Tag Archives: failure

What is Fail Whale?


What is Fail Whale?.

This page is a collection of a lot of user generated images for the Twitter Fail Whale. It also answers the question above. I think this is a great example of two measures we have an eye for when we help companies develop products.

First: failure is a means to the goal and should not be avoided per se. Failures help you carve out your market because it is through failing (and failing fast, as I like to say) that we learn the correct path to success.

Second: spreadability. This is a term that Henry Jenkins uses frequently to describe how users generate content. It’s a term that most people mean when they say “UGC” or “Viral Content” and it simply refers to the ability of a meme to be spread without the encoded original message getting distorted. Not only is Twitter “spreadable” but even its longstanding “fails” are worth sharing. 

What we as product developers can glean from this lesson is that once a product makes it into pop culture, expect to lose direct control of the message. And that even a culture that gently pokes fun at the product by highlighting its shortcomings is in its own way a loving culture. We tease those we love, after all. Why should it be any different for products we love?

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Fail Fast Presentation – 1.0

Release early, release often, right?

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"Failure" is the New "Success"

My latest Lifehacker post (“Failure is the Highway to Success“) is about my personal experience “failing” at growing Dandelife. I’m noticing a lot of people have the same thoughts. I guess you could say there’s something in the water. In a down time, it’s only naturual to collect your thoughts and carve a new path for yourself. Ahem, 3ones, ahem. :-)

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Fail Fast & Other Product Development Lessons Learned in the Trenches

I spoke at a San Diego TiE event at the end of January. It was a panel of Software Entrepreneurs fielding questions about what the start-up life is like in software these days. Steve Bjorg from MindTouch was there. The two other panelists were Thomas Carter, Founder & CEO, Capital Window  and David Desch, Vice President of Engineering and IT, Digital Force Technologies (he helped Sony launch their HDTV division). For me, the chance to speak at the event was well worth it. I had not a little bit of fun too. In every way, I was the anomaly up there. No success to speak of (in the monetary sense), no “team” and no inhibitions.

Aside from being fun, the event also helped me frame some thoughts I’ve been having. I thought it would be a good idea to get them down on paper while they are fresh and share wit you. Let me know what you think, yeah? [...]

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