State of Colorado COVID-19 Innovation Response Team, Part V â Wrapping Up, Days 10-12
(This is the fifth post in a series documenting the work I did in Colorado on the Governorâs COVID-19 Innovation Response Team – IRT. Other posts in order are 1, 2, 3, and 4.)
Thursday, March 26, Day 10
- Sarah continuing to take over and stronger by the day
- Sarah cleared me to go home, only one more person to ask
- Deep deep dive on Mass Testing – so good to spend that time
- Pretty much got the strategy right – shocking we could get that close with so little public health experience – Kyle awesome – EOC leadership briefing
- That was most of the day
- Some downloads to Sarah and Kacey
- Feeling that two of our project teams are going sideways – that will be a big focus for me tomorrow before I leave
- Quick assignments for tomorrow
- Talked to Jared – heâs good with me going now that Sarah is in place and things are running. Awesome!
Friday, March 27, Day 11
- Download with a couple of the project teams to help get them back on trackÂ
- This whole thing is one big exercise in Agile!
- Serendipitously might have found private sector partner for one of the teams in need. Reminded of Georgeâs great line, âwhen the student is ready, the teacher appearsâ
- Gov briefing on mass testing plan
- Spent a lot of the day on strategy/overview/retrospective deck. Have to review it with Brad and core team members. Gov wants to get it in front of the National Governors Association to share learnings/best practices for the states behind us in this fight
- Gov thankful goodbye
- Brad thank you Haiku – so awesome – âYou see things others donât seeâ
- FInal team check-in, lots of nice thank yous from people on team
- Close out drinks with Sarah, Kacey, Kyle – persevered despite lack of corkscrew. Poor Kyleâs shirt looks like he was standing next to a shooting victim
- Incredibly thankful moment with team – really like and care about these people – weâve done such great work together – 11 days but feels like months and months
- Close out email to Governor and Chief of Staff about team
Saturday, March 28, Day 12
- Check out! Fly home! Happy to see Mariquita, Casey, Wilson, and Elyse!
Stay tuned for two more wrap-up posts, tomorrow and the next day…
State of Colorado COVID-19 Innovation Response Team, Part VI â How This Compared to Running a Company
(This is the sixth post in a series documenting the work I did in Colorado on the Governorâs COVID-19 Innovation Response Team – IRT. Other posts in order are 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5.)
As these posts have been running, a few people have asked me to quickly compare this experience to the experience of being a Startup CEO. And thatâs an interesting way to think about it. In a lot of ways, the couple of weeks of getting the IRT up and running felt like starting up a new business, only a lot more intense. Following the outline of sections in Startup CEO: a field guide to scaling up your business…
Part One: Storytelling. The whole timeframe was super compressed. It took us 2 days to be able to spend 4 hours writing our initial pitch deck defining scope, structure, and staffing request – and that was while we were working hard on our first two workstreams. In a startup environment, that process would have taken much longer, involved more customer discovery and product/market fit research and spending 100% of our time on that. But then we got our âapproval and fundingâ in about 45 minutes – that would have taken weeks and involved dozens of pitch meetings. In terms of creating the organizationâs Mission, Vision, and Values, we didnât even bother, although I think it helped that the three of us were generally on the same page with how to work and that urgency was the essence of our job. The larger emergency operations team that we were more or less embedded in also had a very clear set of values and operating principles on display…although we didnât actually go read them, I think they were in sync with our view of our teamâs mission and principles. In terms of âbringing our story to life,â that was wholly unnecessary!
Part Two: Building The Companyâs Human Capital. Like a startup, getting it right with the first handful of employees means everything. In this case, the first two deputies on the team, handpicked by the Governorâs staff, were awesome and critical. Bringing someone in from the private sector to run a public sector team only works when the rest of the team is incredibly knowledgeable about how the machinery of state government works. And in the end, I think Sarah will be a better leader for the team than I was because she had a combination of private and public sector experience (and within her public sector experience, she had a lot of emergency response experience). In general, the recruiting process was soooo different than private sector and public sector normally are. The first two team members handpicked the best people they knew in other relevant parts of the government. People were brought onto the team after one short phone call. Other state departments heads loaned their people willingly. No such thing as a comp negotiation or a reference check. There were a bunch of other things under the âHuman Capitalâ heading that are interesting notes/comparables as well. First, feedback in a compressed-timeframe emergency is something that you absolutely canât skip – and you canât wait for a formal process either. Our team was pretty good about giving feedback at least daily in a semi-structured way as well as in the moment. We didnât really have time to get into things like career pathing and compensation and firing. We did, after about 6 days at the suggestion of Kacey, our Chief of Staff, move the team to almost entirely remote (other than leadership and occasional critical meetings). This worked surprisingly well for a workforce probably unaccustomed to remote work. The rest of the world is also learning how to do a lot of that now, too.
