Get Hired

The Exact Speech Your Team Needs After a Crushing Loss



When your team takes a massive hit, your immediate response matters far more than the loss itself.
Recently, I was on the sidelines of my kid’s soccer game when a friend shared a story that has stuck with me ever since. Her team had spent months pouring their energy into a high-stakes, multi-phase project. The effort was all-consuming. They were so confident in their first-phase submission that they had already begun building the second phase while waiting for the green light.
Then, late on a Friday, the rejection came. They were out.
She described her initial reaction as the expected wave of disappointment. But quickly, a second, uglier feeling set in: dread.
She knew exactly how her company’s culture would process this. Someone had to be at fault, and she was bracing for the blame to land squarely on her team’s shoulders.
“We took a big swing at something we weren’t known for yet,” she told me. “That’s the whole truth. But that’s not the story that’s going to get told.”
If you’ve been in leadership, you know this room. The Friday afternoon, post-mortem moment is one of the most critical junctures a leader will ever face. Yet, most leaders completely waste it. They either go radio silent or, worse, they start quietly gathering evidence to protect themselves.
Here is the speech I wish more leaders would give instead.

The Speech

(Deliver this clearly, calmly, and directly to your team)
"I’ll keep this short, because you’ve all heard the news by now. We didn’t make it through. After everything we poured into this, we’re out.
I know what a lot of you are feeling right now, because I’m feeling it, too. And beneath the disappointment, I know there’s a looming question: Whose fault is this? Is the blame going to land on me?
So let me answer that right now, before the office narrative writes itself.
This was not a failure of effort, and it was not a failure of any single person. We went after something we hadn’t yet earned a reputation for. We reached past our current standing. And reaching like that comes with a very real chance of falling short. That is not a mistake to go hunting for; it is the price of admission for being the kind of team that pursues hard things instead of safe ones. That is who we are. I would rather lose this way, reaching, than win the small stuff on autopilot.
Here is the part I need from you.
Over the next two weeks, we have a choice. We can spend our energy building a case for whose fault this was—trading defensive emails, creating distance, and making sure the blame lands anywhere but on us. I’ve watched teams do exactly that. It feels like protection, but it is actually the fastest way to destroy everything that makes us good.
Or, we can ask a better question. Not ‘Who caused this?’ but ‘What allowed this to happen?’ What did we learn about this client, this market, or ourselves that we didn’t know on Monday? Because extracting that lesson is the only thing that makes this loss actually worth something.
We don’t get to choose the outcome. We got that answer on Friday. But we absolutely get to choose what kind of team walks through these doors on Monday morning. I already know which one I’m betting on.
Let’s get to work."

Why This Speech Works

Notice what this message does—and more importantly, what it refuses to do.
1. It names reality before offering comfort. It says the scary part out loud. By explicitly naming the fear of blame, you disarm it. That level of radical honesty is what earns you the right to guide the team through what comes next.
2. It strategically reframes the narrative. The loss stops being evidence of incompetence and becomes evidence of ambition. The facts remain exactly the same, but the meaning changes entirely. After a loss, people rarely need more information; they need a healthier interpretation of the information they already have.
3. It identifies the real enemy. This is the step most leaders miss. The enemy isn’t the competitor who beat you. The enemy is the human instinct to self-protect by pointing fingers.
People don’t point fingers because they are malicious; they do it because they’ve learned that the person standing closest to a mistake is usually the one who pays for it. The finger-pointing that leaders despise is almost always a rational survival response to a toxic system that those same leaders built.

From "Whose Fault?" to "What Happened?"

The only way out of this trap is shared ownership. The pivot from "Whose fault is this?" to "What allowed this to happen?" is the exact dividing line between a team that learns from a loss and a team that slowly bleeds out because of one.
The woman on the soccer sidelines didn’t need a complex new strategy from me. Her instincts were already correct. She just needed validation that protecting her team didn’t have to mean preparing for an internal war.

What You Will Say When It’s Your Turn

If you lead a team or have built something of your own, you are going to lose. Probably sooner than you’d like.
The question isn’t if you will find yourself standing in that Friday afternoon room. You will. The only question is what you will say once you get there.
Say the scary part out loud. Reframe the reach. Name the real enemy. Give your people something better to do on Monday than cover their own backs.
That’s the speech. Steal it.