Y11W38VC Who actually succeeds at starting a company

If you had to guess, how old would you say the average successful startup founder is when they launch their company? Popular culture suggests mid-twenties — Zuckerberg, Jobs, the college dropout in a garage. The actual average is substantially older. This week's article examines what the data shows about who actually builds successful companies, and why the mythology has run so far ahead of the reality.

Core Vocabulary

aggregate

/ˈæɡrɪɡɪt/|ag·gre·gate

adjective

Formed by combining many individual elements into a whole; collective and summed rather than individual.

Word Breakdown: Latin: aggregare = to collect into a flock; ad- (to) + grex (flock)

Word family: aggregate (vb/n), aggregation (n)

Synonyms: collective, combined, total, summed

Collocations: aggregate data, aggregate outcome, aggregate picture, aggregate success rate

Example: Looking at aggregate startup data — all ventures, not just the visible successes — reveals a very different picture from the one told in founder mythology.

sector

/ˈsektə/|sec·tor

noun

A distinct segment or division of the economy, society, or a field of activity.

Word Breakdown: Latin: sector = a cutter; secare = to cut; a section cut from the whole

Word family: sectoral (adj)

Synonyms: industry, segment, division, area

Collocations: technology sector, private sector, sector growth, different sectors

Example: The rate of startup success varies enormously by sector — some industries see far higher rates of survival and growth than others.

exceptional

/ɪkˈsepʃənl/|ex·cep·tion·al

adjective

Unusual; departing significantly from what is ordinary or expected; not the rule.

Word Breakdown: Latin: exceptionalis = exceptional; exceptio = exception; ex- (out) + capere (to take)

Word family: exceptionally (adv), exception (n)

Synonyms: unusual, extraordinary, atypical, remarkable

Collocations: exceptional case, exceptional outcome, exceptional founder, exceptional success

Example: The founders who succeeded by dropping out of elite universities were exceptional — the visible examples of a pattern that does not hold for the vast majority of people who follow that path.

mythology

/mɪˈθɒlədʒi/|my·thol·o·gy

noun

A collection of stories, beliefs, or assumptions about a topic that are widely accepted but may not reflect reality.

Word Breakdown: Greek: mythos = story + logos = study; mythology = the study of myths, extended to any widely-held set of stories

Word family: mythological (adj), myth (n)

Synonyms: narrative, received wisdom, popular story, legend

Collocations: founder mythology, startup mythology, the mythology of success, mythology around

Example: Founder mythology — the compelling story of the college dropout who builds a billion-dollar company — shapes how people think about entrepreneurship despite being statistically unrepresentative.

In the articleWhat the story actually is The mythology of the brilliant young founder isn't wrong because young founders don't exist.

narrative

/ˈnærətɪv/|nar·ra·tive

noun

An account or story; a particular way of framing and presenting events that shapes how they are understood.

Word Breakdown: Latin: narrativus = relating to telling; narrare = to tell

Word family: narrator (n), narrate (vb), narratively (adv)

Synonyms: story, account, framing, version of events

Collocations: dominant narrative, popular narrative, narrative of success, change the narrative

Example: The dominant narrative of startup success — the young dropout who disrupts an industry — is a narrative constructed from the most visible cases, not the full data.

threshold

/ˈθreʃhəʊld/|thresh·old

noun

The point at which something changes or is entered; a minimum level required for something to occur.

Word Breakdown: Old English: therscold = the point you step across; originally the plank at a doorway

Synonyms: minimum level, entry point, boundary, tipping point

Collocations: threshold for success, cross a threshold, above the threshold, threshold of viability

Example: High-growth startup success requires crossing multiple thresholds — of funding, market fit, and network — that depend on more than individual ability and effort.

sample

/ˈsɑːmpl/|sam·ple

noun

A subset of a larger group used to draw conclusions about the whole; the group actually studied in a piece of research.

Word Breakdown: Old French: essample = example; from Latin: exemplum = example; a portion taken to represent the whole

Word family: sampling (n/gerund), sampled (adj)

Synonyms: subset, study group, test group, representative selection

Collocations: biased sample, small sample, sample of founders, representative sample

Example: The sample of founders we hear about — the ones who succeeded — is not representative of all founders; the failures are systematically invisible.

In the articleIt's wrong because it's been generalised from a tiny, vivid, unrepresentative sample.

disproportionately

/ˌdɪsprəˈpɔːʃnətli/|dis·pro·por·tion·ate·ly

adverb

Out of proper proportion; to a degree that is larger or smaller than would be expected relative to the whole.

