If you’ve talked to an engineering nerd or a tech bro recently, you’ve probably heard the phrase “fail fast, fail often” a lot. The idea is simple: Value trying and learning from failure rather than ...
— -- Let's talk about a word no small business owner or entrepreneur ever likes to utter: "failure." Nobody wants to fail. But some failure is inevitable — at least it is if you ever hope to ...
*There’s a mantra sweeping across the business world: “Fail fast, fail often.” From Silicon Valley startups to corporate boardrooms, leaders have been encouraged to embrace failure as a path to ...
The Museum of Failure is a touring exhibition of failed innovations from across the product and services spectrum. A whole museum dedicated to major brand blunders? Sounds pretty depressing at worst, ...
Across industries, the ability to innovate quickly, learn from setbacks and pivot strategies is paramount for success, given the accelerated rate at which the tech landscape is evolving.
From decreasing dependence on petroleum to decarbonizing the ocean, innovations at the intersection of deep tech and sustainability may be the future of entrepreneurship. Undergraduates and graduate ...
Long known for its massive scale and bureaucratic complexity, the Pentagon is slowly transforming itself into a more streamlined organization, much like a Silicon Valley company. The “fail fast” ...
Sometimes, the widely shared mantras in the startup world passed down from investors, accelerators, or successful founders can turn into liabilities when applied too broadly or in the wrong context.
The U.S. nuclear navy, created by Admiral Hyman Rickover, was an astonishing bureaucratic and cultural revolution in modern military history. Rickover’s belief in superior engineering, continuous ...