6 Reasons Startups Fail - For Entrepreneurs (2024)

Reason 1: Market Problems

A major reason why companies fail, is that they run into the problem of their being little or no market for the product that they have built. Here are some common symptoms:

  • There is not a compelling enough value proposition, or compelling event, to cause the buyer to actually commit to purchasing. Good sales reps will tell you that to get an order in today’s tough conditions, you have to find buyers that have their “hair on fire”, or are “in extreme pain”. You also hear people talking about whether a product is a Vitamin (nice to have), or an Aspirin (must have).
  • The market timing is wrong. You could be ahead of your market by a few years, and they are not ready for your particular solution at this stage. For example when EqualLogic first launched their product, iSCSI was still very early, and it needed the arrival of VMWare which required a storage area network to do VMotion to really kick their market into gear. Fortunately they had the funding to last through the early years.
  • The market size of people that have pain, and have funds is simply not large enough

Reason 2: Failure to find Product/Market Fit

Another reason that companies fail is because they fail to develop a product that meets the market need. This can either be due to simple execution. Or it can be a far more strategic problem, which is a failure to achieve Product/Market fit.

Most of the time the first product that a startup brings to market won’t meet the market need. In the best cases, it will take a few revisions to get the product/market fit right. In the worst cases, the product will be way off base, and a complete re-think is required. If this happens it is a clear indication of a team that didn’t do the work to get out and validate their ideas with customers before, and during, development. Our experience indicates that it takes about 50 conversations with customers that are not friends to find out if the product concept is really going to sell. Unfortunately because most founders come from a technical or product background, they find it very uncomfortable doing 50 cold outreaches into customers, and so skip this step before starting to build the product. That is extremely unfortunate as they will only get the feedback when trying to sell to those customers after they have built the product, by which time it is too late to incorporate the feedback, and many months will be lost.

This topic is covered extensively in the following article:

6 Reasons Startups Fail - For Entrepreneurs (1)

Reason 3: Failure to find a Repeatable and Scalable Sales Motion

Once a product has started to show that it has product/market fit, i.e. it delivers business value, and customers want to buy it, there is another tricky journey to figure out: how to sell the product. Sometimes this is called Go-to-market fit. I prefer to call this phase the search for a repeatable and scalable growth model, as the words repeatable and scalable tell such a clear story about what has to be accomplished. This article provides a lot more detail on Steps 4, 5 and 6 in the 9 Step Startup Roadmap: .

Reason 4: Failure to find a profitable Growth Model

As outlined in the introduction to Business Models section, after spending time with hundreds of startups, I realized that one of the most common causes of failure in the startup world is that entrepreneurs are too optimistic about how easy it will be to acquire customers. They assume that because they will build an interesting web site, product, or service, that customers will beat a path to their door. That may happen with the first few customers, but after that, it rapidly becomes an expensive task to attract and win customers, and in many cases the cost of acquiring the customer (CAC) is actually higher than the lifetime value of that customer (LTV).

The observation that you have to be able to acquire your customers for less money than they will generate in value of the lifetime of your relationship with them is stunningly obvious. Yet despite that, I see the vast majority of entrepreneurs failing to pay adequate attention to figuring out a realistic cost of customer acquisition.

Unit Economics: CAC and LTV

CAC = Cost of Acquiring a Customer
LTV = Lifetime Value of a Customer

To compute CAC, you should take the entire cost of your sales and marketing functions, (including salaries, marketing programs, lead generation, travel, etc.) and divide it by the number of customers that you closed during that period of time. So for example, if your total sales and marketing spend in Q1 was $1m, and you closed 1000 customers, then your average cost to acquire a customer (CAC) is $1,000.

To compute LTV, you will want to look at the gross margin associated with the customer (net of all installation, support, and operational expenses) over their lifetime. For businesses with one time fees, this is pretty simple. For businesses that have recurring subscription revenue, this is computed by taking the monthly recurring revenue, and dividing that by the monthly churn rate.

Because most businesses have a series of other functions such as G&A, and Product Development that are additional expenses beyond sales and marketing, and delivering the product, for a profitable business, you will want CAC to be less than LTV by some significant multiple. For SaaS businesses, it seems that to break even, that multiple is around three, and that to be really profitable and generate the cash needed to grow, the number may need to be closer to five.

The Capital Efficiency “Rule”

To have a capital efficient business, it is very important to have an efficient sales and marketing motion. How can you tell if you do have an efficient sales and marketing motion? Two metrics help you understand this: Sales Efficiency, and Months to recover CAC (cost of acquiring your customers). Both metrics measure the same thing, but in slightly different ways. Sales Efficiency measures how much Net New ARR is generated by $1 of sales and marketing spend. A very efficient SaaS company will have a Sales Efficiency of 1. A not particularly efficient SaaS company will only generate $0.50 in Net New ARR for every dollar of sales and marketing spend, so will have a Sales Efficiency of only 0.5.

