90% of businesses are going to fail. And that includes the vast majority of the startups I’ve seen walk through the doors of any and every co-working space and accelerator in Australia.
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I’ve had several people ask me this week, should they take the risk and get into startups, or get into tech, step into the unknown. What they’re really asking me, is what’s going to happen when they do. They want to know if they’re going to fail. They want to know if it’s going to hurt.
Here’s the truth.
90% of businesses are going to fail. And that includes the vast majority of the startups I’ve seen walk through the doors of any and every co-working space and accelerator in Australia. That 90% includes people who aren’t as driven, as talented or as stubborn as you are, but it also includes people who are playing the game with 10x your ability.
If you’re in an information/technology business, your failure rate is 63%, higher than any other industry. If you’re under or over a certain age, that affects these numbers too. The indisputable fact of it is that you are more likely to fail and wipe out than to succeed.
The odds are stacked the fuck against you.
And you know what?
It doesn’t even matter.
The odds don’t actually have a bearing on you. And they don’t have a bearing on me. Sure, they might be rough and tumble and if you’re honest with yourself you’d have to accept that you’ll probably lose, but it’s not about that. It’s not about avoiding risk. It’s not about playing it safe. If we wanted to play it safe, if we wanted certainty, we’d be staying far away from the tech companies and hackers whose ranks we long to join. But we honestly don’t.
We want the excitement of daring the world to stop us. We want to build something ourselves and make it something we’re proud of and ride every high and every low. We want to build a legacy, we want to build a dynasty, and we want to reshape the course of our lives.
When we know that’s what we want, the success and failure rate isn’t important. Because we’d go ahead and do it all again anyway, wouldn’t we? We’d take on the challenge even if the odds were worse because we don’t care about the safe road. We want the road less travelled.
I guess what I’m trying to say is, be smart, listen to wisdom when you can, don’t take unnecessary risks, but don’t let the risk factor stop you from doing what you want to do. Don’t let it stop you from taking on the world and refusing to take no for an answer.
[This post by Jon Westenberg first appeared on Medium and has been reproduced with permission.]
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