconformities and Recalls"]
B --> B2["💬 Complaints and Near-Misses"]
C --> C1["😨 Blame Culture and Fear"]
D --> D1["🔍 Root Cause Analysis"]
D --> D2["🤝 Blameless Post-Mortems"]
E --> E1["📑 Clauses 8.7 - 9.1.2 - 10.2"]
style A fill:#4A90E2,color:#fff,stroke:#333,stroke-width:2px
style C fill:#FF6B6B,color:#fff
style D fill:#7ED321,color:#000,stroke:#333,stroke-width:2px
style E fill:#F5A623,color:#000,stroke:#333
style B fill:#50E3C2,color:#000
Flashcards
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Key takeaways
- Knowledge from failure is among the most valuable yet most neglected categories of organizational knowledge.
- Nonconformities, complaints, near-misses, audit findings, and recalls all generate unique insight.
- Blame culture, fear, legal concerns, and the urge to move on prevent capturing failure knowledge.
- High-reliability industries use root cause analysis, after-action reviews, and blameless post-mortems.
- Clauses 8.7, 9.1.2, and 10.2 make failure-knowledge capture a compliance requirement, not just best practice.
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