The other metric, Months to Recover CAC is very similar to Sales Efficiency, but it differs slightly different because it looks at Gross Margin of the Net New ARR that is created by spending one dollar in sales and marketing. But for simplicity sake, imagine that we have 100% Gross Margin, in that case an efficient business will spend one dollar on sales and marketing, and generate $1 in Net New ARR, which means that it will recover CAC in 12 months (and have a Sales Efficiency of 1). An inefficient business will take 24 months to recover CAC (and have a Sales Efficiency of 0.5)

Reason 5: Poor Management Team

An incredibly common problem that causes startups to fail is a weak management team. A good management team will be smart enough to avoid Reasons 2, 4, and 5. Weak management teams make mistakes in multiple areas:

  • They are often weak on strategy, building a product that no-one wants to buy as they failed to do enough work to validate the ideas before and during development. This can carry through to poorly thought through go-to-market strategies.
  • They are usually poor at execution, which leads to issues with the product not getting built correctly or on time, and the go-to market execution will be poorly implemented.
  • They will build weak teams below them. There is the well proven saying: A players hire A players, and B players only get to hire C players (because B players don’t want to work for other B players). So the rest of the company will end up as weak, and poor execution will be rampant.
  • etc.

Reason 6: Running out of Cash

A fourthmajor reason that startups fail is because they ran out of cash. A key job of the CEO is to understand how much cash is left and whether that will carry the company to a milestone that can lead to a successful financing, or to cash flow positive.

This topic is covered extensively in the following article:

  • The Most Important Startup Question

Milestones for Raising Cash

The valuations of a startup don’t change in a linear fashion over time. Simply because it was twelve months since you raised your Series A round, does not mean that you are now worth more money. To reach an increase in valuation, a company must achieve certain key milestones. For a software company, these might look something like the following (these are not hard and fast rules):

  • Progress from Seed round valuation: goal is to remove some major element of risk. That could be hiring a key team member, proving that some technical obstacle can be overcome, or building a prototype and getting some customer reaction.
  • Product in Beta test, and have customer validation. Note that if the product is finished, but there is not yet any customer validation, valuation will not likely increase much. The customer validation part is far more important.
  • Product is shipping, and some early customers have paid for it, and are using it in production, and reporting positive feedback.
  • Product/Market fit issues that are normal with a first release (some features are missing that prove to be required in most sales situations, etc.) have been mostly eliminated. There are early indications of the business starting to ramp.
  • Business model is proven. It is now known how to acquire customers, and it has been proven that this process can be scaled. The cost of acquiring customers is acceptably low, and it is clear that the business can be profitable, as monetization from each customer exceeds this cost.
  • Business has scaled well, but needs additional funding to further accelerate expansion. This capital might be to expand internationally, or to accelerate expansion in a land grab market situation, or could be to fund working capital needs as the business grows.

What goes wrong

What frequently goes wrong, and leads to a company running out of cash, and unable to raise more, is that management failed to achieve the next milestone before cash ran out. Many times it is still possible to raise cash, but the valuation will be significantly lower.

When to hit Accelerator Pedal

One of a CEO’s most important jobs is knowing how to regulate the accelerator pedal. In the early stages of a business, while the product is being developed, and the sales motion is still being developed to make it repeatable and scalable, the pedal needs to be set very lightly to conserve cash. There is no point hiring lots of sales and marketing people if the company is still in the process of finishing the product to the point where it really meets the market need, or if the sales motion is not repeatable. This is a really common mistake, and will just result in a fast burn, and lots of frustration.

However, on the flip side of this coin, there comes a time when it finally becomes apparent that the sales & marketing motion (Growth Model) has been proven, and is profitable. That is the time when the accelerator pedal should be pressed down hard. As hard as the capital resources available to the company permit.

6 Reasons Startups Fail - For Entrepreneurs (2)

For first time CEOs, knowing how to react when they reach this point can be tough. Up until now they have maniacally guarded every penny of the company’s cash, and held back spending. Suddenly they need to throw a switch, and start investing aggressively ahead of revenue. This may involve hiring multiple sales people per month, or spending considerable sums on SEM. That switch can be very counterintuitive.

6 Reasons Startups Fail - For Entrepreneurs (2024)

FAQs

Why do startups fail as an entrepreneur? ›

A study by CB Insights found that 42% of startups fail because of a lack of product-market fit (PMF). Startups need to identify a problem worth solving and then develop a solution that meets the market's needs. To find PMF, startups should engage in market research, customer discovery, and regular product iteration.