Part Three: Execution. This whole experience was 97% execution. In fact, we had a hard time finding time for things like strategy and planning because there was a crushing amount of work to do (welcome to emergency response), and a small team to do it. We didnât have to worry about raising money, budgeting, forecasting, reporting, and some of the other major execution steps in the private sector. We did do a good job of creating goals and milestones for our workstreams, but even that took a couple of weeks, and in retrospect, I wish weâd been able to do some of those sooner. In terms of how our work got done, we were very conscious of creating daily meeting routines to structure our day and work – but there was no such thing as even a weekly meeting (let alone monthly strategics or quarterly offsites!), only daily meetings, multiple times per day. One thing that was interesting – I talk in the book about being deliberate and consistent with your platforms, especially around communication. Channel proliferation is a real issue today (much more so than when I wrote the book), but we had an interesting mismatch at the beginning. The public sector team was used to email, text, and Google hangouts for comms. Nothing else. The private sector team used those things but was a lot more comfortable with Trello, Zoom, and Slack. Thank goodness both teams used G-Suite and not a mix of that and LiveOffice. But getting everyone on the team to converge on a couple systems is a work in progress and was messy, as evidenced in this great moment where Kacey was holding a laptop up to an actual whiteboard to show one of our private sector teams how she was thinking about something.
Part Four: Building and Leading a Board of Directors. This is kind of N/A, although the proxy for it in our case on the IRT was the leadership structure of the Emergency Operations Center and then the Governor and the part of his cabinet that was keyed into the emergency response. In this regard, the main differences between the private sector and public sector were speed/formality (no room for formality when youâre meeting daily or at a momentâs notice!), and, interesting, the need for integration. A company reports to its board on how itâs doing. This team had to use its âboardâ to make sure it was integrating with other state agencies and initiatives. In this way, the team functioned more like a business unit within a company than an actual company.
Part Five: Managing Yourself So You can Manage Others. This was obviously critical…and obviously quite difficult. And within the overall Emergency Operations Center (outside of our team, the real emergency professionals), there were people, including leaders, who were working 7 days/week for multiple weeks on end, and long days, too. At one point, the EOC leader posted this note on the wall, and he frequently took time in daily briefings to encourage everyone to take a day or two off and take care of themselves physically. He role-modeled that behavior as well. You can only run a sprint for so long. Once it becomes clear itâs a marathon, well, you know.
Stay tuned for the final post in the series tomorrow…
Startup CEO, Second Edition
I havenât taken a poll to figure out the overlap between people who read this blog and people that bought the first edition of Startup CEO, but Iâm guessing thereâs a high degree of it. If you are familiar with the book, I donât want to bore you with a recap of what I wrote, but I thought I would devote the next several blogs to new ideas in the second edition. First, the new cover art from the publisher is kind of cool:

The first question you might have is, âWhy a second edition? Didnât you say everything you needed to say the first time?â The answer to that is, yes, I did say everything I had to say at the time, and the first edition is pretty comprehensive as a field guide. But that was about a dozen years into what turned out to be a 20-year journey, and after we sold Return Path in 2019, I had time to reflect on all that happened. I learned a lot of new lessons between the first and second editions, we had a lot of first-time experiences, we scaled the company significantly, and we sold it. None of those things are, in and of themselves, worthy of a second edition, but collectively they help tell the story of startup to exit and tell it from a perspective of creating a sustainable business over nearly two decades.
But there are other reasons, too, besides new lessons learned. Eight years is a lifetime in terms of changes to micro-trends, language, business in general, and the world around us. I wanted to update the book to make it contemporary so that it can speak to a new generation of CEOs. The second edition is more than a new cover and obvious updates on the number of employees or revenues. I added topics that reflect heightened responsibilities of CEOs around moral and ethical leadership in an increasingly transparent and socially conscious world. How do you navigate a politically charged and divisive society? For example, the State of Indiana passed a law intended to not force people to do things that contravened their religious beliefs but it had the side effect of legal descrimination against LGBT citizens. It was contentious, with rallying cries in business and society for one side or the other, and those same sentiments were found within our employee population.
How should CEOs handle a situation that conflicts with their core values? There are no easy answers, but avoiding them doesnât make the problem go away.
Whether itâs the #metoo movement, high-profile failures of leadership like airline employees dragging customers off of planes, or something as simple as unconscious bias in the workplace, the best CEOs now need to approach their jobs differently. I didnât write about that in the first edition, but the second edition has an entire chapter devoted to âAuthentic Leadershipâ and provides guidelines and advice to help CEOs. The book went to press early in the COVID-19 pandemic and prior to all the protests around racial injustice surrounding the George Floyd killing, so nothing in it specifically addresses any of those issues. In some ways, though, that may be better at the moment since the book is more about frameworks and principles than about specific responses to current events.
