Startups fail, and most likely yours will too.
Not trying to be mean, but itβs in the numbers. There are hundreds of reasons why startups donβt make it, but there are a few you can control. Here are the things thatβll most likely kill your startup if you donβt get a handle on them.
TL/DR
Wrong co-founder or rushing to find one? Disaster. Take your time or go solo.
Building in isolation will lead to failure. Get feedback from the right audience early and from non-tech people if you are building a non-tech solution.
VC money is for growth, not survival or to build your MVP (in most cases). Bootstrap if you can.
Wrong motivations lead to quick burnout. Do it for the right reasons.
Bad finance management will kill your startup faster than anything else. Plan ahead, or itβs over.
1. Choosing the Wrong Co-Founder (Or Having One at All)
People love to say, "You need a co-founder." Itβs like startup law or something. But how many startups have failed because co-founders couldnβt agree on vision or money? A lot. Sometimes itβs better to go solo.
Just because people say you need a co-founder doesnβt mean itβs true for everyone. If you really want one, take your time. Donβt rush into it. Get involved in startup communities, check out groups like OnDeck or Antler, and meet people who complement your skills. Donβt just grab anyone because theyβre available. Or, if youβre comfortable handling all aspects of the business, go solo and avoid the drama.
2. Building in Silos
Iβve seen this a lot, especially in the indie hacker community. Builders start with an idea, keep their heads down, and build in isolation. Then they wonder why no one cares about their product. You don't start with the idea, start with the solution. Ideas don't matter
How many people are trying to build the next βProduct Hunt alternativeβ because they think Product Hunt is not working? But maybe itβs broken because itβs not solving a problem anyone actually cares about or not too much right now.
Building a solution to a non-existent problem is what? ...
Also, stop talking in silos, go outside touch the grass and talk to tour target users. Iβve seen communities where itβs all technical talk, but no oneβs letting in real users while they are building products either B2B or B2C and not just dev,tools.
If you donβt let your users give you feedback, how will you know if your product solves a real problem? You need to learn from people outside your bubble, or your ego will kill your startup before it even gets going.
3. Relying Only on VC Money
Money, money, money. VC money is for one specific reason: growth and marketing. Once you have a good product or an idea with tremendous provable market potential, thatβs when the VC money comes in. They want to get 10x for every 10 cents they put in. Can you make that happen? Can you make that happen in the fund's lifecycle of 5-10 years max? If the answer is no, donβt talk to them.
Angels are a bit different, but they are high maintenance. Keep the cap table clean as long as you canβevery person on it is a new "boss." There are great VCs, but there are terrible ones that will drive you crazy and crush the idea of "startup freedom" in a snap.
The reality is most startups donβt need VC money at first. Most products should be able to be built with either savings or setting some cash aside. Or, if youβre technical, build it yourself. Just do it with a co-founder whoβs the opposite of you, or solo if youβre savvy in all aspects of business.
4. Doing It for the Wrong Reasons
A startup should solve a problem. If you want to sell anything, there should be someone on the other side willing to pay for it. This is basic stuff, you know it. Yet, how many start something to make their parents proud, to be in Forbes 30 Under 30 (Hi Sam!), or just to make bank? And in reality, itβs the oppositeβit takes time and effort, and in most cases, will bankrupt you because you suck at finance. Most do.
You might think you donβt, that youβve got it covered, that GPT has your back. But thereβs nothing like human experience, living through things. Listen to those who know in all aspects, but take most of it with a grain of salt. Do it because you have a strong belief in something, a solutionβeven if that solution is independence.
5. Bad Finance
I'll say it again. Most founders suck at finance, you might think you donβt, but probably you do (in Robert De Niro's voice).
Iβm gonna add my Hanβs disclaimer here: This is not financial advice. This is a very strong, well-informed opinion after working for 25 years in finance, accounting, tax, and legal. Founders are terrible at financeβgreat at building and vision, horrible with anything related to finances. Except for a tiny 1% that Iβve met and had the pleasure to work with.
Your accountant wonβt save the day.They crunch numbers after the fact. Magic wonβt do the numbers. Finance is not only doing your taxes or accountingβitβs about looking at your businessβs snapshot in the future, planning costs, budgeting, and forecasting versus what you expect the startup to be. This is very important as you grow.
Finance isnβt just about taxes or bookkeeping. Itβs about forecasting and planning. How does hitting 1,000 customers affect your AWS costs? What about payroll? Do you even know? Most founders donβt, and thatβs why they fail. Use tools like EvryThink to help you plan ahead. If you donβt, your startup will failβand not because of your product, but because of your finances.