Get All Access for $5/mo

The Basic Mistakes That Felled 3 Once-Glamorous Startups There is much less to be learned from the failure of aspirational but underfunded startups than from those that seemed to have the stars aligned.

By Firas Kittaneh Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Before they reach their fifth year almost half of all U.S. businesses go under. Among startups, that number is even higher. From those failures, fortunately, there are plenty of lessons learned to help future entrepreneurs avoid those same mistakes and increase their odds of founding a company that outlives them. In this article, we explore what happened to three startups some believed would take over the world, and extract lessons learned to help readers like you build a successful business.

Fab.com: The pitfalls of abundance and excessive investor capital.

At its peak, Fab.com was valued at $1 billion and was home to nearly 700 employees. But earlier this year, the company sold to PCH for $15 million. Some suggest the company's surprising downfall was the result of excess and hubris. Fab.com hemorrhaged cash by splurging on unnecessary staff and underperforming marketing strategies, all whilst consistently raising round after round of financing. Because investors kept giving it, former CEO Jason Goldberg felt free to spend it.

Part of that capital went towards building a fabulous public image. The business moved into a 50,000 square foot space in New York's posh West Village. Abroad, it acquired like minded startups in London and Berlin, and opened a European hub in the latter city. Goldberg spent like a king, but ultimately what he bought was a recipe for disaster.

For other startups, the cautionary tale is in, perhaps, fooling yourself into thinking that investor money can solve all of your problems. With too much free capital, Fab.com didn't get much of a chance to learn how to make all of that money on its own.

Related: Fab Sells to PCH for a Tiny Fraction of Its Former $1 Billion Valuation

Quirky: When good ideas never get a chance to become great.

In an article for The New York Observer, venture capitalist Ben Einstein explained that Quirky's biggest misstep was its failure to iterate on existing products. That would have made good ideas great.

With $180 million in funding, the business ambitiously took on the mission to launch more than 50 different products each year, which they happily built and promoted but never improved. For that reason, many would-be hallmark inventions fell to the wayside as attention was turned towards the next big thing for the company.

Einstein asserted, "Quirky systematically broke the cardinal rule of startups: iterate rapidly to build a product people love." Instead of focusing on improving items customers wanted, the business became an idea factory that regularly churned out high-potential products they treated as disposable.

Related: Ben Kaufman's Quirky Is Officially Out of Money

Grooveshark: Why it pays to play ball.

Although startups like Uber have been known to win by bending the rules, Grooveshark is just one example among many of what can go wrong when you're on the wrong side of the law. After eight years, the music streaming site shuttered when it settled a lawsuit filed by various music labels that accused the company of enabling mass music piracy.

In its final farewell, Grooveshark admitted, "We failed to secure licenses from rights holders for the vast amount of music on the service. That was wrong. We apologize. Without reservation."

Unwilling to change its business model or admit fault, Grooveshark found itself committed to fighting a never-ending war against its foes when, in hindsight, the business should have embraced them as allies. Grooveshark could have thrived if it agreed to pay artists and record labels royalties. Instead, it will be remembered as the catalyst which paved the way for competing services like Pandora and Spotify to broker fair deals with music companies to ethically provide audiences with the content they clearly demanded in a format they were already familiar with.

Related: Early Music Streaming Service Grooveshark Shuts Down to Settle Infringement

Firas Kittaneh

Serial Entrepreneur • CEO at Amerisleep • CEO at OCLU

Firas Kittaneh is a serial entrepreneur and co-founder of amerisleep. Most recently, he launched OCLU to improve how we record our most memorable moments.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Side Hustle

The Side Hustle He Started in His College Apartment Turned Into a $70,000-a-Month Income Stream — Then Earned Nearly $2 Million Last Year

Kyle Morrand and his college roommates loved playing retro video games — and the pastime would help launch his career.

Business News

New Southwest Airlines Major Investor Wants to Force Out CEO, Slams Company's 'Stubborn Unwillingness to Evolve'

Elliot Investment Management announced a $1.9 billion stake in the Dallas-based Southwest Airlines on Monday and is urging shareholders to vote for new leadership.

Science & Technology

Why We Shouldn't Fear AI in Education (and How to Use It Effectively)

Facing resistance to new technologies in the educational process is nothing new, and AI is no exception. Yet, this powerful tool is set to overcome these challenges and revolutionize education, preparing students and professionals for a future of unparalleled efficiency and personalized learning.

Business News

Elon Musk Threatens to Ban Employees from Using Apple Products, Says Will Lock Devices in 'Cages'

The Tesla founder sounded off on X following Apple's 2024 Worldwide Developer Conference on Monday.

Business News

Apple's AI Has a Catch — And It Could Help Boost Sales

Not every iPhone owner will get to use the new Apple Intelligence.