Member-only story

Is Success Distracting You From Red Flags Ahead?

Never think you’ve outgrown reality checks

Philip S. Naudus
The Startup
5 min readNov 12, 2024

--

Growth feels amazing right up until when it doesn’t (upklyak/brgfx/freepik/author)

In 2009, Sunil Nagaraj launched Wings, a dating app that promised to rewrite the rules of digital romance. By analyzing data from Facebook, Twitter, and even Netflix, it could identify compatible matches with unprecedented accuracy.

Wings went viral. Nagaraj and his team were on the verge of something revolutionary. Or so it seemed.

But as matches rolled in, users still preferred physical attractiveness over common interests. Blinded by their initial success, Nagaraj resisted conforming to the dating landscape’s established norms. Convinced they could reshape user behavior, the team leaned harder into data-heavy matchmaking, even refusing to show photographs until compatibility had been rigorously verified. But as it turned out, the very factors that made other dating apps frustratingly basic were exactly what made them popular.

Three years after launching, Wings filed for bankruptcy. Once confident that he could “fix” the dating industry, Nagaraj had instead learned a costly lesson: Some conventions exist for a reason.

Failure is always an option

Over the past thirty years that Tom Eisenmann has taught starry-eyed founders at Harvard Business…

--

--

The Startup
The Startup

Published in The Startup

Get smarter at building your thing. Follow to join The Startup’s +8 million monthly readers & +772K followers.

Philip S. Naudus
Philip S. Naudus

Written by Philip S. Naudus

High school teacher by day, koala by night. My wife is a cartoonist with a Ph.D., and she co-authors all of these articles.

Responses (20)