Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I strongly disagree that execution matters more than luck. I ask myself would I rather be good or lucky, and I will always choose luck. Because no matter how good you are, if luck isn't on your side you're going to lose. You might be the better programmer, but you still didn't get the job. You might have the better proposal, but you still lost the bid. You might be the better candidate, but you still lost the election. You might have a better product, but your company still failed. You might eat right and exercise, but you still got cancer.

I see this regularly play out when founders who found success on their first startups attempt to repeat it, only to fail miserably. Granted, there are a handful who manage to duplicate their success, but I know that some of these are simply due to who you know from their first success (you could argue that's better execution, but the number of unicorns I know that wouldn't exist if it weren't for a lucky break from an investor previously befriended makes me think otherwise). I do not mean to belittle the hard work and brilliance of many successful founders, only to emphasize that luck was absolutely critical in nearly every success story.

Obviously it's better to have both, but pretending that you can outmaneuver the universe is an act of hubris. I think people pontificating that execution matters more than luck are too arrogant to realize how lucky they are, or want to believe it matters more because it's reassuring to believe that we are in control of our destinies.

There are things you can do to increase your exposure to luck, but it's ultimately something beyond your control. The world isn't meritocratic.




To get lucky is something different from being a person who "has luck". The latter doesn't exist. Unless you believe in supernatural things.

Everyone has the same chance to get lucky. You can position yourself to optimize your chances. The question remains if you have the necessary abilities to take advantage of it.


Luck is random. Nobody has luck, but the guy who won the lottery got lucky.


"I am a strong believer in lucks, as I know the harder you work, the more luck you will get".


I don’t remember if it was chess or tennis or something else: “The good player is always lucky.”




Consider applying for YC's Fall 2025 batch! Applications are open till Aug 4

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: