For Whom the Bell Tolls
For Whom the Bell Tolls
I don’t understand why everyone in the world hasn’t yet signed up for VOIP services from companies like Vonage. We just did it a couple of weeks ago at home. In terms of quality, it’s virually indistinguidhable from a POTS land line. You can have as many numbers as you want on the same account. TiVo works with it. You can keep your old phone number. There are no minimums and no contracts. They don’t have to come to your house to get it to work. They’ve even figured out how to get 911 and 311 to work with it.
It’s got tons of other cool features, as well, but even if all you do with it is use it like your old phone or fax line, all it costs is $15/month with a $40 startup cost for 500 minutes/month (they also have $25/month for unlimited calling). I hate to sound like an ad for the thing, but it’s just a better way of having a phone at home. The only real risk is an outage with your cable modem, and while that does happen from time to time, most people now have cell phones as a backup, and if your modem is out, calls go straight into voicemail.
We’ve had one or two phone lines at home forever and bounced around over the years from Verizon to Sprint to AT&T depending on who had the best deal of the month. No matter which carrier we’ve used, we don’t use our home phone that much, and we’ve always paid between $50-100/month per line for the privilige. No longer!
Anyway, I don’t know much about Vonage, and they may have tons of competitors. From a business perspective, then, I don’t know who is going to win this war…but as my board member Greg Sands says, I certainly know who’s going to lose it. I wouldn’t want to be a big old phone company today!
Grow or Die
My cofounder Cathy wrote a great post on the Bolster blog back in January called Procrastinating Executive Development, in which she talks about the fact that even executives who appreciate the value of professional development usually don’t get to it because they’re too busy or don’t realize how important it is. I see this every day with CEOs and founders. Cathy had a well phrased but somewhat gentle ask at the end of her post:
My ask for all CEOs is this: give each of your executives the gift of feedback now, and hold each other accountable for continued growth and development to match the growth and development of your company.
Let me put it in starker terms:
Grow or Die.
Every executive, every professional, can scale further than they think is possible, and further than you think is possible. Most of us do have some ceiling somewhere…but it will take us years to find it (if we ever find it). The key to scaling is a growth mentality. You have to not just value development, you have to crave it, view it as essential, and prioritize it.
Startups are incredibly dynamic. You’re creating something out of nothing. Disrupting an industry. Revolutionizing something. Putting a dent in the universe. For a startup to succeed, it has to constantly put something in market, learn, calibrate, accelerate, maybe pivot, and most of all grow. How can a leader of a startup scale from one stage of life to the next without focusing on personal growth and development if the job changes from one quarter to the next?
I was lucky enough to have a great leadership team at my prior company, Return Path, over the course of 20 years. Within that long block of time with many executives, there was a particular period of time, roughly 2004-2012, that I jokingly refer to as the “golden age.” That’s when we grew the business from roughly $5mm in revenue to $50 or $60mm. The remarkable thing was that we executed that growth with the same group of 5-6 senior executives. A couple new people joined the team, and we struggled to get one executive role right, but by and large one core group took us from small to mid-sized. Why? We looked at each other — literally, in one meeting where we were talking about professional development — and said, “we have to commit to individual coaching, to team coaching, and to growth as leaders, or the company will outpace us and we’ll be roadkill.”
That set us on a path to focus on our own growth and development as leaders. We were constantly reading and sharing relevant articles, blog posts, and books. We engaged in a lot of coaching and development instruments like MBTI, TKI, and DISC. We learned the value of retrospectives, transparent 360s, and a steady diet of feedback. We challenged ourselves to do better. We worked at it. As one of the members of the Golden Age said of our work, “we went to the gym.”
The “Grow or Die” mantra is real. You can’t possibly be successful in today’s world if you’re not learning, if you don’t have a growth mentality. You are never the smartest person in the room. The minute you are convinced that you are…you’re screwed.
If you don’t believe me, look at the development of your business itself as a metaphor for your own development as a leader. What happens to your startup if it stops growing?
(You can find this post on the Bolster Blog here)
New New Employee Training
Years ago, my co-founder Jack and I developed a training presentation to give to new employees who were not just new to Return Path but also new to the workforce. This is another one of those things, like my last post on our sabbatical policy, that people ask me for all the time.
