You've Never Seen a Girl Like This
You've Never Seen a Girl Like This
I played hookey last night and went to a concert in San Diego — The Laura Roppe band was playing. Laura is one of my oldest and dearest friends — we met in second grade and then went to junior high and high school together. The title of this post is the title of her first album and its first song. It's also true of Laura — she's one remarkable person. Her web site is here. If you like country rock and female singer-songwriter music (think of Shania Twain or Norah Jones as comparables, although Laura is more versatile than both), and if you like discovering new up and coming artists, listen to the samples on her site, buy her album, or find her on iTunes.
I can't possibly do justice to Laura's story, which she tells very nicely on her web site here. But the short of it is that she is in the middle of a dramatic personal transformation from brilliant lawyer to self made rock star, all while being a great mom and wife and just finishing up an exhausting 6-month successful fight against cancer. Hopefully that's enough of a teaser to get you to at least give her music a sample!
I've been listening to her music on my ipod for months now, but especially after seeing her perform live last night, I have no doubt that she will be on an international tour within the next 12 months. She is already getting great buzz and radio play in the US as well as Western Europe, and she's been nominated for a bunch of music awards.
I've never done a music recommendation post before in 5 years of blogging, and I may never do one again. But Laura's story and music are just tremendous, and her lyrics are just plain fun.
Living With Less…For Good?
Living With Less…For Good?
Like all companies, Return Path is battening down the hatches a bit on expenses these days. Our business is very strong and still growing nicely, but in this environment, the specter of disaster looms large, so there's no reason not to be more cautious and more profitable.
We weren't an extravagant company before this, and we never have been. But there is almost always room to save. Less travel, leaner budgets for office cafeterias, no more pilates classes in the Colorado office. We've been very clear internally that our three priorities are protecting everyone's job, everyone's salary, and everyone's health benefits. Hopefully things continue to go well and those can remain sacrosanct.
We are now a few months into our various cost savings plans, and it's great to see the results on the income statement and balance sheet. More than that, it's great to see how everyone in the company is rallying around the common cause and looking for other ways to save money as well. We've made it chic to be cheap. And so far, there's no impact on the business.
It will be interesting to me to see what happens on the far end of this economic badness. It's often said the companies that make it through times like these emerge stronger on the other side, and I think I now understand why: it's clear to me that some of the changes will work long term and some will only work short term, which means that we'll learn during this period that we can live with less.
That doesn't mean we were profligate in the past; but it does mean that I think we are going to retrain ourselves. We don't have to send 10 people to a big trade show to have an impact and drive the business forward. We don't have to be the vendor who picks up the tab at the end of the night. We don't need to pay for half the company to have cell phones (a very 1999 policy) to retain top talent. I bet we will learn those things — and a bunch of others to come — in the next few months.
The (Email) Elephant in the Room
The (Email) Elephant in the Room
Email marketing continues to be under attack by some members of the media who are looking to stir up melodrama and controversy and seem to be uninterested in or unwilling to look at real metrics from real companies who are enjoying unparalleled success with email.
I can’t say this any better than Bill McCloskey from Email Data Source, who writes in MediaPost:
The Elephant in the Room that no one is willing to talk about is that Spam is not the problem. The problem is the OVERREACTION to Spam. This overreaction is not something that is hurting e-mail marketing communications–it is hurting all communications.
Read the full column here. It’s great.
UPDATE: Apparently, the column is only available if you register for MediaPost (grrr…). It’s good enough, and free, but don’t feel compelled. Two other useful paragraphs to read are below:
And all this hysteria is wiped up without looking at the facts. Because if you look at the facts, you’d see a pattern emerge. For instance, according to the DMA, e-mail has the second-highest ROI of any direct marketing channel, even with reduced deliverability and open rates. The fact is that if you examine the clickstream data from companies such as Hitwise, you will see that the biggest traffic driver time and time again is e-mail. E-mail is not just an important interactive marketing channel, it is the most important marketing channel–but you’d never know it judging by today’s trade shows and industry publications.
In the name of keeping us free of viagra ads in our inbox, we have crippled the most efficient communications system ever developed. We have allowed the free flow of information to be hijacked by fanatics. And because no one speaks for the e-mail industry, this is going on under our noses with no cry of protest.
Picking Your VC
Jeff Nolan has a great post entitled Pick Your VC Carefully. A must read for any entrepreneur (or VC for that matter).
