How to Think Like a Startup

With the right mindset and a big dose of daily courage, anything is possible.


BEAM Team

10 Aug, 2017

How to Think Like a Startup | BEAMSTART News

- From our Sponsors -

Silicon Valley is 1,500 square miles of the most fertile ground on the planet and a giant launch pad for some of the world's most famous startups. Tesla, Facebook, Apple and Google are just some of the companies that have made it their home. What's telling is, irrespective of size, they cultivate a belief system that with the right mindset anything is possible.

Fast Eats Slow.

Success is no longer about being big or small. It's about speed, pivoting and rapid scaling. In our lifetime, technology has advanced at an extraordinary rate (the first web browser was only invented in 1994 and the first iPhone in 2007). Research by Boston Consulting Group illustrates the time it's taken for each one of the following inventions to reach 100 million users:

  • Telephone: 75 years
  • Web: 7 years
  • Facebook: 4 years
  • Instagram: 2 years

Related: You can now raise funds for your business on BEAM

Think Like A Startup.

Ernst and Young (EY), the global professional services firm, asked more than 1,000 individuals working in big companies how they felt about work today. Only three out of ten respondents agreed their organization had a startup mindset. The three biggest obstacles you must overcome in order to unlock a startup mindset are:

1. Organizational barriers. Fear is the enemy of innovation: fear of judgment, fear of the unknown, and fear of failure can prevent the best-intentioned people from taking risks. To think and act like a startup, you must incentivize risk taking and put experimentation and intelligent failure at the heart of your culture.

2. Cognitive barriers. The demands on our time make it hard for the brain to think clearly. Thanks to unhealthy eating and sleeping habits, our brains are rarely in peak condition. Information overload, digital distractions, and sloppy thinking can literally stop innovation in its tracks. The best entrepreneurs let their minds wander. Take a brain break: go for a walk and get some fresh air. This is often where great ideas lie dormant.

3. Schlep blindness: Paul Graham, cofounder of Y Combinator, is credited with this clever insight. He explains: "There are great startup ideas lying around unexploited right under our noses. One reason we don't see them is a phenomenon I call schlep blindness. Schlep was originally a Yiddish word but has passed into general use in the US. It means a tedious, unpleasant task." To overcome schlep blindness, write your fears down and bounce ideas around with the team. Ideas usually go through a series of stages from "that's a bad idea" to "that's a good idea" and then finally "that's my idea". Graham says ideas can be obvious but hard, easy, and overcrowded, or not obvious but hard. Be open to hidden insights: prototype ideas quickly until they make sense and remember most good ideas start as bad ideas.

The Final Word.

A startup mindset gives you huge advantages in this complex new world. It helps you adapt quickly, duck hazards, and grab opportunities faster than larger, sleepier competitors. And working with tight constraints can challenge outdated assumptions and force more creativity. While big companies are busy protecting the golden goose with business as usual, you will be ready to invent the future.

Related:

- From our Sponsors -

Latest Jobs

Head of Engineering

Nabis

Full Time

USD 250000 — USD 300000 yearly

Software Engineer I

Ophelia

Full Time

USD 120000 — USD 130000 yearly

Content Wizard

Woz

California,

Contract

USD 50 — USD 100 yearly

Field Marketing Manager - APAC & META Markets

Cyble

Full Time

USD 70000 — USD 100000 yearly

Legendary Growth Engineer – Automation

Conveo

New York,

Full Time

USD 40000 — USD 130000 yearly

Event Marketing Manager in SF

Hyperbound

California,

Full Time

USD 140000 — USD 170000 yearly

VP of Marketing - NYC

Thera

New York,

Full Time

USD 80000 — USD 120000 yearly

Director of Marketing

Sendblue

New York,

Full Time

USD 210000 — USD 225000 yearly

Product Marketing

Confido

New York,

Full Time

USD 120000 — USD 160000 yearly

Product Marketing Manager - PMM NYC, Hybrid

Escape

New York,

Full Time

USD 65000 — USD 150000 yearly

BEAMSTART is a hub for everything Startups, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation. Connect with a global community of people, and stay updated with the latest startup jobs, news, and discussions.

 
© 2016 - 2026 BEAMSTART. All Rights Reserved (Legal).