fail fast
Trying Isn’t Enough—You Need Relentless Experimentation
“Whoever tries the most stuff wins” only scratches the surface. You win when you keep experimenting, refining, and learning.
Tom Peters nailed it—movement beats stagnation.
But let’s be real: trying random things without purpose gets you nowhere.
The key is thoughtful experimentation.
Think of it like running a thousand A/B tests: Fail fast, adjust fast.
Every iteration sharpens your skills and gets you closer to what works.
You don’t need endless resources to innovate; you need guts to pivot when things fall apart.
Most people fear failure.
You should fear inertia.
Testing often and failing early isn’t reckless—it’s survival.
The real winners are those who aren’t attached to their first draft.
They’re the ones who take feedback and evolve on the fly.
Trying isn’t the goal—continuous adaptation is.
Ship and iterate!
Here’s the takeaway: Make experimentation your competitive edge.
Double down on what works.
Learn from what doesn’t.
It’s not about counting how many things you’ve tried; it’s about how quickly you figure out the next step.
“Victory doesn’t go to those who try the most; it goes to those who adapt the fastest.” — Mike Brewer