
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Failure is often seen as the opposite of success, especially in the world of startups. Headlines celebrate unicorns, billion-dollar valuations, and overnight success stories, while failed startups quietly disappear from the market. Yet, behind every successful company are countless failed ventures that offer invaluable lessons. In reality, failure is not an exception in the startup ecosystem—it is the norm. Studies have shown that around 90% of startups fail, many within their first few years. Understanding why startups fail is far more important than celebrating the rare success stories.
By Lauren Hills5
66 ratings
Failure is often seen as the opposite of success, especially in the world of startups. Headlines celebrate unicorns, billion-dollar valuations, and overnight success stories, while failed startups quietly disappear from the market. Yet, behind every successful company are countless failed ventures that offer invaluable lessons. In reality, failure is not an exception in the startup ecosystem—it is the norm. Studies have shown that around 90% of startups fail, many within their first few years. Understanding why startups fail is far more important than celebrating the rare success stories.