Stepping into the world of startups is akin to embarking on an expedition: the journey is thrilling, the prospects of discovery unparalleled, but the path is often treacherous. Each year, countless startups emerge, all vying for a spot in the success hall of fame. However, the bitter truth is that 90% of startups fail.
Yet with each setback and misstep, there are lessons waiting to be unearthed. So far, 2023 has proven to be a challenging year for many startups.
By exploring their stories, we can uncover crucial lessons to steer future ventures in the right direction.
Aiming to revolutionize the pizza industry, Zume used tech-integrated trucks to cook pizzas en-route to customers. Their vision was to ensure that each delivery was as fresh as it could get. Unfortunately, they were beleaguered by technical issues, demonstrating that while innovation is key, execution is paramount.
Lesson: Effective and extensive testing should precede full-scale implementation, ensuring product-market fit and operational viability.
IRL, an event discovery and planning app, once reached unicorn status, promising a social platform for real-world connection. However, a revelation about fabricated user statistics became its undoing. It wasn’t a minor fabrication either, 95% of its users were fake.
Lesson: Building trust is crucial in the digital age. Transparent operations and honest data representation underpin sustainable success.
Fuzzy Pet Health, a San Francisco-based veterinary care startup, recently abruptly shut down. Fuzzy offered a gamut of services for pet owners, from telehealth to product delivery. Their holistic model, however, stretched their resources thin, emphasizing the need to strike a balance between ambition and feasibility.
Lesson: Specialization can sometimes outweigh the allure of being a jack-of-all-trades. Streamlined offerings often lead to better resource optimization.
Mandolin is a platform designed to live stream concerts, providing a digital solution for audiences to experience live entertainment.
Launched during the pandemic, Mandolin became the digital bridge for artists and audiences. However, as normalcy returned, its digital prominence waned.
Lesson: Resting on one's laurels isn't enough. Being agile in the market and proactively adjusting to evolving circumstances is vital for enduring success.
New Age Meats is a biotechnology company that develops healthy cultivated meat grown from animal cells instead of animal slaughter. Venturing into cultured meats, this startup aspired to offer sustainable pork alternatives. Despite their potential, premature infrastructural investments hindered their journey.
Founder and CEO Brian Spears took full ownership, “As the CEO, I take ultimate responsibility for this shutdown. When we started ~5 years ago, we had no blueprint to develop and commercialize cultivated meat. I am grateful to everyone who supported our brilliant, talented team as we learned along the way”.
Lesson: Market research and phased investments are crucial. Build infrastructure that aligns with product readiness and market demand.
The WorkFlow podcast is hosted by Steve Glaveski with a mission to help you unlock your potential to do more great work in far less time, whether you're working as part of a team or flying solo, and to set you up for a richer life.
To help you avoid stepping into these all too common pitfalls, we’ve reflected on our five years as an organization working on corporate innovation programs across the globe, and have prepared 100 DOs and DON’Ts.