I just did what no startup founder is ever supposed to do. I gave up. It wasn’t even one of those glorious “fail fast and fail forward” learning experiences. After seven months of hard work and two
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Scooped by
Guillaume Decugis
onto Ideas for entrepreneurs June 10, 2016 2:04 PM
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Cut your losses or pivot? Great question... And a really really hard one to find out. "Errare humanum est perseverare diabolicum."
In this post, Tom Romero details the product / market fit flaw of his product he analyzed and decided not to fix. should you be always analytical in that decision? Can you be?
There are situations when you won't be able to analyze. For instance, when it's about pivoting to a totally different project - as we did pivoting form Goojet to Scoop.it - you don't have data or facts to analyze. You just have the motivation, the inspiration or the feeling that it's the right thing to do. Startup history - from Paypal to Slack and Instagram - shows us that some total reboots have succeeded to create unicorns.
But Tom definitely has a point. To take our same example, we tried to fix Goojet multiple times before giving up and rebooting to a total pivot. Could we have cut our losses earlier by understanding Goojet - as a product and not as a team and company - could not be fixed? Most probably.