Bringing new people into the workforce is different from just bringing new people into an organization. I know I got a huge amount of value in my first job in management consulting from just learning how to go to work every day and how to be successful professionally. The process you need to go through is like Onboarding, but on steroids.
Not everyone has parents or older siblings or role models who work in business — or for that matter, who focus on any kind of workplace mentoring. It may sound dumb, but even things like showing up on time for work, what to wear, and how to meet with your manager aren’t necessarily obvious even to smart and well-intentioned 21-year olds.
So with the caveats that it’s a little dated as is, and that it’s more relevant to the kind of company we are at Return Path (e.g., we serve business clients), here’s a SlideShare version of the presentation.
Feel free to plagiarize, customize, and share it from here if you’re interested.
When it is Time to Hire Your First Chief Financial Officer
(This is the second post in the series…the first one on How to Engage with Your CFO is here.)
What comes before a full-fledged CFO? Lots of startups have nothing more than an outsourced bookkeeper or one junior staff accountant. Sometimes a founder or a founderâs spouse even steps in on this front. As startups scale, they are likely to hire a more senior accountant, maybe an AR/AP/Collections staff member, or even a Controller or VP Finance.
Depending on the complexity of your business you might be able to hold off on hiring a full-time CFO, but if you have any of these signs then itâs time to start thinking about bringing someone on board. One sign is intuitive, and itâs just the feeling that youâre concerned about cash. Maybe you wake up in the middle of the night and thatâs whatâs on your mindânot just that youâre running out of cash, but that you arenât clear on how much cash you have and how fast youâre spending it. Is it concerning that youâre tight when it comes to payroll? Are you getting calls from vendors about late payments? Are you way under market in compensation and trying to overcome that by offering equity or âperks” to attract top talent? These are all telltale signs that your financial situation may be under duress, and a full-time CFO can be a solution.
Another telltale sign that you might need a CFO is more tangible: Are you spending too much of your own time managing fundraising, debt, investors, and cap table questions and issues? If you are in the weeds with the financial reporting, either fixing whatâs there or creating a lot of things from a blank slate, then thereâs an obvious problem, and solution.
Another sign that you need to hire a full-time CFO comes in the form of things you canât answer. If your board asks you about some small-to-mid-level analysis or metric like CAC, customer profitability, margins, or ROI, and you donât have a great answer thatâs a signal that your finances are out of control. And if you canât figure out how to get to an answer, thatâs even worse.
Of course, you donât have to wait until these telltale signs emerge before hiring a full-time CFOâitâs also possible to have a discussion with your current finance person and figure out together what their career path could be, and what their aspirations are. If your finance person aspires to be CFO but doesnât have the skills (yet) consider bringing on a fractional CFO. A fractional CFO may be the way to go if your business model is simple…some combination of a limited number of complex accounting issues, a limited number of customers or invoices or transactions, and an insignificant difference between the income statement and the cash flow statement. If what you need is someone to oversee a gradually growing team, a slow-paced implementation of higher-order systems, basic financial analysis or modeling, or the occasional fundraising event, a fractional CFO may get the job done, for several years. A fractional CFO can also mentor your current finance person in the realities of the CFO role, and they can help you find a qualified CFO who will be a good fit for your company.
While there is no fast and easy answer about when to hire your first CFO, there are some telltale signs that point to that direction and if itâs not in your budget, consider a fractional CFO to help get things under control before you really do run out of cash.
(Posted on the Bolster Blog here)
A Thankful Moment
A Thankful Moment
While there are certainly some aspects of being a CEO that are full of those proverbial thankless tasks…there are some moments that are just the opposite. And boy are those rewarding.
I had one this morning. While I frequently get nice emails or handwritten cards from employees after they interview or start or get a promotion or raise — and those are all great — this is one I can easily blog about because it’s online.
Yesterday was the first official day of work for Neil Schwartzman, who actually joined us many months ago as a consultant running compliance for our Sender Score Certified whitelist but just finally became a full-time employee as we set up a Canadian entity and International entity and whatever our lawyers and accountants told us we had to do in order to be legit about hiring out of the country.
Neil’s thank you post is very entertaining (I promise, our objective isn’t to have employees drinking and slacking off!), but more than that, rewarding in that he says we do a good job at Return Path of walking the walk around ethics, reputation, and high standards in what we do for the email ecosystem. Now that’s rewarding.
