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How To Be A Successful Failure by Fitzgerald%2c Ernest A
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1How To Be A Successful Failure
By Fitzgerald, Ernest A
“How To Be A Successful Failure” Metadata:
- Title: How To Be A Successful Failure
- Author: Fitzgerald, Ernest A
- Language: English
“How To Be A Successful Failure” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: Failure (Psychology) - Success - Conduct of life - Échec
Edition Identifiers:
- Internet Archive ID: howtobesuccessfu0000fitz
Downloads Information:
The book is available for download in "texts" format, the size of the file-s is: 467.48 Mbs, the file-s for this book were downloaded 57 times, the file-s went public at Sat Mar 17 2018.
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The Lean Startup Erick Ries Bangla Verson ntroduction top me if you've heard this one before. Brilliant college kids sitting in a dorm are inventing the future. Heedless of boundaries, possessed of new technology and youthful enthusiasm, they build a new company from scratch. Their early success allows them to raise money and bring an amazing new product to market. They hire their friends, assemble a superstar team, and dare the world to stop them. Ten years and several startups ago, that was me, building my first company. I particularly remember a moment from back then: the moment I realized my company was going to fail. My cofounder and I were at our wits' end. The dot-com bubble had burst, and we had spent all our money. We tried desperately to raise more capital, and we could not. It was like a breakup scene from a Hollywood movie: it was raining, and we were arguing in the street. We couldn't even agree on where to walk next, and so we parted in anger, heading in opposite directions. As a metaphor for our company's failure, this image of the two of us, lost in the rain and drifting apart, is perfect. It remains a painful memory. The company limped along for months afterward, but our situation was hopeless. At the time, it had seemed we were doing everything right: we had a great product, a brilliant team, amazing technology, and the right idea at the right time. And we really were on to something. We were building a way for college kids to create online profiles for the purpose of sharing ... with employers. Oops. But despite a promising idea, we were nonetheless doomed from day one, because we did not know the process we would need to use to turn our product insights into a great company. If you've never experienced a failure like this, it is hard to describe the feeling. It's as if the world were falling out from under you. You realize you've been duped. The stories in the magazines are lies: hard work and perseverance don't lead to success. Even worse, the many, many, many promises you've made to employees, friends, and family are not going to come true. Everyone who thought you were foolish for stepping out on your own will be proven right. It wasn't supposed to turn out that way. In magazines and newspapers, in blockbuster movies, and on countless blogs, we hear the mantra of the successful entrepreneurs: through determination, brilliance, great timing, and-above all-a great product, you too can achieve fame and fortune. There is a mythmaking industry hard at work to sell us that story, but I have come to believe that the story is false, the product of selection bias and after-the-fact rationalization. In fact, having worked with hundreds of entrepreneurs, I have seen firsthand how often a promising start leads to failure. The grim reality is that most startups fail. Most new products are not successful. Most new ventures do not live up to their potential. Yet the story of perseverance, creative genius, and hard work persists. Why is it so popular? I think there is something deeply appealing about this modern-day rags-to-riches story. It makes success seem inevitable if you just have the right stuff. It means that the mundane details, the boring stuff, the small individual choices don't matter. If we build it, they will come. When we fail, as so many of us do, we have a ready-made excuse: we didn't have the right stuff. We weren't visionary enough or weren't in the right place at the right time. After more than ten years as an entrepreneur, I came to reject that line of thinking. I have learned from both my own successes and failures and those of many others that it's the boring stuff that matters the most. Startup success is not a consequence of good genes or being in the right place at the right time. Startup success
Edition Identifiers:
- Internet Archive ID: the-lean-startup-erick-ries-1
Downloads Information:
The book is available for download in "texts" format, the size of the file-s is: 134.56 Mbs, the file-s for this book were downloaded 16 times, the file-s went public at Sat Aug 09 2025.
Available formats:
Archive BitTorrent - DjVuTXT - Djvu XML - Item Tile - Metadata - OCR Page Index - OCR Search Text - Page Numbers JSON - Scandata - Single Page Processed JP2 ZIP - Text PDF - chOCR - hOCR -
Related Links:
- Whefi.com: Download
- Whefi.com: Review - Coverage
- Internet Archive: Details
- Internet Archive Link: Downloads
Online Marketplaces
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- Amazon: Audiable, Kindle and printed editions.
- Ebay: New & used books.
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