Word Breakdown: dis- (not) + proportionately (from proportion; Latin: proportio = comparative relation)

Word family: disproportionate (adj), disproportion (n)

Synonyms: out of proportion, unevenly, asymmetrically, unduly

Collocations: disproportionately represented, disproportionately affected, disproportionately large, disproportionately visible

Example: Founders with elite educational backgrounds and prior network advantages are disproportionately represented among high-growth startup successes.

Technical Terms

high-growth founders

/haɪ ɡrəʊθ ˈfaʊndəz/|high-growth found·ers

noun phrase

entrepreneurs whose companies achieve substantial scale

Synonyms: hypergrowth entrepreneurs, exceptional growth outliers, unicorn founders

Collocations: study of high-growth founders, characteristics of high-growth founders, high-growth founders and survivorship bias

Example: Research on high-growth founders is dominated by survivorship bias — the founders who achieved exceptional growth are the ones whose stories are recorded, while the far larger population who pursued identical strategies and failed are absent from the dataset.

In the articleNot the founders who made the magazines.

survivorship bias

/səˈvaɪvəʃɪp ˈbaɪəs/|sur·vi·vor·ship bi·as

noun phrase

seeing only the successes while failures remain invisible

Synonyms: survivor fallacy, selection illusion, success visibility bias

Collocations: affected by survivorship bias, survivorship bias distorts, classic survivorship bias

Example: Survivorship bias ensures that the entrepreneurship curriculum draws its lessons from the companies that lasted — which is precisely the sample selection that produces misleading conclusions about what predicts business success.

In the articleBut there's a deeper reason the image sticks, and it's called survivorship bias.

base rate

/beɪs reɪt/|base rate

noun phrase

the underlying frequency of success across all attempts

Synonyms: prior probability, background frequency, baseline rate

Collocations: ignore the base rate, base rate neglect, apply the base rate

Example: The base rate for startup success is far lower than the entrepreneurship curriculum implies — a discrepancy produced by survivorship bias ensuring that the failures are absent from the cases studied.

In the articleThe claim is just that the base rate — the average across the whole population of founders — strongly favours age.

longitudinal study

/ˌlɒndʒɪˈtjuːdɪn(ə)l ˈstʌdi/|lon·gi·tu·di·nal stu·dy

noun phrase

research following participants over extended time

Synonyms: long-term follow-up study, cohort study, prospective study

Collocations: conduct a longitudinal study, longitudinal study tracks, findings from a longitudinal study

Example: A longitudinal study follows the same individuals over time — producing the kind of causal inference that cross-sectional snapshots cannot achieve, because only by observing change across time can researchers separate what precedes success from what merely coincides with it.

In the articleIn 2018, a team of economists at MIT and the US Census Bureau — Pierre Azoulay, Ben Jones, Daniel Kim and Javier Miranda — published a study that used real IRS data on every new company founded in the United States over a 10-year period.

cohort effect

/ˈkəʊhɔːt ɪˈfɛkt/|co·hort ef·fect

noun phrase

the influence of being born or entering a field at a particular time

Synonyms: generational effect, birth cohort influence, historical period effect

Collocations: cohort effect confounds, identify the cohort effect, cohort effect in entrepreneurship research

Example: A cohort effect is the influence of the specific historical moment in which a group came of age — founders who started companies during the rise of the internet were shaped by conditions that subsequent cohorts could not replicate, however closely they copied the strategy.

In the articleAnd the successful young founders are so memorable that it's easy to forget they're the survivors of a much larger cohort, most of whom failed quietly and are now working sensible jobs and no longer being interviewed about their twenties.

Figurative Phrases

rags to riches

Describing a rise from poverty or very humble beginnings to significant wealth or success; the narrative of dramatic upward social mobility achieved through individual effort or opportunity.

Etymology/Type: idiom; rarely the actual path

Synonyms: rising from poverty to great wealth, achieving success from extremely humble beginnings, going from nothing to significant prosperity

Example: The rags-to-riches narrative is compelling precisely because survivorship bias makes it the only story we hear — the equal number of rags-to-rags outcomes, same starting point and same effort, are absent from the accounts that shape the entrepreneurship curriculum.

strike gold

To achieve sudden and substantial success or good fortune; to make a discovery or breakthrough that produces exceptional results well beyond what ordinary effort would have been expected to yield.

