My ventures haven't worked out exactly as planned, and I'm wondering how you have made out.<p>For this poll, define 'success' as generating significant income; whatever that means to you.
I'm still a broke hacker living in flyover country, USA but I've always had wild success in everything I've done in some way or another. Usually, it's in lessons learned, contacts made and people helped. Kind of disappointed at the narrow scope of "success" for this poll. Should have been labeled "How many times did you fail before getting rich?"
Well,
I failed for more than 4 yrs.. and only since the last year, I started to see a results of what I was doing..<p>Of course I am responsible on this failure, but when you live in a poor country like Egypt, lack opportunity and education, and everyone is trying to stop you and call you a loser and never believe you.. then it makes me feel better that I am not fully responsible on this failure..<p>But when you make success, you just become so proud of yourself, and you look at those people who stopped you before and tell them: I was right about what I was doing, and here are the results!
If not starting is a failure, then I failed a lot.<p>I have literally never had business go according to plan, which stands to reason, because for some unfathomable reason we plan before execution instead of after when we know the results. This has always struck me as wasteful.
I wonder what the mean age for "Have never honestly tried" is, and a follow-up question: "By what age do you plan on trying?"<p>I'm only 20, I haven't tried to go it alone because I would like to graduate from University first.
As others have said, it depends on how you define success. My first attempt at a business was/is selling a software application in a freemium model. I made $400 the first month, $1800 the next, and it's gone up and down since then. I don't make enough to quit my full-time job, but enough to pay down my mortgage and save up some capital for my next business that I'm working on getting off the ground.
depends.<p>if we are talking individual ideas, I went through 4 before I found something that was actually profitable(~$2-3K of affiliate marketing). 5, before I found that "million dollar idea"(it's not making 6 figures/mo yet...but it'll get there)<p>if we are talking individual projects that number is closer to 50-60(since I made like 40 2-3 page made for adsense/affiliate marketing sites and 10 Q&A sites)
It's funny, I crossed the profitability line a while back after several failed attempts, but I don't really feel much different. When I finally did make a "successful" company, it was a little like when you've been practicing a song on an instrument for a while and you look at one bit that has always felt a bit not right, and you tweak it a bit and you realize that you just corrected a mistake that you had been unknowingly repeating. Or when you're speaking a foreign language and your ears can suddenly hear a place where you've always been speaking with a slight accent but which you didn't know about before.<p>My point is, from the beginning, I've made many such realizations and corrections and at some point I guess I just made enough to be able to create a profitable company.<p>The flip-side is, I feel like I'm still playing my instrument badly, just slightly less badly than before. Every day I wake up anxious about sales and think about my latest expansion plans - just trying to add stones to the wall that stands between me and starvation, which is what I've been doing all along.<p>I'd be interested to hear if others have had a similar experience as I.
If youre looking at statistics you probably have no idea of what you're doing.<p>Information is alienated experience.<p>Try something diferent. Also: if you're doing the same that 95% of the people: you're doing it wrong.
"The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." --George Bernard Shaw
I think success is what you define it. At the moment - my own definition for my start up is enough earnings for me not to rely on getting another job on the side.
2-3 major failures.<p>Failed many times, starting from trying to start a cereal company for religious children at age 15.<p>I am successful now by my own standards which would not have happened without the failure experiences.