When Plans Fail (And Why That's Good)
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I've failed more plans than I can count. Business plans that looked perfect on paper. Marketing strategies that "couldn't miss." Product launches timed to perfection. All failures. And I'm grateful for every single one.
The Myth of the Perfect Plan
We worship planning. We spend hours—sometimes months—crafting the perfect strategy. We build detailed spreadsheets, create elaborate timelines, and convince ourselves that if we just plan thoroughly enough, success is guaranteed.
But here's what I learned building startups: The plan is almost never the point.
The point is what you learn when the plan fails.
Why Failure is Feedback
In The Lean Startup Blueprint, I write about the Build-Measure-Learn cycle. But what I really should have emphasized is this: Learn requires fail.
You can't learn what works without discovering what doesn't. You can't find product-market fit without building something the market rejects first. You can't refine your message without saying the wrong thing a few times.
Every failed plan is data. Every misstep is a course correction. Every "that didn't work" brings you closer to "this might."
The Startup That Pivoted Seven Times
One company I advised went through seven major pivots before they found their winning model. Seven completely different product strategies. Seven failures.
The founders were discouraged. "We keep getting it wrong," they told me.
"No," I said. "You keep getting closer."
By pivot seven, they'd eliminated seven wrong answers. They knew their market intimately. They understood what customers actually needed versus what they said they needed. They'd built resilience into their culture.
When they finally launched their winning product, it wasn't because they'd planned perfectly. It was because they'd failed intelligently.
How to Fail Forward
Not all failures are created equal. The key is to fail productively:
1. Fail Fast
Don't spend six months building before you test. Launch the minimum viable version. Get real feedback. Discover your wrong assumptions early, when they're cheap to fix.
2. Fail Small
Test in increments. Don't bet the whole company on one big launch. Run small experiments. Learn from tiny failures instead of catastrophic ones.
3. Fail Intentionally
Build experimentation into your process. Set up A/B tests. Try the unconventional approach alongside the safe one. Give yourself permission to be wrong in controlled environments.
4. Fail With Metrics
Know what you're measuring. Don't just say "that didn't work"—know why. Track engagement, conversion, retention. Let data guide your next attempt.
5. Fail Publicly (Sometimes)
Share your lessons. When you're transparent about what didn't work, you build credibility. People trust leaders who admit mistakes more than those who pretend they're infallible.
The Real Risk
You know what's riskier than failing?
Never trying anything that might fail.
Playing it so safe that you never learn anything new. Following the same playbook everyone else uses. Building the product you can guarantee will work—which usually means building something nobody actually wants.
The biggest failures I've seen weren't from bold experiments that didn't work out. They were from companies that were too afraid to experiment at all.
From Failure to Resilience
There's a reason I wrote both a startup book and a fiction series about resilience. The skills are the same.
In Threads of Resilience, my characters don't succeed because they never fail. They succeed because they learn to rise every time they fall.
That's not just a story. That's entrepreneurship. That's life.
Your Turn
What plan is failing right now? What experiment didn't work?
Good.
Now you know something you didn't know before. Now you're closer to what will work.
The question isn't "How do I avoid failure?" The question is "What am I learning from this?"
Fail intelligently. Fail productively. Fail forward.
And watch how much faster you succeed.
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