I also added a new section with several chapters on the ins and outs of selling a business. Startup exits are the important culmination of the startup experience and something that the first edition only briefly touched on. Obviously, I was still CEO of a growing company and although we had an opportunity or two to sell within those first years, we never pulled the trigger. The first edition talks about that process at a surface level, but the second edition has far more content and detail since we had completed a sale transaction.
The first edition of the book has sold close to 40,000 copies as of the writing of the second edition, which blew me away when I tallied it all up. Iâve received many notes of thanks from readers all over the world for the book, and Iâm glad that the content has proved useful to so many people, noting from some of the more critical reviews on Amazon that it certainly doesnât scratch everyoneâs itch. I hope the changes in the new edition add even more value to the lives of entrepreneurs and startup management teams. Thatâs really who the book is written for.
Here are some places to go to pre-order the book:
- Directly from the publisher, Wiley
- From Amazon
- From Books-a-Million
- From Indie Bound
- From BN.com
I have a limited number of free copies of the book that I can send out, and oddly, they are only print copies since the book publishing ecosystem hasnât figured out an efficient way for authors to distribute free Kindle copies of books yet. As a bonus incentive for reading all the way to the end of this post, I will be happy to send a free copy to the first 5 people who comment on this post on the blog and ask for one.
Startup CEO, Second Edition Teaser: The Importance of Authentic Leadership in Changing Times
As I mentioned the other day, the second edition of Startup CEO is out. This post is a teaser for the content in one of the new chapters in this edition on Authentic Leadership.
As I mentioned last week, the book went to press early in the COVID-19 pandemic and prior to all the protests around racial injustice surrounding the George Floyd killing, so nothing in it specifically addresses any of those issues. In some ways, though, that may be better at the moment since the book is more about frameworks and principles than about specific responses to current events. Two of those principles, which are timeless and transcend turmoil, uncertainty, time and place, are creating space to think and reflect and being intentional in your actions. In a world in which CEOs are increasingly called upon to deal with more than traditional business (pricing, strategy, go-to market approaches, team building, etc.) itâs imperative to approach and solve challenging situations from a foundation that doesnât waver.
At Return Path our values were the foundation that provided a lens through which we made every decision. Well, not every decision, only the good ones. When we strayed from our core values, that got us into trouble. The other principle, outlined in Chapter 1 of the Second Edition, is leading an organization authentically.
Let me provide a couple concrete examples of what I mean by âAuthentic Leadershipâ since the term can be interpreted many ways.
One example is to avoid what I call the âSay-Doâ gap. This is obviously a very different thread than talking about how the company relates to the outside world and current events. But in some ways, itâs even more important. A leader canât truly be trusted and followed by their team without being very cognizant of, and hopefully avoiding close to 100%, any gap between the things they say or policies they create, and the things they do. There is no faster way to generate muscle-pulling eyerolls on your team than to create a policy or a value and promptly not follow it.
Iâll give you an example that just drove me nuts early in my career here, though there are others in the book. I worked for a company that had an expense policy – one of those old school policies that included things like âyou can spend up to $10 on a taxi home if you work past 8 pm unless itâs summer when itâs still light out at 8 pmâ (or something like that). Anyway, the policy stipulated a max an employee could spend on a hotel for a business trip, but the CEO (who was an employee) didnât follow that policy 100% of the time. When called out on it, did the CEO apologize and say they would follow the policy just like everyone else? No, the CEO changed the policy in the employee handbook so that it read âblah blah blah, other than the CEO, President, or CFO, who may spend a higher dollar amount at his discretion.â
What does that say about the CEO? How engaged are employees likely to be, how much effort are they willing to devote to the company if there are special rules for the executives? You can make any rule you want — as you probably know if you have read a bunch of my posts or my book over the years, Iâm a proponent of rule-light environments — but you canât make rules for everyone else that you arenât willing to follow yourself unless you own the whole company and donât care what anyone thinks about you or says about you behind your back.
Beyond avoiding the Say-Do Gap, this new chapter of the book on Authentic Leadership also talks about how CEOs respond to current events in todayâs increasingly politicized and polarized world. This has always felt to me like a losing proposition for most CEOs, which I talk about quite a bit in the book. When the world is polarized, whatever you do as CEO, whatever position you take on things, is bound to upset, alienate, or infuriate some nontrivial percentage of your workforce. I even give some examples in the book of how I focused on using the companyâs best interests and the companyâs values as guideposts for reacting (or not reacting) to politically divisive or charged issues like guns or âreligious libertyâ laws. I say this noting that there are some people who *believe* that their side of an issue like this is right, and the other side is wrong, but the issues have some element of nuance to them.
