Brittle Points: How to make companies robust
Companies fail for all sorts of reasons. Sometimes we’re not surprised, like if the product never worked or not enough people wanted to pay to solve the pr...
Similar Articles (10 found)
🔍 78.1% similar
The Important Thing—powerful enough to override all your deficiencies
Do you feel the crushing weight of the disadvantages facing every new company? N...
🔍 75.6% similar
The “errors” that mean you’re doing it right
If you don’t make mistakes, you’re not working on hard enough problems.
—Frank Wilczek, 2004 winner of No...
🔍 74.8% similar
The Startup Drake Equation
Most startups fail, even when the founders are smart, driven, passionate, capable, and are solving a problem that people re...
🔍 74.0% similar
The fundamental forces of scale
Idealistic founders believe they will break the mold when they start scaling. They will not turn into a “typical big c...
🔍 73.6% similar
The three kinds of leverage that anchor effective strategies
“Leverage” means generating a large effect from a relatively small effort, created by rid...
🔍 73.5% similar
It’s a torturous chaos until it isn’t
When you hear “explosive startup growth,” a few darlings come to mind. Facebook, Slack, now OpenAI (Figure 1).
I...
🔍 73.2% similar
“It’s a Balance” isn’t always the answer
Faced with two conflicting choices, what should you do?
Ironically there are several answers, which are thems...
🔍 73.0% similar
April 2006
(This essay is derived from a talk at the 2006
Startup School.)
The startups we've funded so far are pretty quick, but they seem
quicker to...
🔍 72.9% similar
Excuse me, is there a problem?
How many companies fail:
- Founder gets a flash of insight: The world has a Problem.
- Founder talks to three potential...
🔍 72.4% similar
Extreme brainstorming questions to trigger new, better ideas
How do you generate ideas?
“Brainstorming” is hard—staring at a blank whiteboard, wonderi...