Wednesday Apr 01, 2026

The Real Reason Startups Fail: It’s Not Funding with Craig Ingram

Ever wonder why some brilliantly funded startups still crash and burn while others quietly scale into eight and nine figures? In this episode, commercialization and go-to-market specialist Craig T. Ingram breaks down the brutal data on business failure—and the rare strategies that actually flip the odds. We dive into his powerful four-part framework of awareness, attention, adoption, and retention, and how it separates the 55% that shutter from the few that survive and thrive. Along the way, Craig exposes why MBAs, big-brand experience, and corporate titles often matter less than real-world execution and extreme ownership. If you’re serious about turning influence into income and wisdom into long-term profitability, this conversation will challenge how you see leadership, strategy, and success in business.

 

Summary:

Craig Ingram, a US-based commercialization and go-to-market leader, discussed the challenges and strategies for startup success. He highlighted that 55% of US businesses with 500 employees or less fail within five years, and 72-77% fail between their eighth and tenth anniversaries. Craig's advisory firm focuses on a four-part framework: awareness, attraction, adoption, and retention. He emphasized the importance of effective commercial strategies and leadership, advocating for extreme ownership and accountability. Craig also shared his experience with venture capital and the potential of Malta's business-friendly policies, offering a 1.5 million euro grant to companies that stay for 12 months.

 

Takeaways

 

  • Commercial failure is rarely about funding alone; it’s usually about weak awareness, attraction, adoption, and retention.
  • Academic credentials and big-company titles often mask a lack of real, zero-to-one business-building experience.
  • Effective leadership means taking 100% responsibility for outcomes while equipping others to own and fix their part of the work.
  • Strategy options are limited, but small tactical execution choices—like which door you knock on and how—change everything.
  • Long-term business survival and meaningful exits demand wisdom and execution, not just intelligence, theory, or corporate politics.

 

Quotes:

  • Without high levels of customer adoption, companies go under period.
  • We are not anemic in intelligence in the world, but we are anemic in wisdom, because wisdom is the proper use of intelligence.
  • Leadership is being able to get your team, however big it is, to buy into the vision, the mission and the execution.
  • Leaders are not just people in leadership positions; leaders lead from the front, they don’t tell you what to do, they say, Let’s go do it.
  • The vast majority of people in business are not successful, because success has to be defined as revenue converting into profitability.

 

Timestamp:

[00:00:00] Tech Glitches, Warm-Up, and Guest Introduction

[00:04:25] Why Most Businesses Fail and Craig’s “Why”

[00:06:50] Surviving Beyond Five and Ten Years in Business

[00:08:46] The Four-Part Commercial Framework: Awareness to Retention

[00:12:10] Startups, MBAs, and the Illusion of Business Expertise

[00:17:01] Strategy vs. Tactics and Selling into Healthcare

[00:20:49] Real Influence, Proof of Results, and Questionable “Experts”

[00:32:22] Craig’s Origin Story: Family Businesses, Cancer & Early Medtech Sales

[00:37:39] Corporate Politics vs. Performance at Johnson & Johnson

[00:40:31] Extreme Ownership, Leadership, and Shared Accountability

 

Conclusion:

Business today is brutally simple: if you don’t create real adoption and real profit, you disappear. Craig’s story shows that wisdom, not just intelligence or an MBA, is what actually bridges the gap between a struggling venture and a scalable company. The leaders who win are the ones who own everything in their world, care deeply for their people, and execute with uncommon tactics on a clear strategy. In a market where 55% of companies shut their doors within five years, mediocrity in commercialization and leadership is no longer an option. If you want to beat the statistics, you need influence that nudges people to act, leadership that owns the outcome, and a relentless focus on turning awareness into long-term, profitable clients.

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