Todayâs world feels a bit different, and Iâm not sure what I would be doing if I was leading a known, scaled enterprise at this stage in the game. The largely peaceful protests around all aspects of racial injustice in America in the wake of the murder of George Floyd — and the brutality and senselessness of that murder itself — have caused a tidal wave of dialog reaching all corners of the country and the world. The root of this issue doesnât feel to me like one that has a lot of nuance or a second side to the argument. After all, what reasonable person is out there arguing that George Floydâs death was called for, or even that black Americans donât have a deep-seeded and widespread reasonable claim to inequality…even if their view of what to do about it differs?
I *think* what I would be doing in a broader leadership role today is figuring out what my organization could be doing to help reduce or eliminate structural racial inequality where we could based on our business, as opposed to driving my organization to take a specific political stand. I know for sure that I wouldnât solicit feedback from a select group of people only, but I would create a space where voices from across the organization (and stakeholders outside of it as well) could be heard. Thatâs not a solution, but a start, and in challenging times making a little bit of headway can lead to a cascading effect. It can, if you keep the momentum.
And, in line with âauthentic leadership,â itâs okay to admit that you donât have the answers, that you might not even know the questions to ask. But doing nothing, or operating in a âbusiness as usualâ way wonât make your company stronger, wonât open up new opportunities, wonât generate new ideas, and wonât sit well with your employees, who are very much thinking about these issues.
So, in todayâs challenging times I would follow my own advice, be thoughtful and reflective, and intentional in searching for common solutions. Iâd try to avoid âmob mentalityâ pressure — but I would also be listening carefully to my stakeholders and to my own conscience.
In the coming weeks, I’ll write posts that get into some of the other topics I cover in the book, but none of them will be as good as reading the full thing!
Startup CEO Second Edition Teaser: Transition and Integration
As part of the new section on Exits in the Second Edition of the book (order here), thereâs a specific chapter around handling the post-sale transition and integration process.
No two transitions are exactly the same. If the buyer is a financial sponsor, you may have the same job the day after the deal closes that you had the day before, just with a new owner and new rules for you. Sometimes youâll stay on with a strategic buyer as the head of a division, or the head of your product. Sometimes you leave on Day 1. Sometimes you leave later.
But the most important thing you can do is remember that once the deal is over, itâs over. Â Thatâs why an honest answer to the question, âAre you ready to let go?â that I posed in an early post is so important. You may or may not be the CEO, but now you definitely have a new boss, and in many cases, a boss for the first time in years. And you are no longer in charge.
âEven though the deal was called a merger,â I once heard Ted Leonsis tell the Moviefone founders a while after AOL acquired Moviefone, âplease remember that you have been acquired.â Your job is to figure out how best to set your team and products up for success in the new environment, regardless of how long or short you plan to stay at the new company.
We tried to focus our transition at Return Path to Validity in a few ways:
- For employees, we spent most of our energy and our capital setting things up in the deal documents before closing, recognizing weâd have no control of things after the deal was signed. Things like how much severance people would get if they were let go, and for how long post-deal, how much their comp could change, whether they could be required to move – those are all things you can negotiate into a deal
- For ourselves as leaders and me as CEO, knowing most of us would leave almost immediately post-deal, I wanted to have as elegant an exit as possible after 20 years. Fortunately, I had a good partner in this dialog in Mark Briggs, the acquiring CEO. Mark and I worked out rules of engagement and expenses associated with âthe baton pass,â as we called it, that let our execs have the opportunity to say a proper goodbye and thank you to our teams, with a series of in-person events and a final RP gift pack. This was a really important way we all got closure on this chapter in our lives
- For the new owners of the business, our objective was to be of service to them, knowing theyâd want to run it differently. So, for example, every time our new owners from Validity asked me a question (âShould we do X or Y,â or âShould we keep person A or person B?â), my answer was never simple. It was always, âWhatâs your strategy with regard to Z?â and then my advice could be in context, as opposed to thinking about what I would do in the prior context.
There are more details on this in the new section on exits in Startup CEO: A Field Guide to Scaling Up Your Business.
The New Way to Scale an Executive Team
(This post also appeared on Bolster.com)
As we wrote in our Founding Manifesto, Bolster was started in part to create a new way for startup and scaleup CEOs to think about growing their leadership teams.
Why do CEOs need help with this?
CEOs of any company have too many things to do at all times. This is even more true at startups and scaleups, which by definition are more fast-paced, dynamic, CEO-driven, and thinly staffed. All those challenges point directly to the specific challenge CEOs have with their leadership team.