It’s worth the full read, but his main points are:
1. Pick the right type of investor — big, small and specialized, financial, corporate.
2. Check their references!
3. Make sure you understand how much pull your investor has within his or her firm.
All good advice, some overlap with my posting on How to Negotiate a Term Sheet with a VC. My only addition beyond what’s already in that post is that if you’re adding a new investor into a syndicate, make sure you have your existing investors spend time speaking with the prospective investor, both with you present and without you present. You’ll learn a lot about your future board dynamics that way.
Luck Matters (and You Can Only Make Some of It)
Luck Matters ( and You Can Only Make Some of It)
There was a great article recently in the Financial Times that’s worth reading here. (Warning – you might have to complete a free registration in order to read this article.) The premise is that most outliers, to use Malcolm Gladwell’s term, achieve their super status at least partly through luck. And once that status is achieved, the good things just pile on from there. This concept is as much Gladwell’s as that term is.
I always say that “you can make your own luck.” And to some extent, that’s true. Hard work and persistence and creativity can eventually open up doors on their own, no question about it. While this article doesn’t say there are limitations to that axiom, it does note that hard work, persistence, and creativity PLUS some good luck is the more likely path to being #1 in your field.
Think about it this way – why is the most gifted golfer of the last 15 years someone who grew up in Southern California with a father who loved golf, and not, say, someone from the sub-Saharan region of Africa? The latter person might have the equivalent amount of raw talent as Tiger Woods, maybe even more grit and determination. But he’s probably never even heard of golf.
So what’s the lesson here for business leaders? First, count your blessings. You’re probably where you are for a bunch of reasons, some of which have nothing to do with you. Second, look for other people to work with you who are lucky as well. I read somewhere once that Tony Hsieh of Zappos asks every person he interviews if he or she is a lucky person – and that question pulls a lot of weight for him. Finally, put your head down and work hard. While this point is 100% valid, the thing is…you can’t do anything about it anyway, so you might as well push as hard as you can to do the best you can with what you’ve got!
Feedback Overload and Confusion – a Guide for Commenting on Employee Surveys
We run a massive employee survey every year or so called The Loop, which is powered by Culture Amp. We are big fans of Culture Amp, as they provide not only a great survey tool but benchmarks of relevant peer companies so our results can be placed in external context as well as internal context.
The survey is anonymous and only really rolled up to large employee groups (big teams, departments, offices, etc.), and we take the results very seriously. Every year we run it, we create an Organization Development Plan out of the results that steers a lot of the work of our Leadership team and People team for the coming year.
I just read every single comment that employees took the time to write out in addition to their checkbox or rating responses. This year, that amounted to over 1,200 verbatim comments. I am struggling to process all of them, for a bunch of reasons you’d expect. Next year we may give employees some examples of comments that are hard to process so they understand what it’s like to read all of them…and we may reduce the number of places where employees can make comments so we try to get only the most important (and more detailed) comments from people to keep the volume a little more manageable.
But I thought it might be useful to give some general advice to people who write comments on anonymous surveys. Your company may have every good intention of following up on every last comment in an employee survey (we do!), but it’s difficult to do so when:
- The comment is not actionable. For example, “The best thing about working at Return Path is…’I can afford to live nearby.'” That doesn’t do much for us!
- The comment is too vague. For example, “I’m not the engineer I was a year ago” – we have no idea what that means. Is it a plus or a minus? What is behind it?
- The comment is likely to be in conflict with other comments and doesn’t give enough detail to help resolve conflicts. 40 positive comments about the lunch program in an office and 40 negative comments about the lunch program in the same office kind of get washed out, but “Lunches are good, but please have more gluten-free options” is super helpful.
- The comment lacks context. When the answer to the question “What would be the one thing we could do right away to make RP a better place to work?” is “Investing in some systems,” that doesn’t give us a starting point for a next step.
- The commenter disqualifies him or herself. Things like “Take everything I’m saying with a grain of salt…I’m just an engineer and have no real idea of what I’m doing” that punctuate a comment are challenging to process.
- The commenter forgets that the comments are anonymous. “I have serious problems with my manager and often think of leaving the company” is a total bummer to hear, but there’s not a lot we can do with it. I hope with something like this that you are also having a discussion with someone on the People team or your manager’s manager!
