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DATA ANALYSIS · APRIL 2026

What 85 startup post-mortems tell you about scaling.

46 successful companies 24 failures 15 investor analyses 29 factors coded

What I was looking for when I started this research was consistency. Which patterns actually appear, again and again, in companies that scale? And which ones show up every time a company collapses?

See the data
Paul Musters
Paul Musters
emaho · paul@emaho.world
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01 - what worked

What successful companies consistently got right.

How often each pattern appeared across the 46 successful companies. The top six showed up in more than 80% of cases, and almost always together. That consistency is not accidental.

02 - the core six

Successful companies didn't pick from these six.
They had all of them.

The overlap between any two of these factors runs from 75 to 93%. Have one, and you almost certainly have the others. The line width shows how strongly any two appeared together.

avg overlap 82%
90%+ overlap 75-89% under 75%
How strongly linked?
Every pair overlaps at 75 to 93%. Have one, and you almost always have the others. That's near certainty, not just correlation.
Why does this matter?
They reinforce each other. Hiring well is easier when culture is defined. Autonomy works when hiring is high. Mission filters decisions when the founder models it.
What a founder learns
You don't build these one by one. Build the system, or accept that gaps will appear under pressure. Missing one tends to weaken the rest.
03 - what went wrong

What failed companies had in common.

How often each problem appeared across the 24 failed companies. No single cause tells the whole story. These patterns almost always showed up in combination.

04 - how companies fail

Three routes to collapse.

Looking at which problems appeared together, three clear patterns emerge. Most failed companies followed one of these routes, not a random mix of bad luck.

01
The Market Trap
Wrong product + Cash runs out + Bad timing
The product never found customers who needed it. Money ran dry before they could pivot. External forces accelerated the end. The team and culture were often fine. The bet on the market was wrong.
Rdio · Quibi · Jawbone · Doppler Labs · Tutorspree
02
The Leader Trap
Toxic founder + Fear culture + Board stays silent
A dominant founder builds a culture where no one speaks up. The board fails to intervene. Problems compound invisibly until it's too late. The most destructive route: it damages the people inside, not just the investors.
WeWork · Clinkle · Wirecard · Vine
03
The Scale Trap
Scaled too fast + Leader didn't change + Wrong hires
The company grew faster than the model could support. The founder kept leading the same way. Wrong people were brought in to solve the wrong problems. There was often something real early on. The failure was in how it was grown.
Fab · Boo.com · Juicero · Groupon (post-peak)

What all three share: once the first problem appears, it tends to pull the others in. The Leader Trap is hardest to stop, because the people who would normally raise the alarm have been made afraid to do so.

05 - how success patterns connect

How strongly success patterns travel together.

The darker the cell, the more often those two things appeared in the same company. Numbers show the percentage overlap. The top-left cluster is the core six: almost always together, across every region and sector.

Culture + Autonomy: 93%, the strongest pair in the matrix Safety + Handbook: 81%, consistently go hand in hand Openness: the most independent factor, some companies had it, most didn't
What each label means
Culture: Behavioral norms were defined specifically enough that people could actually act on them
Hiring: The bar for who joined was deliberately kept high, even under growth pressure
Autonomy: Teams had real decision-making power, paired with clear accountability
Modeling: The founder demonstrated the culture through their own daily behavior
Mission: The company's purpose was concrete enough to use as a filter for decisions
Adapts: The leader actively changed how they led as the company moved through stages
Safety: People felt genuinely safe to raise problems, disagree, or challenge decisions
Openness: Information, including financials and strategy, flowed freely across the company
Role shift: The leader consciously changed their role from doer to manager to leader
Handbook: The culture was written down and shared so it lived beyond conversations
Standards: A clear performance standard was maintained consistently, even under pressure
06 - what the data says

Seven things worth holding on to.

01
Most companies don't fail because of bad luck.
External forces were the only cause in a small minority of cases. In most failures, internal problems caused the collapse or made it significantly worse.
02
Hiring well is the single most consistent thing successful companies do.
91% had a genuinely high bar for who they brought in, and held it even when growth created pressure to lower it. No other factor appeared more consistently.
03
The six core patterns come as a package.
Culture, hiring, autonomy, founder modeling, mission clarity, and leadership adaptability appear together in almost every successful company. They reinforce each other. Missing one tends to weaken the rest.
04
The most destructive problems are the ones no one talks about.
Toxic leadership and a culture of fear appeared in the same companies, again and again. The reason they're hard to stop: the leader causing the problem is the one who would need to fix it.
05
Leadership adaptability appears in both outcomes. The difference is timing.
Leaders who reflected and changed appeared in nearly 90% of successful companies. They also appeared in almost half the failures, but there, the reflection came in the post-mortem.
06
The sequence that works is the same across every region and industry.
Define culture in specific behaviors. Use it to decide who joins. Give people real ownership. Let mission filter decisions. Change how you lead as the company grows. That order holds.
07
The companies that fully committed outperformed on every dimension.
The roughly 25 companies that applied all these patterns built organizations that held together under pressure, retained people who mattered, and scaled without losing what made them good in the first place.
Analysis by Paul Musters · emaho · April 2026 · paul@emaho.world