Think about the journey of a company from a founding team to 50 employees. My long time friend and former board member Greg Sands once compared the phenomenon
of companies growing out of the startup stage to cell development in small organisms. Amoeba or paramecia consist of one cell, and that cell has to do everything: eat, move, sense its surroundings, and respond accordingly. When the cell divides, the new cells still need to do everything â theyâre just attached to other cells. As organisms grow more complex, individual cells need to specialize. And when things get really complex, you need a liver, a spleen, a stomach, and a pancreas. By and large, startups work the same way. In the early stages, you have to hire generalists who are both willing and able to take on dozens of tasks at once. Your developers will have to speak with potential customers; your accountants will have to give advice on product direction; and the born salesperson on your team will need to put the phone down a few hours a day and set up a new employeeâs computer. Thatâs a really different team than when you need functional managers on top of engineering, sales, etc. — not to mention needing strategic leadership of those functions as the company grows from 50 to 100 to 250 to 500 employees.
Thatâs the journey that startup and scaleup CEOs are on. Itâs less of a journey and more of a roller coaster ride. Jason is running HR today…but tomorrow, the job of âhead of HRâ will be different, and Jason might or might not be capable of it. Then your VP Finance Sally gets lured away by an even hotter and sexier new startup and leaves a sudden, gaping hole on your team. Then cracks start to show up with the job Jamie is doing as your marketing director and you lose confidence that your upcoming product launch is going to be a success. Every time one of these events happens – whether itâs an actual event, or just an âaha momentâ for you as CEO, you add something to your plate. You add tasks to take over work yourself. You add the task of finding a new person. You add stress from having to deal with one more critical thing.
Leveling up a leadership team is probably the hardest part of the CEOâs job.
Why donât current solutions meet the CEOâs needs? Well, of course they do, sometimes. The problem is that the current solutions either arenât tailored to the needs of startup or scaleup CEOs, or theyâre ad hoc and inefficient. Executive search is slow and expensive, and it produces expensive full-time executives. And no matter how good an executive search firm is, Iâve never met a CEO who has a better than 50% success rate in hiring new leaders from the outside. Ever. Add all that up – expensive, slow, medium success rate, and perhaps most important for a startup CEO, leaving you with expensive full-time headcount in multiple areas of your company – that is not a recipe for startup success when youâre sweating your burn rate.
Frequently, the CEO just taps her network for execs or for on-demand executives like the ones Bolster places — that could be asking board members or friends or advisors for suggestions. Quite frankly, those suggestions stand a better chance of success than transactional executive search since the candidate referral source is usually somewhat of an insider. But those searches are really disorganized or one-off. When a CEO turns to their network for spot help, they often arenât running a comprehensive process, creating a serious job spec, seeing a broad set of candidates for comparisons, and the like.
Our job at Bolster is to make all of this easier and lighter weight. The rise of the gig economy means that startups no longer need to rely on the painful binary choice of âthe person/opening I have todayâ and âthe expensive full-time exec coming in from the outside.âThe new way to scale an executive team is with a mix of interim executive talent to quickly fill gaps, fractional executive talent to provide strategic oversight and guidance to a team, part-time, functional mentors/coaches/advisors to advise a less experienced functional leader, project-based consultants to fill in specific holes, and yes, the occasional full-time outside hire, possibly via a search firm (or if your fractional CXO loves your company and joins full-time!).
With Bolster, you have a network of all those types of talent, well curated and well profiled, available for near-instant matches and near-instant start dates – and a suite of tools and services designed to help you proactively identify your needs across all your functional areas so youâre never scrambling your way out of a tight spot.
What about the existing team? If youâre a leader inside a startup or scaleup, Bolster is ALSO created for you. The painful binary choice CEOs face that I wrote above is particularly painful for you if youâre no longer scaling quickly enough. Frequently, promising junior people are layered or shuttered aside because the CEO doesnât have the time, or the functional expertise required, to coach or mentor the person to success. Bolster creates an easy mechanism for CEOs to help pinpoint the areas in which you need growth and development as well as an easy way to find either temporary leadership or a function-specific advisor/mentor/coach to help you grow with the role and with the company.
The best startup CEOs I know are the ones who are already using multiple types of on-demand talent at the same time to help their companies along that journey from single-cell to complex organisms. I believe three years from today, the frequent usage of this kind of talent will move from the realm of early adopters to mainstream. The ones who embrace it first will have a competitive advantage.
Zoomsites
(Written by both my Bolster co-founder Cathy Hawley and me)
Iâve attended two remote conferences, which Cathy dubbed âZoomsitesâ — one here at Bolster and the Foundry Group CEO Summit. Both hold interesting lessons for how these kinds of events can work well.
We founded Bolster two months into the COVID-19 pandemic, and our founding team had not met in person after 6 months of working together. Now, luckily, weâve all worked together for many years, so we have a lot of trust built up, and have a very strong operating system which includes full team daily standups. Still, nothing beats face-to-face interaction. If youâve ever founded a startup, you know how impactful it can be to work side by side, bounce ideas off each other, and collaborate as you learn more about opportunities and challenges in your market.
