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The most dangerous threats to a business aren’t the ones you see coming—they’re the ones quietly forming in the blind corners of your own decisions. From founder blindspots that distort judgment to subtle cultural shifts that weaken your team, the real killers of young companies are rarely dramatic—they’re silent, cumulative, and entirely avoidable if you know where to look.
This book is a field guide to uncovering what most leaders miss. It exposes the hidden risks behind startup mistakes like hiring too quickly, feature creep product strategy that bloats your offering, misreading customer validation signals, or trusting revenue while ignoring startup cash flow management realities. Drawing on research, postmortems, and real-world cases, it reveals the patterns that sink companies early—and the practical tools that keep them afloat.
For founders, operators, and anyone building from zero to scale, this isn’t theory. Each chapter translates complex psychology and business dynamics into actionable habits, from identifying hiring mistakes in startups before they erode culture, to spotting the warning signs of overbuilding, to creating a feedback system that tells you the truth before the market does.
By the end, you’ll have a sharper lens for decision-making, a framework to audit your own blindspots, and the ability to anticipate the problems others only recognize in hindsight. Whether you’re navigating your first launch or steering a fast-growing team, this is your advantage in a world where early missteps can cost everything.
If you want to avoid startup failure and build not just a product but a company that lasts, this is the book that will help you see what others miss—and act before it’s too late.

The Things You Don’t See

SKU: 9789371770026
$28.99 Regular Price
$22.10Sale Price
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  • Jordan Hale writes at the intersection of entrepreneurship, decision design, and organizational behavior. After years inside early-stage teams and advising founders across product, operations, and finance, Jordan became obsessed with a recurring pattern: smart companies fail quietly from the inside out. Hale’s work focuses on making unseen risks legible—translating cognitive bias, messy feedback loops, and cultural dynamics into practical tools leaders can use on Monday morning. A steady skeptic of hype and hero narratives, Jordan champions disciplined experimentation, cash clarity, and candid debate as the backbone of durable companies. When not researching failure patterns and postmortems, Jordan works with small founder groups to pressure-test strategies before they become expensive mistakes.

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