Site icon Brent Ozar

Fail Small and Often, but Keep Pushing

The Lean Startup methodology basically says:

  1. Come up with a hypothesis
  2. Build the cheapest, smallest thing you can to test the hypothesis
  3. Measure, and learn as much as you can from that investment
  4. Understand what additional resources you can invest next time (and zero is an option)
  5. Go back to step #1

There’s much more to it than that, and I’d strongly encourage any business or community builder to read the whole book, but that’s the core.

I was talking to a friend of mine about successes and failures, and he mentioned that it looked like I’d had a string of hits recently. It only looks that way because I try a lot of small things along the way, and most of them either get abandoned, or pivoted. If something’s not resonating with the audience, it’s outta here.

Examples of some of our failures over the years include:

You can’t let failed experiments get you down.

With the Lean Startup methodology, you expect to fail – a lot – but your investments are limited, so who cares? You’re learning and adapting the whole time. You use what you learn, and keep pushing forward to find the things that work well.

To keep myself psyched up – and I know this is gonna sound cheesy – I follow a few motivational Instagram accounts. Most of my Instagram feed is friends and family and SQLfamily, but peppered in there are a few keep-pushing feeds like @6amsuccess, @big.empire, and @words_worth_billions.

WARNING, CHEESINESS FOLLOWS

And finally, and perhaps most importantly:

Having stuff like that in your daily Instagram feed can get you started with a smile and keep you focused on what matters. Sure, a lot of the sayings and images are stupidly cheesy – but at the heart of it, the message is real. Fail small, fail often, and keep pushing. Eventually your successes pile up and become real.

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