Fail fast, fail often
Kyle Balmer
?? AI entrepreneurship || RISEN? prompt framework || International AI trainer || 60k newsletter readers || 8x best sellers || 200k audience || Forbes featured || Great eyebrows
Today we talk about failure.
And why we love it.
(Or why we best learn to love it).
Let’s learn how best to fail.
Failure is key to learning.
And the key to failure is to make each failure small.
There are two ways to do this. The wrong way and the right way.
The wrong way to fail is how?most?businesses operate.
They spend time and money:
All before actually, you know, opening the doors to customers.
What generally happens is a flop.
At no point did the business bother asking what the customer actually wanted. Or, better, asking them to make a purchase.
Instead the business followed the Hollywood Blockbuster model of “build it, do a big launch and hope for the best.” And if it doesn’t immediately work then throw cash at advertising.
This is a dangerous, flashy way to launch a business. And often leads to a glorious wreckage.
One huge failure. Game over.
It’s also how most, if not all, businesses launch.
The better way
The right way is to avoid one big failure by having?as many small failures?as possible. As quickly as possible. Fail fast, fail often.
Sounds weird but hear me out.
We?only?learn through failures and mistakes. We cannot, by definition, learn from a complete success. There’s no learning moment there.
We?need?to fail in order to learn.
But: we need each of those failures to be?survivable.
The regular (bad!) model allows all our failure to coalesce in one big launch moment. It’s all of nothing.
The better model is to make lots of plays, make a lot of mistakes and small failures, learn from each failure and improve.
‘Learn’ startup
This model is called “lean startup”, a term popularised by Eric Ries in his book of the same name. I’m calling it “leaRn startup” to hammer home the point.
The basic idea is:
Lean Startup Machine
I actually won a lean startup competition when I lived in New York. This is where I learned the power of this methodology.
It was a 2 day hackathon where we came up with a product and got the basics built. We then were judged by a group of successful entrepreneurs and a winner announced.
There were some seriously impressive startups being created that weekend. Really cool ideas. Multi-million sized projects. Amazing teams.
But we won.
Not because our idea was better. Not because the projected market was larger. Not because out team was more impressive.
We won because we got members of the public to give us cash.
We got total strangers to pay us for this product that didn’t exist yet, with the promise that we’d get it to them if/when it’s ready.
Anyone can say “that’s a great sounding product.” People say nice things (white lies!) all the time. Especially if you are talking to people who like you.
But what people?say?doesn’t matter. It’s what they?pay?for that is the only real proof.
Minimum viability product
In practical terms what does this mean?
It means you need to launch your product/service immediately.
Not in a few months. Now.
And you use the success of this launch to gauge the next steps.
If people bite your hand off for it you know you are onto something.
If there’s no interest then the idea needs tweaking. In lean startup it’s called a “pivot”.
We can do fast launches by building something called a “minimum viability product” or MVP.
Basically this is something that captures the?value?of your business in its most essential form.
AirBnb is a famous example here. It began literally as one air mattress on the floor of an apartment in SF. People rented it instead of a hotel during conference season.
Groupon’s MVP was hitting up an email list of 500 people working out of an office building selling them pizza. Then calling up the local pizza joint and bulk buying 2-for-1 pizzas and pocketing the difference.
The purpose of the MVP is purely to prove that there is a market demand for what your business intends to sell.
You?do not?wait until you have an office, team, fancy logo and letterhead to sell. You sell immediately and see if anyone gives a damn.
If no then this is a tiny low cost failure. Instead of wasting months and thousands of dollars you have your answer immediately.
So let’s build an MVP for your business:
Fill in as many details about your business as possible. As always, more specificity is best.
ChatGPT will generate some MVP examples. Here’s one of five:
Importantly there are Success/Failure conditions. Use these as jumping off points to set your own. Remember, the purpose here to validate where there is a market or not.
The MVP should be super simple to deploy. Not something that’ll take a month to prepare.
And remember - you can always kill it before having to fulfil!
In the example above it’s a workshop that we get sign ups for. You’d set a date, create a zoom invite link and publish the event to your channels. If you don’t have channels in place you’d run an advert.
If you get the 10 sign ups (success condition) great - run the workshop.
If you get less than 5 signups (failure condition) - kill the workshop.
The goal here is not running a workshop.
The goal here is to gauge customer demand!
This originally featured in my free daily AI Entrepreneur emails.
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