Wil Schroter
We need to treat every successful startup like it's our last — because statistically speaking, it probably will be.
In the startup biz, there are tons of second and third acts (I'm on my 9th) but there are very few that are ever equally successful. That's a problem for us as Founders, because we can easily lose sight of how important a single success is, and waste the opportunity thinking there will simply be another.
What if there isn't? What if this startup success, in whatever form it has right now, is the last successful startup we'll ever build? Shouldn't we treat it like gold versus assuming this is "one of many"? What happens if we get this wrong?
The first thing we need to understand is that the odds are largely stacked against us. Years ago someone way smarter than me published a Harvard study that did a nice job of summarizing our odds:
"All else equal, a venture-capital-backed entrepreneur who starts a company that goes public has a 30 percent chance of succeeding in his or her next venture. First-time entrepreneurs, on the other hand, have only an 18 percent chance of succeeding, and entrepreneurs who previously failed have a 20 percent chance of succeeding."
Did you catch the part that it's a 30% chance of succeeding if we started a public company on our last go around? Yeah, even if we went IPO we're at a 30% success rate, and I'm guessing most of us reading haven't rung the bell at NASDAQ recently. That's a best-case scenario by far.
The moment we start to risk our current payday for what a future payday might look like, we're putting ourselves in danger. In our minds, we think "Well if this one was successful, then obviously the next one has a higher probability of success because I know so much more than I have before!"
That argument falls apart at so many levels, which is why those second-time success stats are so awful.
Every new startup is a completely new set of conditions, from product/market fit to market timing to team makeup. Getting the right conditions for one startup guarantees absolutely nothing about the next one.
When we create this fantasy about future success, we erode the value of our current success and by way of that, often tank the one best shot we had to get paid.
We need to treat every success as a single moment in time that may never exist again. As such, we don't have the luxury of betting on the success of the next one — we can only focus on maximizing the value of what we have right in front of us.
Now, this is where it gets tricky. Maybe there doesn't seem like there's a huge upside relative to our expectations. Maybe the amount of time it will take to maximize the outcome feels too long. Or maybe we're just straight-up bored.
It doesn't matter. In this startup life, we typically get one opportunity to make the best of good fortune — one. We can't mess it up for anything. Just because there may be another big idea on the horizon, the one that actually turned into something of value is the only thing that should matter.
Maximize this outcome first — take it as far as it can go — and then, and only then, even consider what comes next.
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Optimizing for Productivity. Working through peak productivity is easy. It’s the valleys that we’re concerned about. The key is to plan for and optimize the valleys so we can recharge effectively.
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