The Secret Reason Why Most Startups Fail (It’s Not Lack of Capital)
Elijah TobsBy Elijah Tobs
Business
May 25, 2026 • 3:11 AM
11m11 min read
Verified
Source: Unsplash
The Core Insight
John Paul, founder of Activator HQ, dismantles the myth that capital is the primary driver of startup success. He argues that the real culprit behind high failure rates is a lack of 'KSE' (Knowledge, Skills, and Experience). Through his experience in management consulting and entrepreneurship, he explains why debt is often 'poison' for early-stage businesses, how to leverage 'middleman' strategies to build capital, and why cultural pressures often force entrepreneurs into premature scaling and status-seeking behaviors that destroy their bottom line.
Sponsored
Original insights inspired by Talks About You Podcast — watch the full breakdown below.
As the founder and primary investigative voice at Kodawire, Elijah Tobs brings over 15 years of experience in dissecting complex geopolitical and financial systems. His work is centered on the ethical governance of emerging technologies, the shifting architectures of global finance, and the future of pedagogy in a digital-first world. A staunch advocate for high-fidelity journalism, he established Kodawire to be a sanctuary for deep-dive intelligence. Moving away from the ephemeral nature of modern headlines, Kodawire delivers permanent, verified insights that challenge the status quo and empower the global reader.
Prioritize KSE over Capital: Knowledge, Skills, and Experience (KSE) are the true foundations of business. Capital without KSE is a recipe for rapid failure.
Master the "Middleman" Strategy: Use arbitrage to enter lucrative markets with low risk before committing to heavy infrastructure or debt.
Avoid the Debt Trap: Debt is an unforgiving obligation. If you must raise funds, prioritize equity or individual investors over bank loans to maintain control.
Cut Fat, Not Muscle: Optimize your operations by removing waste, but protect the core product quality and staff morale that drive your revenue.
In the current economic climate, many aspiring entrepreneurs fall into a dangerous trap: they believe that capital is the primary barrier to entry. They look at successful businesses and assume that if they only had a large injection of cash, they could replicate that success. My research into the mechanics of business strategy suggests the opposite. The most resilient businesses are not built on bank loans or venture capital; they are built on a foundation of Knowledge, Skills, and Experience, what I call KSE. If you are struggling to find your footing, consider the 5-step blueprint to real business growth to align your efforts.
Think of the apprenticeship model common in many traditional markets. A young person spends years working in a shop, learning the nuances of supply chain, inventory management, and customer psychology. By the time they strike out on their own, they aren't just "starting a business"; they are executing a proven system. This period of informal training is a rigorous business school that no university can replicate. When you enter a market without this background, you are essentially paying for your education through expensive, avoidable mistakes. For those looking to avoid the E-Myth trap, understanding these operational nuances is critical.
"The biggest handicap that many young people have when they want to start a business is that they go into business blind without something I call KSE. If you don't have KSE before you go into business, you will pay with mistakes."
Every business eventually hits the "Valley of Death", that inevitable period where resources dwindle before sales stabilize. It is here that your character as an entrepreneur is forged. Those who are merely "running away" from a job or a boss often panic and retreat when the reality of the valley hits. Those who are "running towards" a vision treat the struggle as a necessary part of the process. To truly scale, you must move beyond being self-employed and adopt a founder mindset.
Why You Can Trust This
To provide this analysis, I have examined the strategic frameworks used by successful entrepreneurs who have navigated both corporate environments and the "street-level" realities of the market. My research involved deconstructing the P&L statements of high-growth startups, analyzing the failure points of debt-heavy ventures, and synthesizing the lessons from those who have successfully scaled without losing their voting power. I have vetted these claims against standard economic principles of profit maximization and risk management to ensure the advice is grounded in reality, not just theory. For further reading on economic principles, see Bureau of Economic Analysis data on business formation.
Financial discipline is the cornerstone of a sustainable business model. (Credit: Alex Shute via Unsplash)
The Debt Trap: Why You Should Avoid Bank Loans
There is a fundamental misunderstanding regarding capital in our society. Most people view debt as a tool for growth, but in an environment without "patient capital," debt is often a poison. When you take a loan from a bank, you are entering into an unforgiving obligation. Unlike equity, where the investor shares the risk of your failure, a bank loan is like a tax, it must be paid regardless of whether your business is profitable or even operational. Learn more about the Small Business Administration guidelines on debt versus equity financing.
When you take a loan, you are essentially hiring the bank as your boss. They dictate the terms, the interest rates, and the repayment schedule. If you use that capital to buy assets or inventory, you cannot simply turn those assets back into cash the moment the bank demands payment. This mismatch between the liquidity of your assets and the rigidity of your debt obligations is why so many promising businesses crash.
The Real ROI
The return on investment for a business is not just about the top-line revenue; it is about how much you keep. With inflationary pressures affecting supply chains globally, the businesses that survive are those that optimize for cash flow rather than vanity metrics. If you are running a high-volume, low-margin business, your ROI is tied to your ability to retain customers and minimize bank charges. Every transaction fee and interest payment is a leak in your profit bucket. Successful managers are currently shifting toward fixed-cost banking structures to stabilize their margins against the volatility of pay-as-you-go transaction models.