We also have a strong belief in the power of the team, and the need to work together to ensure that we are aligned on all aspects of the business. And, we had a successful launch, with more interest in our marketplace than we had anticipated, so we knew we needed to step back to have a planning and strategy session.
Weâve done many executive offsites, and couldnât imagine having an impactful offsite remotely, and we all agreed that we would be comfortable meeting up in person. So we started planning a 2-day offsite together in New York. Unfortunately, it turned out visitors to NY from Colorado and Indiana, the two states we were traveling from, needed to quarantine for 10 days when they got to NY. While technically we could get around this because we werenât staying for 10 days, we decided to follow the spirit of the rules, and cancel our travel.
Since we really needed to have the planning and strategy session, and weâd blocked the two full days on our calendars, we decided to test out a âzoomsiteâ – an all-remote video call. We modified the agenda a little – some things good in person fall flat on video. We knew we wanted to have really engaging conversations, and keep the agenda moving along, so that all eight of us could fully participate and complete the necessary work. Iâm happy to say that we came out of the offsite with a revised strategic plan, new six-month goals set, and owners for each of the different workstreams. And, we had fun. Success!
The Foundry Group CEO Summit has been a different animal — it’s wrapping up today, but there’s been enough of it so far this week to comment on. Foundry took a regular annual event with a large group (50-75) and moved it online. They did a great job of adapting to the medium, spreading the event out with a few hours a day over multiple days to avoid Zoom fatigue and optimize attendance; scheduling content in shorter bursts than usual; making good use of breakout room technology; and encouraging heavy use of Zoomâs chat feature during sessions to make it as interactive as possible. Like the Bolster event, there were some elements missing — all the great âhallway conversationsâ you have at in-person conferences where people are staying in the same hotel and seeing each other at meals, in the gym, between sessions, etc. But it has also been a big success with enough community elements to make it worthwhile.Â
Want to have a Zoomsite? Here are some tips:
- Make sure you have the tools needed for each activity. When you are brainstorming in person, you may use sticky notes or flip charts to write on. Remotely, you can use Google Docs or Sheets or tools like Note.ly or Miro
- Prep the sheets or docs ahead of time, so that people can engage in the activities easily. At our Zoomsite, we modified our blue-sky brainstorm session so that we each answered a few questions in a Google Sheet. We had a separate section for each person, and the exercise was easy to understand and engage in, and people got straight to work.
- Schedule in more breaks, shorter sessions, or less than full-day meetings. We had a couple of hour-long breaks during the day, which helped people to focus. Foundry did a great job of getting everyoneâs attention for a few hours every day, for more days than a normal in-person conference
- Plan your technology. At the Bolster meeting, we learned this the hard way. We tested out the idea of doing a âwalk and talkâ session where weâd each walk in our neighborhoods, and have a couple of strategic conversations just on the phone. Unfortunately, the technology didnât work for everyone, as they hadnât all used Zoom on their phones before, it was windy in some locations, and cell service dropped people from time to time. Probably not the best idea we had!
- Include a social component. We were a little skeptical about this at the Bolster Zoomsite, but weâd always incorporated social time into offsites, and we really value connecting as people, not just as professionals, so we gave it a try. On the second day of our Zoomsite, we took a 2 hour break at the end of the day, and came back for drinks and dinner together. We had personal conversations, including sharing our favorite tv shows. Eight people on video eating together might sound odd, and we werenât sure if it would work, but we all agreed that it was fun, and weâd do it again. I missed the Foundry âVirtual Funâ session, but they did a virtual game show run by our sister portfolio company, Two-Bit Circus (and also had investigated Jack Box Games as another option for virtual games via Zoom screen share plus real-time voting and other engagement via phone). I heard that session was great and engaging from people who attended
We all hope life returns to some kind of normal in 2021, though itâs unclear when that will be. And thereâs definitely value to doing meetings like this in person, but at least we now know that we can have a successful remote offsite or larger conference event. As with everything, it will be interesting to see how the world is changed by COVID. Maybe events like this will figure out how to mix remote and in-person participation, or alternate between event formats to keep travel costs down.
How I engage with the CCO
Post 4 of 4 in the series of Scaling CMO’s- the other posts are, When to Hire your First Chief Customer Officer, What does Great Look like in a Chief Customer Officer and Signs your Chief Customer Officer isn’t Scaling.
You can engage with each person on the executive team one-on-one to understand what their issues and challenges are, but Iâve found that engaging with the CCO offsite with customers is far more productive and leads to a better understanding of the service organization than any other meeting time. I have typically spent the most time with or gotten the most value out of CCOs over the years doing the following.
