I founded a startup three years ago with a brilliant technical innovation. We raised $10 million, built a team of 30, and launched a product that reviewers loved. We're almost out of money. Our technology is still better than competitors, but our operations are a mess. Customer support is slow, billing is error-prone, deliveries are late. We're losing customers who love our product but hate the experience of being our customer. My CTO says we need to double down on R&D—our tech advantage is eroding, and the only way to survive is to stay ahead of competitors technically. "Operations can be fixed later. If we lose our innovation edge, we have nothing." My COO says the opposite: "The best product in the world doesn't matter if customers can't rely on us. We need to pause development, fix our operations, and build a company that can actually deliver what we promise." I don't have resources to do both well. The next six months will determine if we survive. Do I bet on innovation or operations? — The Struggling Startup in Austin
I founded a startup three years ago with a brilliant technical innovation. We raised $10 million, built a team of 30, and launched a product that reviewers loved. We're almost out of money. Our technology is still better than competitors, but our operations are a mess. Customer support is slow, billing is error-prone, deliveries are late. We're losing customers who love our product but hate the experience of being our customer. My CTO says we need to double down on R&D—our tech advantage is eroding, and the only way to survive is to stay ahead of competitors technically. "Operations can be fixed later. If we lose our innovation edge, we have nothing." My COO says the opposite: "The best product in the world doesn't matter if customers can't rely on us. We need to pause development, fix our operations, and build a company that can actually deliver what we promise." I don't have resources to do both well. The next six months will determine if we survive. Do I bet on innovation or operations? — The Struggling Startup in Austin
Gentlemen, it seems to me you're both dancing around the true question: what promises were made to those original investors? Was this venture sold as the next great technological leap, or as a reliable service? Because it sounds like the CTO and COO are arguing for entirely different companies. "Struggling Startup," perhaps the real innovation here lies not in the *what*, but in the *how.* Mr. Harriman, how does one instill operational excellence when the very DNA of a company seems geared towards invention?
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