We’re doing everything employees would expect us to do – reading the ratings and comments, looking at trends over time, breaking them down by office and department, and creating a solid Organizational Development Plan that we’ll present publicly and follow up on…but hopefully this is useful for our company and others in the future as a guide to more actionable commenting in employee surveys.
Counter Cliche: How Much Paranoia is Too Much Paranoia?
Counter Cliche:Â How Much Paranoia is Too Much Paranoia?
Fred’s VC cliche of the week this week, Opening the Kimono, is a good one. He talks about how much entrepreneurs should and should not disclose when talking to VCs and big partners — companies like Microsoft or Google, for example.
In response to another of Fred’s weekly cliche postings back in April, I addressed the issue of opening the kimono with VCs in this posting entitled Promiscuity. But today’s topic is the opposite of promiscuity, it’s paranoia.
I was talking with a friend a few months back who’s a friend and fellow CEO of a high profile, larger company in a similar space to Return Path. He was obsessing about the secrecy surrounding the size of his business and wouldn’t tell me (a friend) how much revenue his company had, even within a $20mm band.
He pursued this secrecy pretty far. He never shared financials with his employees. He never told anyone the metrics, not even his close friends and family. He even withdrew his company from consideration for a high-profile award for growth companies which it had entered into and won in prior years since someone might be able to string together enough years of data to compute their size.
Why? Because he didn’t want any venture capitalists to figure out how big they had gotten and decide to throw money at upstart competitors. Talk about a closed kimono!
I’m much more open book than that with Return Path, but I have a tremendous amount of respect for this guy, so I gave the matter some thought. There are certainly some situations which call for discretion, but I couldn’t come up with too many that would drive my guiding principle to be secrecy.
1. Being “open book” with employees is essential. Your people need to know where the business stands and how their efforts are contributing to the whole. More important, they need to know that you trust them.
2. Using some key metrics to promote your company can be very helpful. I challenge you to show me a marketing person who doesn’t want to brag about how big you are, how many customers you have, what market share you have.
3. There’s no reason to worry about Venture Capitalists. Sure, they can fund a competitor, but they’ll do that without knowing exactly how much revenue you have, how quickly. The good ones are good at sniffing out market opporunities ahead of time. The bad ones, you care about less anyway.
4. All that said, you can never be paranoid enough about the competition. Assume they’re all out to get you at every turn, that they’re smarter, richer, quicker, and better looking than you are. Live in fear of them eating your lunch.
Paranoia is healthy (just ask Andy Grove), but it does have its limits around the basics of your business, and around how you treat employees.
Learn Word of Mouth Marketing
Learn Word of Mouth Marketing
Our friend, former RP colleague, and WOM guru Andy Sernovitz is hosting a small-group word of mouth marketing seminar. Usually he only does private training for companies at a very large price, so this is a rare chance for 50 people to get the best introduction to word of mouth that there is. I blogged about his book a while back here.
We’ve arranged for a $250 discount for our clients. Use code “welovereturnpath” when you register (kind of catchy code, isn’t it?).
This is a very practical, hands-on course. In one intense day, you will:
- Master the five steps of word    of mouth marketing
- Construct an action plan that    your company can start using the very next day
- Get the same training that    big corporations (Microsoft, TiVo, eBay) have received — for a fraction    of what they paid
- Know how to translate word of    mouth marketing into real ROI
- Participate in an active, Â Â Â intense day of practical brainstorming (not boring theory)
- Learn from Andy Sernovitz, Â Â Â the guy who literally wrote the book on word of mouth marketing
Andy promises you will learn a repeatable, proven marketing framework that is easy to execute, affordable, and provides measurable results within 60 days.
More information: http://events.gaspedal.com
Chicago: July 30 and September 4
Pass it on: http://events.gaspedal.com/banners
Counter Cliche: Ready, Set, Exit
Counter Cliche:Â Ready, Set, Exit
Fred’s VC Cliche of the week is the about the Quick Flip. My counter to that is Ready, Set, Exit (image from Google Images).
Most quick flips involve a huge element of luck. For every quick flip out there, there are dozens of companies that thought they’d be quick flips and ended up crashing and burning instead. Back in 1999, when we started Return Path, another Internet entrepreneur I knew loved the idea so much that he told me to start writing the book then, because I would be able to sell the for $100 million before we even had a product in the market. He said the title of the book would be Ready, Set, Exit.