Etymology/Type: idiom from mining

Synonyms: find great success or wealth unexpectedly, make a breakthrough discovery, encounter exceptional good fortune

Example: Founders who strike gold with their first venture are subsequently treated as experts on how to start companies — a status that survivorship bias confers regardless of whether their success owed more to timing and luck than to transferable strategic insight.

catch lightning in a bottle

To achieve something remarkable and essentially unrepeatable that depended on an extraordinary and unlikely combination of circumstances, timing, and fortune that cannot be deliberately reproduced.

Etymology/Type: idiom; physically impossible

Synonyms: achieve something remarkable and unrepeatable through unusual fortune, capture a rare and fleeting opportunity, succeed through an unreproducible combination of factors

Example: The startup success that appears to have caught lightning in a bottle typically cannot be reproduced by the same founders — which is why base rate thinking, rather than case studies of exceptional outcomes, is the more reliable guide to evaluating new ventures.

dropped out to start

To leave formal education before completing a degree in order to launch a business; an act associated in popular mythology with exceptional entrepreneurial success, though rarely examined for its base rate of failure.

Etymology/Type: idiom; 'dropped' figurative

Synonyms: left formal education to found a company, departed from a conventional academic path to launch a business, chose entrepreneurship over completing a degree

Example: The myth that dropping out to start a company is a viable path for talented people is a product of survivorship bias — the famous examples are visible precisely because they succeeded, while the far larger population who made the same choice and failed are structurally absent from the narrative.

In the articleFounders in their fifties were about twice as likely to launch a successful start-up as founders in their thirties.

overnight success

A person or venture that appears to have achieved prominence very rapidly, when in reality the success may have been many years in preparation but became visible only when the public moment arrived.

Etymology/Type: idiom; rarely literally overnight

Synonyms: a person or venture that appears to have achieved success very suddenly, something that becomes famous or profitable very rapidly, a rapid rise to prominence

Example: The overnight success is almost always preceded by years of invisible work — the longitudinal study of entrepreneurial trajectories revealing that the apparent suddenness of breakthrough is an artefact of when observers began paying attention.

hit the big time

To achieve significant fame, wealth, or professional success; to break through from obscurity to a scale of recognition or impact that places one among the notable cases in a field.

Etymology/Type: idiom; 'big time' figurative

Synonyms: achieve significant fame or financial success, reach a level of major professional achievement, break through to a large audience or market

Example: For every founder who hits the big time, the cohort effect reminds us that the timing of market entry — as much as the quality of the venture — determines which companies become the cases that business schools study and which become the data points that do not appear in the curriculum.

Confusing Words

aggregate vs average

Both words describe ways of summarising multiple data points, but they describe different summary operations that have different implications for interpretation.

  • aggregatethe total formed by combining multiple elements; a sum or collected whole. Aggregate data pools all observations into a single figure without dividing by the number of cases. The aggregate outcome of a set of ventures is the total value produced across all of them.
  • averagethe result of dividing a sum by the number of cases; the mean of a distribution. The average outcome of a set of ventures divides the total by the number of ventures to produce a per-venture figure. The distinction matters enormously when distributions are skewed, because the average can be dominated by a few extreme cases.

If referring to the total sum of all values combined, use aggregate. If referring to the sum divided by the number of cases — the mean per unit — use average.

exceptional vs exceptionally

These words share a root but serve different grammatical functions — one modifies nouns, the other modifies verbs and adjectives.

  • exceptionalunusually good, outstanding, or departing significantly from the norm. An exceptional founder is one who has achieved results well beyond what most achieve. Exceptional is an adjective that modifies nouns and noun phrases.
  • exceptionallyto an unusual degree; used to intensify an adjective or verb. An exceptionally talented founder is one who is talented to an unusual degree. Exceptionally is an adverb and cannot modify nouns.

If modifying a noun or describing a person or thing as outstanding, use exceptional. If intensifying an adjective or adverb to indicate an unusual degree, use exceptionally.

sample vs population

These statistical terms describe different scopes of observation — one a subset selected for study, the other the complete group about which conclusions are drawn.

  • samplea subset of a larger group selected for observation or analysis. The sample in an entrepreneurship study is the specific set of companies examined. The validity of conclusions depends on how representative the sample is of the group it is meant to represent.
  • populationthe complete set of individuals, cases, or observations about which a claim is being made. The population of interest in survivorship bias discussions is all ventures launched, not just those that survived. Conclusions from a biased sample may not generalise to the full population.

If referring to the subset of cases actually observed and studied, use sample. If referring to the complete group about which generalisations are being made, use population.