In person at âCanary in the Coal Mineâ customers. They donât use canaries any more in coal mines, but the principle applies to companies: What are the early warning signs that youâve got big problems looming? The earlier you discover those problems the better, and the CCO is usually the first person to figure out that something isnât right with your product or service. I always find that the largest clients, the most demanding ones, the ones who push you around, the ones who are highly critical or you, are the ones who make your company a better company. At Return Path, we had those types of clients over the years, from eBay, to DoubleClick, to Microsoft, to Groupon, to Facebook, to Bank of Americaâand thatâs just the short list off the top of my mind. The demanding customer is the one who breaks things and forces you to own up to your lack of scalability. They also either take you to task or threaten to pull their business if you donât clean up your act. As painful as some of those meetings are, they are also ones I always wanted to attend in person with my CCO, both so I could eat whatever form of crow needed to be eaten as the Chief Crow Eater (which sends a very powerful message to the customer), and also because the CCO and I could experience the chirping of the canary in the coal mine and learn from the experience together.
While itâs important to engage with the CCO in the critical meetings with demanding customers, itâs also important to understand the base. Thereâs an old saying from the hardware world that goes, âGod was able to create the world in only 7 days because God didnât have an installed base.â The new world of Internet technologies, SaaS, and agile development is one where your installed base of customers is your biggest asset, not a millstone around your neck. Some of the most meaningful experiences I had over the years with our CCOs was to be in market, spending time with all kinds of customers together in small groups and large, deeply understanding their needs and use of our product.
The CCO role is one that is easy to ignore or put on the back burner if things are going smoothly at your company, but as CEO I feel that it is best to stay close to the market and engaging with the CCO with demanding customers and with the base is a good way to understand your company and CCO better.
(You can find this post on the Bolster Blog here)
Introducing the Bolster Board Benchmarking Survey
Over the years, Iâve had a list of nagging questions every time Iâve contemplated my board, but didnât have anyone I could turn to who had deep, broad advice on this topic. Those questions were:
- How big should my board be at this stage?
- How many independent directors should I have?
- What is the right profile of an independent director?
- How many options should I give a board member?
- How do I find the best, diverse, talent for my board openings?
Thatâs why Bolster is excited to announce the launch of our first CEO tool: Board Benchmarking. This application (which is free!) is the first of a series of tools that weâre designing to help CEOs understand the performance, design, and impact of themselves, their executive teams, and their boards. The results of this first application will shed light on the independence, diversity, and compensation of private company boards thatâs never been available on a broad basis before.
Why are we starting with Board Benchmarking?
- Increasing Board Diversity is top of mind right now…
…and that means CEOs need to have a handle on three things at the same time to get it right: appropriate board size/number of independent seats, a talent pipeline that is diverse and well vetted, and clear compensation guidelines for independent directors. Diverse employee populations and customer bases start with having a diverse board and a CEO (you!) who is attuned to the benefits of diversity at the top. The longer you wait to prioritize diversity in the boardroom, the harder it becomes to change the makeup of your board. Culture becomes entrenched, recruiting becomes driven by referrals, and before you know it, everyone in an organization looks and thinks a little bit the same way. By capturing data on the diversity and composition of startup boards, we hope to offer an industry-wide snapshot to help CEOs start to have what can often be tricky conversations with their VCs about board size and composition as early as possible. And by pairing that with Bolsterâs unique marketplace for diverse and vetted Board-ready talent, we hope to help CEOs slay all three dragons (number of independent seats, talent pipeline, and comp guidelines) at the same time.
- Private company board composition is notoriously tricky to benchmark.
Unlike public companies, which are required to disclose the identities and compensation packages for their boards of directors, private board structure tends to remain…well, private! While this makes sense from a regulatory perspective, it often means private companies CEOs are taking a shot in the dark when it comes to things like when to add independent directors and how much to pay them. By aggregating and anonymizing thousands of data points across hundreds of private companies, we hope to (for the first time ever) provide CEOs with a very real, in-the-moment look at how their board today stacks up against others in similar cohorts.
- Filling an open board seat is a high-priority item for a CEO, and a tough one to get right.
Itâs said that good choices come from good options. Early benchmarking results show that half of startup CEOs expect to fill an open board position within the next 12 months. Just as itâs critically important to get the right executives around your (well, now virtual) table, itâs equally, if not even more important to build a board that effectively supports you, your company, and your customers. Every month that goes by with a board vacancy is another month where youâre potentially leaving valuable introductions and perspectives on the table. We hope that by exposing these board searches across such a broad subset of companies, weâll also empower CEOs to take immediate next steps to fill those vacancies — including help recruiting multiple board candidates directly from the Bolster network.
As we conduct this survey over the next month, weâll provide greater visibility into the size, composition, diversity, and director compensation of private company boards. Weâre also establishing robust pipeline partnerships to amplify board-ready talent from organizations with diverse membership of African American, Hispanic/Latinx, and women orgs. So for anyone interested in adding qualified diverse talent to their boards, weâll be ready.
