Good speed and bad speed are fundamentally different
Good speed is strategic velocity. You take fast signals seriously, pivot away from stagnant ideas, and compress learning cycles so execution compounds before the world catches up. The signal comes first; the speed follows.
Bad speed is impatience wearing ambition's clothes. It optimizes for novelty over depth and doesn't let you sit long enough inside the unglamorous stretch where the real edge forms. The frontier rarely yields itself in the first six months.
The harder skill is discernment: knowing when a pivot reflects genuine new information versus when it's fueled by fear, impatience, or the seduction of momentum itself.
Source claim: Good speed acts on real signals to compound learning; bad speed optimizes for novelty over depth and exits before the frontier yields.