How, not just Why, Startups Fail

Paul O'Brien
6 min readApr 6, 2018

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From Paul Graham and Mark Vital

I’ve met with 20 startup teams in the last 48 hours, because of various incubator kick offs.

Not one had anyone experienced in charge of marketing

I’m reminded of this analysis Chandni Shah Motwani did a few years ago for Chubby Brain.

It still astounds me to no end that founders think marketing is what’s done to promote a business; that it’s only applicable when ready to sell to customers.

Considering the third most frequent reason startups fail (not the right team) sits between the 1, 2, and 4 all being marketing related, it’s probably a safe bet that that wrong team is a lacking, experienced CMO… making the top 4 reasons startups fail because of the market… and yet 15 startup teams have no one dealing with that.

5 of the teams were doing Facebook ads and had no Analytics in place. WTF?! 🤣 Someone help me grasp why we have so many companies doing this and who’s advising them so poorly?? 🤨 Is it that founders don’t know that this stuff is possible? Are investors telling startups to fly blindly till they stumble into what works? Are we being advised these days to just build build build and customers will come??

I’m fed up.

Article after article, study after study, offers Buzzfeed style insight to why startups fail. It’s such a popular and frequently recurring tweet that I’ve started chewing on WHY the question of why keeps coming up.

As founders, perhaps we’re asking the wrong question and shouldn’t be seeking to know why but rather how so that we might avoid failure.

It’s Incubator launch season in Austin, TX so thanks to Mass Challenge, DivInc, and my work with Founder Institute, I’ve met and chatted with some 20 startup teams in the last 48 hours.

I start most of my meetings with startups by asking about their Web Analytics.

I get your pitch, it sounds neat, good luck! Show me your data (I can learn more about what’s going on in 3 minutes there than in an hour talking with you).

Many have nothing place.

The majority haven’t set it up in any way that it’s meaningful.

“Okay… who’s in charge of developing your market?” I always ask next. “How do you know what you should be doing??”

The reply that ALWAYS makes my heart sink… “oh we’re testing some Facebook ads but we’re not ready to do any marketing.”

Not one of my recent 20 meetings had anyone experienced in charge of Marketing.

It astounds me to no end that founders think marketing is what’s done to promote a business; that it’s only applicable when ready to sell to customers.

Marketing. NOT Advertising and Promotion. Marketing.

How do Startups Fail? They don’t understand or are they aren’t prioritizing what Marketing actually is and should be doing.

Not sure what I mean by that, or don’t believe me?

Take a look again at Paul Graham’s assessment.
#s — 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15 are all MARKET related issues. Marketing.

This is how startups fail!

Here’s the study again that Carnegie Mellon’s Chandni Motwani did for Chubby Brain

Reasons 1, 2, 4… Marketing.

And one could argue that since 1, 2, and 4 are Marketing related, #3 (not the right team) is in fact because that team didn’t prioritize, understand, or include Marketing.

Go down the list though, 1, 2, [3], 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, and 20. Marketing.

20 of my most recent startup encounters have no one dealing with that.

Let’s do it again.

Here’s CB Insights with Statista

#1 No Market Need.

1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 (actually says “poor marketing” LOL), 9, 10, 13, 15, 20

Now, let me do some *big data, AI* analysis of those three perspectives. *ahem*

Let’s tease out the recurring themes in a rough rank order:

  1. No Market and Ignoring Customers — Paul Graham refers to it as Obstinacy; the market should be telling you what to do, not your blind certainty
  2. Wrong Team — What’s on your team?
  3. Bad Location / Wrong Platform — Developers will note that this is a decision of Node vs. Ruby and to an extent, it is. It’s also whether or not you should be based in Austin or Chicago, part of that Incubator, on iOS or Android, promoting on Facebook or Snapchat…
  4. Marginal Niche / Derivative Idea / Out competed — Do you know all of your competitors and partners?? Who’s job is it to know them?
  5. Slowness in Launching / Launching Too Early / Product Mis-Timed / Bad Time to Start — Is there any way to determine that other than studying the market? Is your launch AND roadmap attuned to what’s going on in the market?
  6. Having No Specific User in Mind need I even question?
  7. Raising Too Little Money / Spending Too Much Money / Ran out of Cash — how do you think you determine the money it will take and from where that money will come?
  8. Pricing / Cost issues — How would you know?
  9. Don’t Use Network — which is what?
  10. Failed Pivot
  11. Hiring Bad Programmers
  12. Raising Too Much Money — Manageable by doing what?
  13. Poor Investor Management / Team/Investor disharmony
  14. Sacrificing Users to Profits
  15. Burn Out / Lose Focus / Half Hearted Effort /
    Fights between Founders
    … which is motivated by what?
  16. Not Wanting to Get Your Hands Dirty
  17. Legal Challenges

Granted, my ordering of a mashup of what’s in there, but I think you might concur with the ranking and note that my associated questions all steer your attention to Market-based issues.

That’s the work of Marketing.

Please appreciate that MOST people have no idea what marketing actually is and way too many advisors, incubators, and investors are guiding founders to think that marketing is what’s done to promote a product, when it’s ready.

Let me bottom line something for you too — WAY too many “Marketers” have no idea what they’re doing and that’s not me picking on peers — that’s an issue with the way we’ve created job titles and roles in society. Someone who kicks ass at doing Facebook Ads is not doing Marketing — they’re doing online advertising. Someone who does “Content Marketing” isn’t really doing marketing, they’d developing content to promote something.

These mentality is f*-ing up the economy.

Promotion is one of the Ps of marketing and when you’re actually doing Marketing and not just Promotion, it includes all the other Ps in the foundation of the role: Pricing, Placement, Product, People, etc.

Founders that start anything without having first and foremost been marketing (studying the market, knowing competitors, uncovering from where funding might come), are shooting an arrow at a target while blind and drunk.

Marketing is the work of determining what to do, when, where, how, and for whom. BASED on the market.

A great economist once noted that, “Marketing is the work of making Sales superfluous.” Not irrelevant mind you! Just unnecessary. His point was that if you have to do Sales (to anyone: customers, partners, investors… are you having to seek out and push yourself into investors? that’s selling to them) then you Marketing hasn’t closed the gaps in the business to make that unnecessary.

CEO brings the vision, resources and team, and potential

CTO (or related role if not tech) delivers the solution

CMO studies and develops the market

No market = no business. No business, you fail.

Let’s stop failing so frequently, yeah?

Originally published at seobrien.com on April 6, 2018.

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Paul O'Brien

CEO of MediaTech Ventures, CMO to #VC, #Startup Advisor. I get you funded. Father, marketer, author, #Austin. @seobrien & @AccelerateTexas. https://seobrien.com