Participants who complete the survey will receive early access to your benchmark results and a comprehensive guide to building and managing your Board of Directors.Â
In early Q1, weâll invite all participants of our Board Benchmarking survey to log in to Bolster and view their results interactively. CEOs will be able to see how their own boards stack up compared to others in the VC portfolio network or other cohorts. VC partners will be able to see patterns across the entire portfolio.Â
Watch this space in the coming days and weeks for CEO-specific content about hiring Board members.Â
We invite you to register as a Bolster client to participate in our Board Benchmarking survey today.
Addicted to Ruthless Efficiency
Last week I wrote about The Tension That Will Come With the Future of Work. No one knows what the post-pandemic world of office vs. remote work will look like, but there are going to be some clear differences between how people will respond to being in offices or not being offices going forward. As I said in that post, I think the natural, gravitational pull for senior people will be to do more remote work, because of a combination of their commutes, their personal time, their work setups at home, and their level of seniority…but with the possible exception of engineers, âall remoteâ may actually not be in the best interest of a number of junior or more introverted team members.
Two things popped up in the last few days that are making it clear to me that thereâs another issue all of us — whether youâre a CEO or CXO or an entry level employee — will face. Weâve become much more efficient in how we do our jobs and run our lives. In my case, Iâll go ahead and say it — Iâm addicted to the efficiency and scarcity of social interactions in my work life now in a way that Iâm going to find hard to unwind, so Iâm calling it âruthless efficiency.â
Example 1 is a time-based example. Iâve been doing virtually all client-related meetings, whether sales calls or customer success calls, in 30 minutes over Zoom or equivalent for a year now. Sometimes I even get one done in 15 minutes. Very, very rarely, Iâll book one for an hour.
One of my Bolster colleagues who lives not too far away in Connecticut is having drinks with a very important potential partner one night next week as the temperatures outside warm up here in the northeast. She invited me to join — and really, I should join. But then âruthless efficiency mathâ sets into my thinking. Instead of a 30 zoom, this will take me three hours – an hour drive each way plus the meeting. Maybe I get lucky and I can do a call or two from the car, but is the meeting really worth 4-6x the amount of time just so I can be in person? Even though this is the kind of thing I would have done without hesitation a year ago…that calculus is really hard to make from where I sit today.
Example 2 is an expense-based example. We have spent basically $0 for a year on T&E. Now we are planning some kind of a multi-day team meeting a few weeks from now around the 1-year anniversary of the company to work on planning for the next couple quarters. The quarterly offsite, including travel, hotels, etc., has been a deeply-ingrained part of my leadership Operating System for 20-25 years now. OF COURSE we should do this meeting in person and offsite if the public health environment allows it and people are comfortable. But then âruthless efficiency mathâ sets into my thinking. Whatâs this meeting going to cost? $10,000? Depends where we do it and how many team members come since we have people in multiple cities. But YIKES, thatâs a lot of money. We are a STARTUP. Shouldnât we use money like that for some BETTER purpose?
Forget the big things. I think we all realize that we donât have to hop on a plane now and do a day trip to the other coast or Europe or Asia for a couple meetings unless those meetings are do-or-die meetings. Itâs these little things that will be tough to readjust now that weâve all gotten used to having hours upon hours, and dollars upon dollars, back on our calendars and balance sheets because weâve gotten addicted to the amazing, and yet somewhat ruthless efficiency of the knowledge worker, pandemic, work from anywhere, get it done in 30 minutes on a screen way of life.
Who Are Your CPO and COO?
Who Are Your CPO and COO?
Every senior management team needs a CPO and a COO. No, I’m not talking about Privacy and Operations. I’m talking about Paranoia and Optimism. On my leadership team at Return Path, many of us are Paranoid and many of us are Optimistic, and many of us can play both roles. But I’m fortunate to have two business partners who are the Chiefs – George Bilbrey is our Chief Paranoia Officer, and Anita Absey is our Chief Optimism Officer. Those monikers fit their respective roles (product and sales) as well as their personalities.
My view is simple – both traits are critical to have around the management table, and they’re best when they’re in some kind of equilibrium. Optimism keeps you running forward in a straight line. The belief that you can successfully execute on your plan, with a spring in your step and a smile on your face, is very motivating. Paranoia keeps you looking around corners. It may also keep you awake at night, but it’s the driving force for seeing potential threats to the business that aren’t necessarily obvious and keeping you on your toes. I wrote about the benefits and limits of paranoia (with an extreme example) years ago here.
Too much of either trait would be a disaster for a team’s psyche. But both are critical points of view that need a loud voice in any management discussion. It’s a little bit like making sure your management team knows its actual and target location along the Fear/Greed Continuum.