The shame faced by Singapore startup founders who fail is real.

Johnrambo

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At a recent fireside chat with undergraduates, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong spoke about how he does not think that there is any stigma or shame attached to startup founders who fail.


He had good intentions in encouraging aspiring Singaporeans to try new businesses and succeed. I, for one, am eager too to promote this culture of entrepreneurship.


The reality, however, is starkly different. For the last 10 years, I have been a mentor and advisor to numerous early-stage Singaporean startup founders. And from where I stand, Singapore has a long way to go in supporting them and understanding the concept of failure in the startup industry.


We often celebrate news of startups receiving funding. But away from the news is a larger group of startups that have failed and quietly disappeared. I have noticed that startup founders who regularly posted on social media about their startup activities would suddenly go quiet once their venture failed to take off.


Khailee Ng of 500 Startups has spoken previously about how entrepreneurs face high stress and this is not discussed openly with investors, staff and other founders. Mr Ng cited a Harvard Business School study done in 2012 which attributed 65 per cent of startup failures to personal stress.


Shame prevents founders from openly sharing their problems, and this can be a vicious circle that further perpetuates a culture where no one wants to talk about failure and the shame associated with it becomes worse.

More at https://tinyurI.com/y2knpxdz
 
Who want to talk about failure? U ask Loong, he will know how grand strategy can turn to dogshit.
 
When your place of business has costs that were inflated by greedy/incompetent govts with all sorts of hidden taxes, fees, levies, exorbitant rentals, expensive labour and ridiculous utilities and expendables, 99% of startups are bound to fail in my opinion.
 
When your place of business has costs that were inflated by greedy/incompetent govts with all sorts of hidden taxes, fees, levies, exorbitant rentals, expensive labour and ridiculous utilities and expendables, 99% of startups are bound to fail in my opinion.
The reverse is true here. Startups sustained with grants and passions. :inlove:
 
GRAB still losing money. Thus could be the biggest failure.
On the other hand, airbnb, which help those with homes in good locations to earn incomes and expand by buying even more homes under airbnb, will be listing soon. Its a good business model. And unlike uber, no potential threats or viable competition.
 
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