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X (Twitter)

Most founders I know sit in one of two camps on this. Camp one says:…

X (Twitter) post

Most founders I know sit in one of two camps on this. Camp one says: don't make a move until you know the answer. Study the market, validate the model, get the conditions right before you commit. Cautious. Deliberate. Safe. Camp two says: you just start. Pick the area that interests you, get moving, talk to people, and figure it out as you go. Here's the tension. Both of those instincts are right, and both of them are dangerous. I've built six companies. The advice I give myself hasn't changed much, but I've felt the cost of getting the balance wrong in both directions. Moved too fast with bad information. Moved too slow waiting for certainty that never arrived. The thing is, "don't make a move until you know the answer" and "you just start" are not actually opposites. They apply to different problems. One is about strategic decisions you can't walk back. The other is about momentum, about getting into the market and learning from real signals instead of your own head. The founders who get it right know which situation they're in. So here's the question I'm genuinely curious about: in your experience, which instinct has cost you more? Moving before you had the answer, or waiting too long to begin?

Mark HadfieldJun 9, 2026Published to X - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

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