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Mark Hovde's avatar

"Here’s another question: What does it mean for a business to fail? A coffee shop that stopped serving coffee would probably be considered a failure. But an expense filing startup that stopped managing expenses? The idea failed, but the business didn’t. A startup can discontinue its products, replace its founders, and wipe out its investors, and still be the same startup as it was before. It can fire everyone—which is equivalent to missing payroll, for all practical intents and purposes—and still be considered alive. In other words, so long as a startup could still succeed at anything, it hasn’t failed."

The startup is a gamble that a team can find a way to make money. It tries to say what it will do, but that plan may fail. As long as the team has the money to pivot, there is no issue. As one of our board members said, "No one is going to care how you got there, just as long as you got there." He was referring to earning a 5X exit for the VCs. The problem with the pivot is when it requires more money. Then things are dicey indeed. In my experience, there'd better be a very good reason for putting in more money when the first thing didn't work. The VC's may have their own reasons for not owning up to a failure and putting in more money. It might be they can keep a valuation for the moment that looks better than writing off the thing right when they may be in the middle of raising a juicy new fund that'll be throwing off 2% annually for themselves!

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Michael Golden's avatar

A different kind of pivot! From the farm to world record holder on the basketball court -- and he never even made the pros! https://thegoldenmean2040.substack.com/p/becoming-the-best-in-the-world

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