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Equity

Failure is a choose-your-own adventure for startups

Equity

TechCrunch

Entrepreneurship, Business News, News, Business, Technology

4.2372 Ratings

🗓️ 6 April 2022

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is our Wednesday show, where we niche down to a single topic, think about a question and unpack the rest. This week, given a parade of headlines and news that Fast shut down, Natasha and Alex asked: What are we missing when we talk about startup failure? The question comes after one of Natasha’s recent Startups Weekly columns, where she looked into the complexity of startup failure, fallacy of takedown stories, and importance of diversity in newsrooms. Here's an excerpt: "There’s the argument that startup tensions are inevitable and common, so should we spotlight every time something bubbles to the surface, especially at the cost of an underrepresented founder who may just be doing their best? There’s also an argument that the business is messy, so we should report on the issues as we hear about them; and there’s the narrative of the female takedown story, in which people believe that women are targeted by the press more than men due to unreasonably high standards." In today's episode we discussed our own definitions of failure past Theranos and WeWork, current examples of rising tensions, and what this means for early-stage startups and historically overlooked founders. There's been more layoffs recently, some notable valuation cuts, and the implosion of Fast to weigh against 2021's strident startup optimism. That makes this the perfect time to dig into the topic of failure, and how to cover it from a startup perspective. Finally, as promised, here's a look at our artsy depictions of the startup failure cycle: https://twitter.com/nmasc\_/status/1511365442249580548 Don't forget that Equity is live this Thursday, and you can you come hang out with us on Hopin (free, and you can ask questions) or Twitter Spaces (free, but you cannot ask questions) if you'd like! See you then! Credits: Equity is produced by Theresa Loconsolo with editing by Kell. Bryce Durbin is our Illustrator. We'd also like to thank the audience development team and Henry Pickavet, who manages TechCrunch audio products. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome back to Equity, a podcast about the business of

0:14.7

startups where we unpack the numbers and nuance behind the headlines. I'm Natasha

0:18.8

Masqueriness and this is our Wednesday show where we niche down into a

0:22.3

single topic, think about a question and unpack the rest.

0:25.3

This week we are asking, what are we missing when we talk about startup failure?

0:29.8

And I'm joined by one of the most successful people I know which is fitting so Alex

0:33.8

Wilhelm happy to have you. Either that was sarcastic and kind of mean or it was

0:37.4

honest and kind of sad. It was the latter. I swear. No I just want to say that I'm stoked by this topic because I think it really

0:45.6

cuts across a number of things we're seeing in the news, cultural conversations we've

0:48.7

been having across social media, and I'm really glad that we've picked a topic that's going to

0:52.4

guarantee no negative responses whatsoever.

0:55.0

I mean it's tough, right? I feel like the tech versus media tensions have always been rooted about how journalists cover failure and how founders hide and

1:05.2

obfuscate failure. And so I think that we've always kind of talked about this on Slack and

1:09.8

throughout the Friday show, but it is kind of a risk for us to be taking on a spicy topic for 30 minutes because I agree like there's a reason why it breaks everyone up every three months on tech Twitter and people get blocked and unfall out.

1:22.4

I've been through the tech Twitter, Tech versus Media thing so many times now I can almost

1:26.4

script it for you.

1:27.4

I know we're going to get into this but like I hope that we can actually advance the

1:30.1

conversation a little bit, explain more how we we think and show empathy as you might

1:34.1

say and try to have an open mind but we're talking about this all for reasons

1:37.2

Natasha so why you explain people you know why this is the moment to really riff on

1:40.5

startup failure definitely so as we're kind of talking about,

1:43.4

startup failure is something that I think

...

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