It’s important to keep a positive attitude when running a failing startup, lest your employees, customers, or partner get a whiff of where things are heading and decide to bail. That leaves 4 a.m. as an ideal time to stare wide awake at the ceiling and give panic and despair free rein.   In order to view the video, please allow Manage Cookies

  Where did I go wrong with this can’t-miss idea? (Everywhere. Really.) How can I save the company? (Zero ideas.) How will I explain this to everyone who trusted me? (Uh.) How will I bounce back? (I can’t think about that disaster until this one is done.) Is today the day I throw in the towel? (No—just sweating it seems far less daunting.)

How to Start a Business—And Make It Succeed

Read article

It wasn’t supposed to be this way. Just two years earlier, a successful health-care executive asked me to partner with him to launch a website aimed at helping companies expand overseas. The offer surprised me: I was a journalist, not a business guy. But after years of covering innovative entrepreneurs, how could I resist the chance to actually become one myself? Plus, here was a chance to make some serious money. I did my homework and picked the brains of founders, investors, would-be customers, even competitors. All offered sound, mostly encouraging advice. Then I talked with a high-powered venture capitalist: “Don’t do it. You’ll be miserable. And you’ll fail.” The only people who should start a company, he said, were those who were so obsessed with their idea that they were incapable of doing anything else. That didn’t describe me, but I plunged ahead anyway.

Want to Boost Your Creativity and Productivity? Go Off the Grid

Read article

I hired five smart young staffers, and we built a great website. Soon we had hundreds of influential readers at major organizations. They loved our work. Now we just needed to turn them into paying customers. But no one wanted to pony up, and we were burning through funding. It was a miserable death spread over half a year. I was letting a raft of people down in slow motion: my investment partner, who sunk money and passion into the venture; my wife, who was nothing but supportive as our savings dwindled; my employees, who worked hard for less than they deserved. The physics of commerce let you delay pulling the plug on a dying company for only so long. Then, suddenly, it’s over. You can sleep again. You can start to appreciate what a wild adventure it was, and what your team pulled off under, or in spite of, your guidance. You can marvel at all you learned, even if it came too late. Then you can get back to doing something—anything—else. This essay is part of our Art of the Fail series.

For access to exclusive gear videos, celebrity interviews, and more, subscribe on YouTube!

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It’s important to keep a positive attitude when running a failing startup, lest your employees, customers, or partner get a whiff of where things are heading and decide to bail. That leaves 4 a.m. as an ideal time to stare wide awake at the ceiling and give panic and despair free rein.

 

In order to view the video, please allow Manage Cookies

Where did I go wrong with this can’t-miss idea? (Everywhere. Really.) How can I save the company? (Zero ideas.) How will I explain this to everyone who trusted me? (Uh.) How will I bounce back? (I can’t think about that disaster until this one is done.) Is today the day I throw in the towel? (No—just sweating it seems far less daunting.)

How to Start a Business—And Make It Succeed

Read article

It wasn’t supposed to be this way. Just two years earlier, a successful health-care executive asked me to partner with him to launch a website aimed at helping companies expand overseas. The offer surprised me: I was a journalist, not a business guy. But after years of covering innovative entrepreneurs, how could I resist the chance to actually become one myself? Plus, here was a chance to make some serious money.

How to Start a Business—And Make It Succeed

Read article

How to Start a Business—And Make It Succeed

I did my homework and picked the brains of founders, investors, would-be customers, even competitors. All offered sound, mostly encouraging advice. Then I talked with a high-powered venture capitalist: “Don’t do it. You’ll be miserable. And you’ll fail.”

The only people who should start a company, he said, were those who were so obsessed with their idea that they were incapable of doing anything else. That didn’t describe me, but I plunged ahead anyway.

Want to Boost Your Creativity and Productivity? Go Off the Grid

Read article

I hired five smart young staffers, and we built a great website. Soon we had hundreds of influential readers at major organizations. They loved our work. Now we just needed to turn them into paying customers. But no one wanted to pony up, and we were burning through funding.

Want to Boost Your Creativity and Productivity? Go Off the Grid

Read article

Want to Boost Your Creativity and Productivity? Go Off the Grid

It was a miserable death spread over half a year. I was letting a raft of people down in slow motion: my investment partner, who sunk money and passion into the venture; my wife, who was nothing but supportive as our savings dwindled; my employees, who worked hard for less than they deserved. The physics of commerce let you delay pulling the plug on a dying company for only so long. Then, suddenly, it’s over. You can sleep again. You can start to appreciate what a wild adventure it was, and what your team pulled off under, or in spite of, your guidance. You can marvel at all you learned, even if it came too late. Then you can get back to doing something—anything—else.

This essay is part of our Art of the Fail series.

For access to exclusive gear videos, celebrity interviews, and more, subscribe on YouTube!

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					How Matt Higgins Climbed and Conquered the Corporate Ladder					



					Best THC Detox Methods: 4 Best THC Detox Cleanse & Weed Detox Kits Of 2023					



					Your Pup Needs These Greenies Natural Dog Dental Treats					



					Model and Influencer Sixtine Rouyre Joins 2023 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition					



					Start Gaming With The PS5 God of War Ragnarök Bundle					


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							The MJ5: Tony Hawk on His Favorite Gear, Why He Always Carries His Board, and More							





							Here's the Difference Between Bourbon and Whiskey							





							Young Guns and a Supercharged Catamaran: U.S. SailGP Team Takes on New York City							

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