Embracing Failure: Hacks to Rise from the Ashes

Embracing Failure: Hacks to Rise from the Ashes

Failures are unpredictable. Being an entrepreneur, you must have especially encountered failures like no one else. From Rovio to Microsoft, there are numerous examples of how the startup founders made failure their stepping stones and rose from the ashes like a Phoenix to achieve success. Failures are hard to avoid, but you can definitely minimize your losses from them. Here are a few simple hacks to deal with failures.

Take a step back, relax, and find out what went wrong. Remember, this phase carries the force to break you and make you take whimsical decisions that you might regret later in life. Do not lose your calm and proceed with patience.

Failures can wreak havoc if not tended to at the right time. So, stop looking from the surface and get into the root cause of the problem before it turns into a disaster. Look back at the entire series of incidents and find out the root cause of the failure.

Dare to accept your failures and their consequences. Failures are as normal as any other thing that we go through in our everyday life. So, have the guts to accept your failure and do not try to portray your failure in false limelight.

Conduct Frequent SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats) Analysis of your business. A SWOT analysis will help you identify areas that are working and those that are not. Use the results of your SWOT analysis to re-design your business plan according to the demands of the situation.

Take advice from a mentor. Running a business alone is a tough job. The ups and downs of the entrepreneurial journey may break you, at times. Encouragement, guidance, and reassurance from a mentor will help you stand strong in these tough situations. Mentors have been in similar situations in the past and they know the right ways to deal with these situations.

Rethink your vision and adjust your strategies accordingly. The service offering, the target audience, and the methods employed for reaching the audience – you may need to rethink your entire mission and vision and adjust your plans accordingly for moving forward.

 

No one starts a business expecting a failure. But failures are an inevitable part of the journey to success. Remember, straight roads don’t make skillful drivers. So, learn to embrace the failures on your way to success and utilize them to build even better products and services.

Read here about the crucial takeaways from some famous startup failures.

 

 

By: Geetima Das
5 take-home notes from stories of startup failure

5 take-home notes from stories of startup failure

 

Swearing by the stories of successful entrepreneurs is a good practice. But digging into the cases of startup failure is equally smart. If a success story tells what to do, a startup failure teaches what not to do. Here are 5 such stories of startup failure to learn from in order to unlearn the bloopers.

 

Shyp
Shyp stormed into the scene with a promise to make cargo shipping as easy as the “two taps on a smartphone.” The company founded in 2013 in San Francisco by Kevin Gibbon, Joshua Scott, and Jack Smith, grew at a rapid pace and managed to raise $62.1 million in quick time. The startup was under the media spotlight and comparisons began to be drawn with Uber, so much so that the stories got into the founders’ head. While Shyp focused excessively on the vanity metrics, the founders were caught offhand when the need arose for re-strategizing and reorienting the company in the wake of decelerating consumer growth.

Note in a Nutshell

A Startup that witnessed a sprawling growth in the initial days, eventually had to die a slow death in 2018 due to a fixation with growth and the inability to flex a strategy to keep up with that growth.

 

Jawbone
The consumer electronics company was launched in 1999, offering wearable technology, like portable audio devices, Bluetooth speakers, and fitness trackers, etc. The company attracted the interest of big VC companies like Sequoia, Khosla Ventures, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, and Andreessen Horowitz and had raised over $930 million in due course. Overfeeding with VC funding had artificially shot up the valuation of the company.
Meanwhile, however, news of product failures began to grow more prominent and the company’s wearable technology struggled to stay up in the race against the industry giants like Apple, Samsung, and Fitbit. It had also got into a legal spat with Fitbit on claims of patent infringement and trade secret misappropriation. Finally, weighing under an insurmountable financial pressure, Jawbone announced the liquidation of its assets in July 2017.

Note in a Nutshell

The Company messed up due to overfunding, especially with the failure of an ambitious product in the face of stiff competition, affording too little margin for mistakes.

 

Juicero
Juicero shot to limelight with its $699 Wi-Fi connected premium juicer that came with proprietary cold-pressed juice packs. Company founder, Doug Evans even compared his pursuit of juicing perfection to another perfectionist, Steve Jobs. He claimed that his juicer had the power to lift two Teslas. Having succeeded in creating a sensation around the product, the company raised $118.5 million right in the initial days. However, once the product had hit the market, a few of the investors expressed dissatisfaction over the bulkier size of the juicer than what was originally pitched. The biggest blow came when Bloomberg released a video that showed how their juicer packs could be squeezed with hands to yield almost the same amount of juice and just as fast as by using the juicer. This largely dissuaded consumers from buying a luxury juicer. Subsequently, they reduced the product price to $399 but decided to shut down just 16 months after the initial launch.

Note in a Nutshell

The Company that had everyone in confidence about their claims to take juicing to the next level, had to draw curtains because they did not care to test the product and pricing with the users before launching.

 

Beepi
Beepi introduced an online peer-to-peer marketplace for buying and selling used cars in 2014. The startup venture came at a time when demand for such a marketplace was rather high. Being able to address the pain point, Beepi soon managed to raise $60 million Series B funding round. Unfortunately, the startup could not take care of the money. It went through a high burn rate that reached $7 million monthly at one point while paying exorbitant salaries and furnishing the office space with extravagant items. Further, if reports are to be believed, the leadership failed to get rid of micromanaging decisions that restricted the employees from learning fast and acting on it.

Note in a Nutshell 

The Company that speedily rose to prominence and managed to bag funds even faster fell prey to reckless spending.

 

Yik Yak
Back in 2013, when Yik Yak, an anonymous chatting app, was launched, it attracted a large number of young takers, mostly the college-goers. For a time when smartphones had started witnessing a boom, many innovative apps were launched, much to the users’ delight. Yik Yak smartly tapped on the opportunity but failed to capitalize on it further. The app was plagued with cyberbullies and crass content that led to some colleges and universities even banning it. Entries of more popular chat apps like Snapchat and Tinder proved to be the final nail in the coffin for Yik Yak. It had decided to call it a quit in 2017 without anyone remembering or missing it anymore.

Note in a Nutshell 

A Company that rose in popularity by tapping on the current trends failed to create a roadmap to stay afloat against competitors and beyond the current trends.

 

 

By: Satarupa Mishra