But in some ways, it’s even more meaningful coming from Neil. Just as he says he took a risk in coming to work with us, we took a risk in bringing him on board. As a leading voice in the anti-spam community, Neil is exactly the kind of person that spooks out some of our clients who think of anti-spammers as the enemy. Our view is, as you can imagine, more nuanced. Anti-spammers who do their job well are a legitimate marketer’s best friend because they are keeping the inbox clean of actual spam. As we tell our clients, we are a big tent here — the only way we will solve our clients’ deliverability problems is by working WITH the receivers of the world on common language, rules, standards, and metrics — not working AGAINST them. And that’s where Neil has done such a great job for us so far — bringing his unique perspective on the spam problem and working alongside many others on our deliverability team like Tom Bartel, Tom Sather, Leslie Price, Melinda Plemel to help keep the world safe for email.
So thanks, Neil…and right back at you!
Startup CXO: the Sequel to Startup CEO
As I finished up my work on the Second Edition of Startup CEO: A Field Guide to Scaling Up Your Business and started working on a new startup, my colleagues and I started envisioning a new book as a sequel or companion to Startup CEO that is going to be published on June 9 with our same publisher, Wiley & Sons. The book is called Startup CXO: A Field Guide to Scaling Up Your Companyâs Critical Functions and Teams.
Simply put, the first book left me with the nagging feeling that it wasnât enough to only help CEOs excel, because starting and scaling a business is a collective effort. What about the other critical leadership functions that are needed to grow a company? If youâre leading HR, or Finance, or Marketing, or any key function inside a startup, what resources are available to you? What should you be thinking about? What does âgreatâ look like? What challenges lurk around the corner as you scale your function that you might not be focused on today? If youâre a CEO who has never managed all these functions before, what should you be looking for when you hire and manage all these people? If youâre an aspiring executive, from entry-level to manager to director, what do you need to think about as you grow your career and develop your skills?
Startup CXO is a âbook of books,â with one section for each major function inside a company. Each section is be composed of 15-20 discrete short chapters outlining the key âplaybooksâ for each functional role in the company – Chief People Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Chief Marketing Officer, Chief Revenue Officer, etc., hence the title Startup CXO – which is a generally accepted label in the startup ecosystem for âChief ____ Officer.â
Here are the front and back covers of the book, with some great endorsements we’re so proud of on the back.


This is an important topic to write about at this particular time because Americaâs âstartup revolutionâ continues to gather steam. There are only increasing numbers of venture capital investors, seed funds, and accelerators supporting increasing numbers of entrepreneurial ventures. While there are a number of books in the marketplace about CEOs and leadership, and some about individual functional disciplines (lots of books about the topic of Sales, the topic of Product Development), there are very few books that are practical how-to guides for any individual function, and NONE that wrap all these functions into a compendium that can be used by a whole startup executive team. Very simply, each section of this book serves as a how-to guide for a given executive, and taken together, the book will be a good how-to guide for startup executive teams in general.
Startup CXO has my name on it as principal author, and Iâm writing parts of it, but I canât even pretend to write it on my own, so the book has a large number of contributors who have the experience, credibility, and expertise to share something of value with others in their specific functional disciplines — most of my Bolster co-founders are writing sections, and the others are being written by former Return Path executive colleagues — Jack Sinclair, Cathy Hawley, Ken Takahashi, Anita Absey, George Bilbrey, Dennis Dayman, Nick Badgett, Shawn Nussbaum, and Holly Enneking.
Startup CXO is also pretty closely related to Bolsterâs business, since we are in the business of helping assess and place on-demand CXO talent, and as such, the final section of the book has a series of chapters written by Bolster members who are career Fractional Executives about their experience as a Fractional CXO.
The book is available for pre-order now at Amazon and Barnes & Noble.
Oh, and stay tuned for a third book in the series (kind of) due out late this year. More on that over the summer as the project takes shape!
Less is More
Less is More
I have a challenge for the email marketing community in 2009. Let’s make this the Year of “Less is More.”
Marketers are turning to email more and more in this down economy. There’s no question about that. My great fear is that just means they’re sending more and more and more emails out without being smart about their programs. That will have positive short term effects and drive revenues, but long term it will have a negative long term impact on inboxes everywhere. And these same marketers will find their short term positive results turning into poor deliverability faster than you can say “complaint rate spike.”
