True failure isn't making the wrong choice; it's making no choice at all. Gary Vaynerchuk advocates for rapid decision-making because mistakes are "information-rich data streams." Moving, even in the wrong direction, provides learning and momentum. Standing still provides nothing.
This quote inverts the traditional view of failure. It argues that the real mistake is the opportunity cost of inaction—the products that are never tested in the market. A failed launch provides invaluable learning, whereas a product that never ships provides none, encouraging a bias for action.
The best leaders act on incomplete information, understanding that 100% certainty is a myth that only exists in hindsight. The inability to decide amid ambiguity—choosing inaction—is a greater failure than making the wrong call.
Being unable to choose between several viable ideas isn't a strategy problem; it's a psychological one. This indecisiveness is often a defense mechanism, allowing you to talk about potential without ever risking the public failure of execution. The solution is to force a decision—flip a coin, draw from a hat—and commit.
Action, even incorrect action, produces valuable information that clarifies the correct path forward. This bias toward doing over planning is a key trait of outliers. Waiting for perfect information is a silent killer of ambition, while immediate action creates momentum and reveals opportunities.
Entrepreneurs often view early mistakes as regrettable detours to be avoided. The proper framing is to see them as necessary, unskippable steps in development. Every fumble, pivot, and moment of uncertainty is essential preparation for what's next, transforming regret into an appreciation for the journey itself.
Agency leaders often delay decisions for fear of being wrong, creating significant opportunity costs and mental distraction. This paralysis is more damaging than the risk of an incorrect choice. Any decision is better than indecision because it provides momentum and learning, a lesson especially critical for small or solo-led agencies.
Taking a strong stance on a strategic question, even if it's not perfectly correct, is a powerful way to accelerate progress. It provides clear direction, allowing a team to skip endless deliberation and move decisively, avoiding the paralysis that comes from trying to keep all options open.
A founder's retrospective analysis often reveals that delayed decisions were the correct ones, and the only regret is not acting sooner. Recognizing this pattern—that you rarely regret moving too fast—can serve as a powerful heuristic to trust your gut and accelerate decision-making, as inaction is often the biggest risk.
The number one reason founders fail is not a lack of competence but a crisis of confidence that leads to hesitation. They see what needs to be done but delay, bogged down by excuses. In a fast-moving environment, a smart decision made too late is no longer a smart decision.
The key to success is high-volume decision-making with a slight edge, not perfection. Like a casino, being right just over half the time on decisions with measurable outcomes guarantees long-term success. This mindset encourages action over analysis paralysis and accepts failure as part of the process.