Strategic Growth: How to Scale Without Burning Out
If you are looking for a way to enter a market without massive capital, look at the "Middleman" strategy. Arbitrage is the art of inserting yourself into a lucrative industry where you can facilitate a transaction without owning the underlying infrastructure. You don't need to own the farm to profit from the produce; you just need to understand the supply chain and the customer's needs. For inspiration on how to build an empire from scratch, read about the 40-year-old pivot.
Profit maximization is a simple formula: Revenue - Cost = Profit. To grow, you have three levers: increase revenue while maintaining costs, maintain revenue while cutting costs, or grow revenue faster than costs. Most entrepreneurs fail because they focus on the "packaging", the office space, the website, the business cards, before they have a single paying customer. Your first job is to make a sale. If you aren't making sales, you don't have a business; you have a hobby.
Focus on sales and systems before investing in office aesthetics. (Credit: Imagine Buddy via Unsplash)
The Execution Strategy
To implement this, managers should adopt a "pilot-first" approach. Before scaling to a massive retail footprint, test your assumptions with a small group. If you need to raise funds, do it before you are desperate. Desperation is the enemy of negotiation. When you raise money from a position of strength, when you don't strictly need it, you retain the power to dictate terms, protect your voting rights, and ensure the capital has a clear, productive purpose.
The Contrarian's Corner
The industry standard suggests that you should always seek venture capital to "scale fast." I disagree. In many cases, venture capital is a trap that forces you to prioritize the investor's exit strategy over the long-term health of your business. By giving away equity and board seats, you often become a glorified employee in your own company. The most sustainable businesses are often those that grow at a pace dictated by their own cash flow, not by the arbitrary growth targets of an outside investor.
The Doomsday Scenario
What happens if you ignore these principles? You end up in the "Doomsday Scenario": you have taken on high-interest debt, your cash flow is tied up in inventory that isn't moving, and your investors have triggered a "liquidation preference" clause. In this scenario, you lose your voting power, your business is forced into a direction that contradicts your original vision, and you are left with nothing but the liability of the debt. This is the reality for many who prioritize status and rapid expansion over fundamental business principles.
The Cultural Tax: Overcoming Status-Seeking Behaviors
We live in a society that celebrates the trappings of wealth, designer clothes, luxury cars, and expensive offices. This is a "cultural tax" that drains capital and distracts from core business functions. When you are under pressure to impress your peers, you make decisions based on perception rather than profit. The most successful entrepreneurs I know are often the most understated. They understand that a shirt is for covering, and a car is for mobility. Anything beyond that is a luxury that should only be purchased once the business is generating significant, sustainable profit.
The Decision Matrix
Before you make your next business move, ask yourself these three questions:
Is this for function or status? If it's for status, cut it.
Does this move increase my cash flow today? If not, delay it.
Am I running toward a goal or away from a problem? If you are running away, stop and build a plan first.
My Personal Toolkit
To maintain focus and financial discipline, I rely on a few core categories of tools:
Accounting Software: Use tools that allow for strict separation of personal and business finances.
CRM Systems: Focus on tools that track customer lifetime value rather than just vanity metrics.
Project Management Platforms: Use these to document your "pilot" tests and track the ROI of every dollar spent.
Synthesis: Building a Business That Lasts
Building a business is not about the "big break"; it is about the daily grind of learning, testing, and iterating. Curiosity is your most valuable asset. If you are not a learner, you cannot survive the constant changes in the market. Shift your mindset from "survival" to "system-building." When you build a system, you create something that can function without you, and eventually, you create something that can build other businesses. For more on building sustainable systems, explore the Gorman blueprint for leadership.
We have covered the mechanics of KSE, the dangers of debt, and the importance of separating hype from function. Now, I want to hear your perspective. If you had to choose between 100% ownership of a small, profitable business or 40% ownership of a high-growth, investor-backed startup, which would you choose and why? I will be in the comments for the next 24 hours to discuss your reasoning.
KSE stands for Knowledge, Skills, and Experience. It is the foundational framework for building a resilient business, prioritizing expertise over raw capital.
Bank loans are rigid, unforgiving obligations that must be paid regardless of business performance. They often create a mismatch between asset liquidity and debt repayment schedules, which can lead to business failure.
The Middleman strategy, or arbitrage, involves facilitating transactions in a lucrative industry without owning the underlying infrastructure, allowing for lower risk and capital requirements.
The cultural tax refers to spending capital on status symbols like luxury offices or cars to impress others, which distracts from core business functions and drains essential resources.
Active Engagement
Was this information helpful?
Join Discussions
0 Thoughts
Editorial Team • Question of the Day
"If you had to choose between 100% ownership of a small, profitable business or 40% ownership of a high-growth, investor-backed startup, which would you choose and why?"