Question
How do I practice fail fast fail cheap?
Quick Answer
Identify one project or commitment you are currently in the middle of — something you have been working on for at least two weeks without external validation. Write down the three riskiest assumptions embedded in that project: the things that, if wrong, would invalidate the most work. For each.
The most direct way to practice fail fast fail cheap is through a focused exercise: Identify one project or commitment you are currently in the middle of — something you have been working on for at least two weeks without external validation. Write down the three riskiest assumptions embedded in that project: the things that, if wrong, would invalidate the most work. For each assumption, design a test you can run in under 48 hours that would surface whether the assumption holds. Run the cheapest test today. You are not looking for confirmation. You are looking for the earliest possible moment of disconfirmation — the point where reality can correct you before you invest further.
Common pitfall: Confusing 'fail fast' with 'be reckless.' The principle is not about moving quickly without thinking. It is about deliberately designing your sequence of actions so that the most consequential assumptions get tested first, when correction is cheapest. People who misunderstand this principle skip planning entirely and call the resulting chaos 'iteration.' Real fail-fast design requires more upfront thinking, not less — you must identify which assumptions carry the most risk and engineer tests for them before you invest in execution. Speed without structure is not failing fast. It is just failing.
This practice connects to Phase 25 (Error Correction) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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