There's some confusion as to what "Fail Fast" means - it's caused some disturbance in the force. Let me give you my perspective.
I'm going to use a business example for illustration. The message won't change if you apply the ideas to a product, a way of working - or even just a task.
The Fail Fast Move On Philosophy
Of course, we would like to maximize our probability of success. But - sometimes, we just can't know.
Let us use a restaurant as a showcase: I haven't seen any restaurant owner ever who opened a deli in order to go broke. And yet, almost 90% of restaurants don't survive their first year. Worse yet: the average restaurant owner loses at least $50k on the ordeal. Which, by the way, is the reason why I haven't opened a restaurant. For me, the upfront investment plus bound capacity (it's a pretty taxing job) isn't in sound relationship to possible benefits. But I digress ... but only slightly.
Fail Fast
During the "Fail Fast" stage, we start by figuring out what we're trying to do, what we know and what the unknowns and risks are. We exhibit a healthy skepticism of facts, for example, "Do we really know people in this part of town like Sushi?" and ask critical questions, such as, "What will happen if they don't?" We can then classify how much we're risking in case our assumptions turn sour. That gives us an analyzed, itemized list of risks which could make our endeavour fail.
Experiment
With our risk list, we propose a counter to our business idea, and we try to prove that the counter is false:
Returning to our sushi example, "We will offer a piece of Sushi to 100 pedestrians and ask them whether they'd visit a Sushi bar offering the same level of quality. [Counter:] Fewer than 10 positive answers mean that there's not enough interest in Sushi here."
Next, we're not even going to try to open a Sushi bar: all we want to do is disprove the pessimistic notion of an empty Sushi, our key risk of failure. (We could still be wrong - but now we know that there's a possibility of being right.)
We're not trying to succeed, we're trying to rule out predictable failure.
Move On
Moving on requires us to let go of what we invested.
The 3 Steps of Fail Fast, Move On
Applying Fail Fast, Move On goes far beyond validating a business idea - it goes for any idea, and thus is all-encompassing for all creative work. Fail Fast, Move On could be considered a 3-step process:
- Pull risk forward
- Rigorously inspect and adapt
- Minimize and write off sunk cost
That, of course, doesn't mean that we either:
- Generate unnecessary risk by negligence or unprofessionalism.
- Act without a prediction to validate.
- Waste our energy on doing things we know we could do smarter.
To the contrary - "Fail Fast, Move On" is the notion of avoiding these three antipatterns by systematically eliminating failure points.
Proper "Fail Fast, Move On" saves you energy and maximizes your opportunity of success.
You can learn more about succeeding with "Fail Fast, Move On" in my Lean Startup lasses.
Feel free to set up an appointment with me using the PAYL coaching mechanism (on the left) to discover more.
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