I heard a wonderful case study this week from Chip House at ExactTarget at the EEC Conference. One of his clients, a non-profit, took the bold and yet painful step of permissioning an opt-out list. Yikes. That word sends shivers down the spine of marketers everywhere. What are you saying? You want me to reduce the size of my prime asset? The results of a campaign done before and after the permission pass are very telling and should be a lesson to all of us. The list shrank from 34,000 to 4,500. Bounce rate decreased from 9% to under 1%. Spam complaints went from 27 to 0 (ZERO). Open rate spiked from 25% to 53%. Click-through from 7% to 22%. And clicks? 509 before the permissioning, 510 after. This client generated the same results, with better metrics along the way, by sending out 87% LESS EMAIL. Why? Because they only sent it to people who cared to receive it.
This is a great time for email. But marketers will kill the channel by just dumping more and more and more volume into it. Let’s all make Less Is More our mantra for the year together. Is everyone in? Repeat after me…Less Is More! Less Is More!
BookShort: Vive La Difference
Book Short:Â Vive La Difference
Brain Sex, by Anne Moir and David Jessell, was a fascinating read that I finished recently. I will caveat this post up front that the book was published in 1989, so one thing I’m not sure of is whether there’s been more recent research that contradicts any of the book’s conclusions. I will also caveat that this is a complex topic with many different schools of thought based on varying research, and this book short should serve as a starting point for a dialog, not an end point.
That said, the book was a very interesting read about how our brains develop (a lot happens in utero), and about how men’s and women’s brains are hard wired differently as a result. Here are a few excerpts from the book that pretty much sum it up (more on the applied side than the theoretical):
- Men tend to be preoccupied with things, theories, and powerâŠwomen tend to be more concerned with people, morality, and relationships
- Women continue to perceive the world in interpersonal terms and personalize the objective world in a way men do not. Notwithstanding occupational achievements, they tend to esteem themselves only insofar as they are esteemed by those they love and respect. By contrast, the bias of the adult male brain expresses itself in high motivation, competition, single-mindedness, risk-taking, aggression, preoccupation with dominance, hierarchy, and the politics of power, the constant measurement and competition of success itself, the paramountcy of winning
- Women will be more sensitive than men to sound, smell, taste, and touch. Women pick up nuances of voice and music more readily, and girls acquire the skills of language, fluency, and memory earlier than boys. Females are more sensitive to the social and personal context, are more adept at tuning to peripheral information contained in expression and gesture, and process sensory and verbal information faster. They are less rule-bound than men
- Men are better at the kills that require spatial ability. They are more aggressive, competitive, and self-assertive. They need the hierarchy and the rules, for without them they would be unable to tell if they were top or not â and that is of vital importance to most men
As I said up front, this book, and by extension this post, runs the risk of overgeneralizing a complex question. There are clearly many women who are more competitive than men and outpace them at jobs requiring spatial skills, and men who are language rock stars and quite perceptive.
But what I found most interesting as a conclusion from the book is the notion that there are elements of our brains are hard wired differently, usually along gender lines as a result of hormones developed and present when we are in utero. The authors’ conclusion — and one that I share as it’s applied to life in general and the workplace in particular — is that people should âcelebrate the differenceâ and learn how to harness its power rather than ignore or fight it.
Thanks to David Sieh, our VP Engineering, for giving me this book.
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 (OnlyOnce- the book!)
Startup CEO (OnlyOnce – the book!)
One of the things Iâve often thought over the years since starting Return Path in 1999 is that thereâs no instruction manual anywhere for how to be a CEO. While big company CEOs are usually groomed for the job for years, startup CEOs arenâtâŠand theyâre often young and relatively inexperienced in business in general. That became one of the driving forces behind the creation of my blog, OnlyOnce (because âyouâre only a first time CEO onceâ) back in 2004.
Now, over 700 blog posts later, Iâm excited to announce that Iâm writing a book based on this blog called Startup CEO: A Field Guide to Building and Running Your Company. The book is going to be published by Wiley & Sons and is due out next summer. The book wonât just be a compendium of blog posts, but it will build on a number of the themes and topics Iâve written about over the years and also fill in lots of other topics where I havenât.
