
Informed i’s Weekly Business Insights
Extractive summaries and key takeaways from the articles carefully curated from TOP TEN BUSINESS MAGAZINES to promote informed business decision-making | Since 2017 | Week 391 | March 7-13, 2025 | Archive

Best-in-Class Business Advice From Famed Female Founders
By Diana Ransom | Inc | March 11, 2025
Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen
2 key takeaways from the article
- To put together a best-in-class list of America’s top 500 female founders, Inc. rounded up a crew of the greats. These women know what it takes to perform at the highest levels of business.This year’s Female
- Founders advisory board members share their best advice for starting and growing a company now. Pace Yourself – this is a marathon, not a sprint. It’s important you define your own goals and metrics for success, as a founder and a business. Run your own race and stay in your lane. Take Care – become an expert in both supporting and investing in yourself, so you can consistently operate at the level of excellence required to do great things. Embrace Failure – True success comes not from avoiding failure, but from turning your setbacks into stepping stones. Listen to Your Customers – Your customer base should always serve as your north star, guiding your decision-making. Understand the Economics – your passion for an idea must have the potential to scale and generate returns. Build your community and trust your team.
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Topics: Entrepreneurship, Startup, Female Founders, Success, Failure, Resilience
Click to read the extractive summary of the articleTo put together a best-in-class list of America’s top 500 female founders, Inc. rounded up a crew of the greats. These women know what it takes to perform at the highest levels of business.This year’s Female Founders advisory board members share their best advice for starting and growing a company now.
- Pace Yourself. This is a marathon, not a sprint. It’s important you define your own goals and metrics for success, as a founder and a business. Run your own race and stay in your lane.
- Take Care. Become an expert in both supporting and investing in yourself, so you can consistently operate at the level of excellence required to do great things.
- Embrace Failure. True success comes not from avoiding failure, but from turning your setbacks into stepping stones. Don’t let fear or doubt stop you. Your determination and resilience can transform challenges into generational wealth and lasting impact.
- Listen to Your Customers. Your customer base should always serve as your north star, guiding your decision-making. Flexibility doesn’t mean abandoning your vision; it means evolving it to create a product or service that truly resonates.
- Understand the Economics. It’s easy to get caught up in the passion of an idea, but for it to be a great investment—of your time and others’ money—it must have the potential to scale and generate returns. That means building not only a business with a strong economic foundation, but also one that solves a pain point your customers face daily or weekly—something they truly can’t live without.
- Build Your Community. Entrepreneurship is not a solo journey. There is no challenge you will encounter that someone else has not faced before. Instead of asking yourself, ‘What am I going to do about this? How can I solve this?’ ask, ‘Who can help me solve this?’ Lean on your community—this support system will accelerate solutions and, ultimately, your business growth.
- Trust Your Team. Real leaders give permission to their teams to own their responsibility and have the opportunity to explore and take some risks.