Why do 90% of startups fail? ›

Top Reasons Startups Fail

The relatively high startup failure rates are due to various reasons, with the most significant being the absence of a product-market fit, poor marketing strategy formulation and implementation, and cash flow problems.

What are the top 10 reasons why businesses fail? ›

And once you identify these harbingers of failure, you can increase your own chance of success.
  • Procrastination. ...
  • Inadequate knowledge of regulations. ...
  • Ignoring the competition. ...
  • Ineffective marketing and ignoring customers' needs. ...
  • Incompetent employees and management. ...
  • Lack of versatility. ...
  • Poor location. ...
  • Cash flow problems.

Why do startups fail book summary? ›

Why Startups Fail (2021) identifies six core reasons why startups fail. It presents a framework for analyzing startup failure that explores how different aspects of a business work together. Entrepreneurs can use this framework to evaluate the health of their own ventures.

What are the top 5 reasons for startup failures? ›

According to business owners, reasons for failure include money running out, being in the wrong market, a lack of research, bad partnerships, ineffective marketing, and not being an expert in the industry.

What's the #1 reason most startups fail? ›

Reason 1: Market Problems

A major reason why companies fail, is that they run into the problem of their being little or no market for the product that they have built.

How many entrepreneurs are millionaires? ›

88% of millionaires are entrepreneurs. You likely won't get wealthy putting money into a savings account or buying index funds. This is the lie you're sold so you never get wealthy.

Why only 1 percent succeed? ›

All jokes aside, there is a very good reason for this. If everyone was a success, no one would be. What makes a person successful is how we compare them to others. If everyone was considered successful then we wouldn't have any failures to compare them to and therefore no one would be successful.

What year do most startups fail? ›

About 90% of startups fail. 10% of startups fail within the first year. Across all industries, startup failure rates seem to be close to the same. Failure is most common for startups during years two through five, with 70% falling into this category.

Why do startups fail? ›

A bad business plan is detrimental to raising and running out of money, the most frequently reported reason for failure. Few startups launch with a bulletproof, immutable plan. Rather, successful founders create a plan and improve it continuously as market conditions and customer feedback demand.

What are the 7 reasons why small business fail? ›

7 Reasons Why Small Businesses Fail
  • Lack of Proper Planning. ...
  • Inadequate Financial Management. ...
  • Insufficient Market Demand. ...
  • Weak Marketing and Branding Strategies. ...
  • Ineffective Leadership and Management. ...
  • Competitive Landscape and Industry Changes. ...
  • Lack of Persistence and Resilience.
Oct 5, 2023

What are the six reasons why a new business may fail? ›

According to sources, there are six common reasons why small businesses fail: a lack of proper planning, insufficient funding, ineffective marketing, poor management, failure to adapt to market changes, and legal issues.

What happens to investors' money if a startup fails? ›

Investors form a partnership with the startups they choose to invest in – if the company turns a profit, investors make returns proportionate to their amount of equity in the startup; if the startup fails, the investors lose the money they've invested.

Does a failed startup look good on a resume? ›

As we have mentioned, the hiring manager won't be surprised that a startup failed and it doesn't have to be negative. However, you don't need to highlight the reasons on your resume. Still, you should come up with a solid answer if they ask you why it failed at the interview.

What are the reasons for decline of startups? ›

Top 10 Reasons Startups Fail and What to Do About It
  • Cash flow problems. ...
  • Lack of market need. ...
  • Poor product or service quality. ...
  • Not hiring the right people. ...
  • Poor leadership. ...
  • Not utilizing available technology. ...
  • Poor marketing strategies. ...
  • Inability to adapt to market changes.
Mar 28, 2023

What are the top two reasons reported as why startups fail? ›

  • Not Investigating the Market. ...
  • Business Plan Problems. ...
  • Too Little Financing. ...
  • Bad Location, Internet Presence, and Marketing. ...
  • Remaining Rigid. ...
  • Expanding Too Fast.

Why most entrepreneurship ventures are prone to failure? ›

Lack of or insufficient market demand. Lack of product or service (competitive) differentiation & other marketing issues (the four Ps of marketing) Lack of awareness of and/or ability to respond to emerging trends, relevant developments (technology, regulatory, geo-political, environmental), and competitive actions.

What happens to founders when startups fail? ›

Of course, not every founder of a sloppily shuttered startup will find themselves in the sights of law enforcement, like Oltyan did, but they could face a series of serious issues ranging from liability for unpaid debts to claims from former employees and vendors.

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