We were careful not to behave that way, and that’s one of the reasons we’re still here and doing as well as we are doing today.
As nice as it is to be an investor or an entrepreneur who falls into a Quick Flip scenario, beware of anyone who’s planning on Ready, Set, Exit, whether you’re being pitched to invest, to join the company, or even to be a customer. Ready, Set, Exit scenarios can’t be manufactured or counted on (if they could, everyone would do them), and that whole mentality is completely antithetical to the stamina required to build a real company.
I think it’s analogous to what everyone tells you when you’re in junior high or high school:Â you’ll never find a girlfriend/boyfriend if you’re out looking for one.
Comment on Political versus Corporate Leadership, Part II: Admitting Mistakes
Comment on Political versus Corporate Leadership, Part II: Admitting Mistakes
My colleague Mike Mayor writes:
So you’e only asking for politicians to be honest Matt? Is that all? 🙂
Couldn’t agree more on the CEO side. A CEO who cannot admit to failure is doomed to be surrounded by “yes men” and, therefore, must go it alone, whereas the CEO who admits to having the odd bad idea every now and then is more likely to get truthful and accuruate information from those around him/her. Which scenario would you prefer to base your next decision on?
However, I look more to Hollywood for fostering the faux CEO/Board Room stereotypes, not politics. Look no further than the highest ranked show among 18 to 46 year olds: The Apprentice. Trump is just one contemporary example of successfully perpetuating the “kill or be killed” mentality of the ideal CEO. In his book, “How to Get Rich” one of his lessons is to “never take the blame for anything” (meanwhile Trump gets rich by being a caricature of a CEO).
The ideal CEO needs to set the example for the behavior of his employees, and creates opportunities by building relationships not “squashing the competition.” And like it or not, the ideal Board Room is actually a Think Tank of great minds working toward a common goal rather than a place to play mind games and mental poker.
Unfortunately, both of these things make for a horrible TV show but do contribute to building truly great companies! On the other hand, watch too many TV shows (or follow the politician’s lead) and you’ll likely become a CEO whose success is comparable to the CEOs of Enron and Tyco.
Driving Out of the Bubble
Driving Out of the Bubble
It’s easy for those of us who live in the Internet bubble to confuse the words “startup” and “entrepreneur” with the word “technology.” Every once in a while, I am struck by a fantastic entrepreneurial idea that’s low-tech or no-tech.Â
In the last few weeks, I’ve learned of two of them — oddly, very similar ideas. They’re both going after the New York City black car limo market (all those car services that take business travelers to and from airports and meetings), which is a lucrative but kind of gritty business. I’ve used black car services for 16 years now, and while I’ve found one that’s pretty good, they all have massive customer service problems and are pretty expensive. It’s a market ripe for revolution. But how to execute it?
Kid Car New York is one new service that is attacking this market with an alternative car service that’s oriented around families and kids. The cars are mini-vans. The drivers are trained in safety and friendly. The cars all have car seats and bases in them, which are sanitized from one passenger to the next. The drivers are actually employees with benefits — this company is trying to do to car services what Starbucks did to convenience store workers. There is a membership/subscription pricing model that makes it feel more like a club. While it’s moderately more expensive than black car competition, Kid Car is a natural alternative that appeals to a big niche audience. The entrepreneur is a friend and former Return Pather, Topher McGibbon. He’s excited about revolutionizing a sleepy, rough industry. Mariquita and I have used Kid Car for a bunch of trips with the kids, and it’s like night and day.
In a different way, Ozocar is doing the same thing. It’s a black car service with a fleet 100% made up of Toyota Priuses (if that’s the plural — I keep wanting to call them Prii). That’s the hook. If you care about your carbon footprint but still have to do things like fly on planes and get to and from airports, why wouldn’t you pick a service that’s more environmentally friendly? I tried Ozocar last night for the first time, and it was perfectly fine. Plus, I felt better about myself the whole 18 minutes home from LaGuardia.Â
Ozocar reminds me of my friend Andrew Winston’s book, Green to Gold (I posted about it here), and how businesses can be both more sustainable and more valuable at the same time. Both Ozocar and Kid Car are great examples of innovation being driven by customer needs and market opportunity unrelated to high tech. They’re great services, and I hope they succeed. I just wonder how businesses like these get funded with all of the venture focus in the world on high tech and life sciences.