Grow Without Breaking
Pivot or persevere — on a calendar
Six months in and the needle has barely moved. Push harder or change course? Right now you decide by mood — hopeful on Monday, defeated by Friday. That isn't a decision, it's weather.
Deciding whether to change direction by feeling is how businesses die slowly. On a brave day you double down on a dead idea; on a scared day you abandon one that was about to work. And 'I've spent too much to quit now' quietly keeps you paying for yesterday's mistake.
Pivot-or-persevere is a scheduled decision, not a mood. Innovation accounting makes it honest: write down the ugly baseline number, run experiments to tune it, and on a date you fixed in advance, check whether it moved enough. Moved enough → persevere. Didn't → pivot. No debate on the day.
- Baseline: write down today's real, ugly number — conversion, reorder rate, retention.
- Tune: run focused experiments aimed at moving that one number toward what your plan needs.
- Set the date: fix a review date and the threshold in advance, in writing.
- Decide: on that date, moved enough → persevere; didn't → pivot. No arguing with yourself.
- Count runway in experiments you can still afford, not in months on the calendar.
Stewart Butterfield's company set out to build an online game called Glitch. The game never found enough players — but the internal chat tool the team had built just to talk to each other was something they couldn't work without.
→ They shut the game down and pivoted to that chat tool. Slack grew explosively, and Salesforce later bought it for about $27.7 billion.
The honest part: the original product — the game — genuinely failed and was closed. A pivot is a controlled change of direction onto a proven strength, not a magic reset; Butterfield had the cash and the discipline to make the call deliberately, not in a panic.
Two opposite failures. Pivot too often and you thrash — never giving any idea long enough to prove itself. Pivot too late and you become a zombie, burning cash on a flat idea because quitting feels like admitting defeat. The scheduled checkpoint protects you from both.
Write today's true number — say 22% of trials convert to paying. Give yourself two tuning cycles of one month each; if honest experiments can't move it toward the ~40% your plan needs by the set date, you pivot then — no debate. With 60,000 in the bank and 10,000 monthly burn, that isn't '6 months of runway', it's 3 real experiments. Spend them; don't drift them.
Put one line in your calendar 30 days out: 'Review [the one number]. If it's below [X], pivot.' Write today's baseline beside it. When the date arrives, obey your past self — that's the whole discipline.
Pivot or persevere is a decision you schedule with a baseline, a date, and a threshold — never a mood you obey. And your true runway is the number of experiments you can still afford, so shrinking the loop buys you more attempts than cutting costs.
Grow Without Breaking