The catalyst for writing this book was Brad Feld. Brad has been a friend, mentor, investor, and Board member for over a decade. Weâve had many great times, meals, and conversations together over the years, not the least of which was staggering across the finish line together at the New York City Marathon in 2005. Brad started writing books a few years ago, and Iâve been peripherally involved with them, first with Do More Faster: TechStars Lessons to Accelerate Your Startup (I contributed one of the chapters) and then with Venture Deals: Be Smarter Than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist (I wrote all the âEntrepreneur Perspectiveâ sidebars).
Those are great books, and theyâve been incredibly well received by the global entrepreneurial community. But then Brad got the bug, and now heâs in the middle of writing FOUR new books with Wiley that will all come out over the next year. They are:
- Startup Communities:Â Building an Entrepreneurial Ecosystem in Your City
- Startup Life:Â Surviving and Thriving in a Relationship with an Entrepreneur
- Startup Metrics:Â Making Sense of the Numbers in Your Startup
- Startup Boards:Â Reinventing the Board of Directors to Better Support the Entrepreneur
These four books, plus the two earlier ones, plus Startup CEO, are all part of the Startup Revolution series. While Iâll continue to do most of my blogging and posting here on OnlyOnce, Iâd also encourage you to check out the Startup Revolution site and sign up to be a member of that community. Iâll be doing some things on that site as well in connection with Startup CEO, and itâs a more concentrated place to post and comment on all things Startup. In addition, weâll be putting a bunch of add-ons to the book on that site closer to publication time.
I hope Startup CEO becomes a standard for all new CEOs. I donât think I have all the answers, but at least others can benefit by learning from my 13 years of successes and mistakes! Now all I have to do is go write the darned thing.
Reboot â The Fountainhead
Reboot â The Fountainhead
Happy New Year! Every few years or so, especially after a challenging stretch at work, Iâve needed to reboot myself. This is one of those times, and I will try to write a handful of blog posts on different aspects of that.
The first one is about a great book. I just read Ayn Randâs The Fountainhead for (I think) the 5th time. Itâs far and away my favorite book and has been extremely influential on my life. I think of it (and any of my favorite books) as an old friend that I can turn to in order to help center myself when needed as an entrepreneur and as a human. The last time I read it was over 10 years ago, which is too long to go without seeing one of your oldest friends, isnât it? While the characters in the book by definition are somewhat extreme, the bookâs guiding principles are great. Iâve always enjoyed this book far more than Atlas Shrugged, Randâs more popular novel, which I think is too heavy-handed, and her much shorter works, Anthem and We The Living, which are both good but clearly not as evolved in her thinking.
As an entrepreneur, how does The Fountainhead influence me? Here are a few examples.
- When I think about The Fountainhead, the first phrase that pops into my head is âthe courage of your convictions.â Well, thereâs no such thing as being a successful entrepreneur without having the courage of your convictions. If entrepreneurs took ânoâ for an answer the first 25 times they heard it, there would be no Apple, no Facebook, no Google, but thereâd also be no Ford, no GE, and no AT&T
- One great line from the book is that âthe essence of man is his creative capacity.â Our whole culture at Return Path, and one that Iâm intensely proud of, is founded on trust and transparency. We believe that if we trust employees with their time and resources, and they know everything going on in the company, that they will unleash their immense creative capacity on the problems to be solved for the business and for customers
- Another central point of influence for me from the book is that while learning from others is important, conventional wisdom only gets you far in entrepreneurship.  A poignant moment in the book is when the main character, Howard Roark, responds to a question from another character along the lines of âWhat do you think of me?â The response is âI donât think of you.â Leading a values-driven life, and running a values-driven existence, where the objective isnât to pander to the opinion of others but to fill my life (and hopefully the companyâs life) with things that make me/us happy and successful is more important to me than simply following conventional wisdom at every turn. Simply put, we like to do our work, our way, noting that there are many basics where reinventing the wheel is just dumb
- Related, the book talks about the struggle between first-handers and second-handers. âFirst-handers use their own minds. They do not copy or obey, although they do learn from others.â All innovators, inventors, and discoverers of new knowledge are first-handers. Roarkâs speech at the Cortland Homes trial is a pivotal moment in the book, when he says, âThroughout the centuries, there were men who took first steps down new roads armed with nothing but their own vision. The great creators — the thinkers, the artists, the scientists, the inventors — stood alone against the men of their time. Every great new thought was opposed.â In other words, first-handers, critical thinkers, are responsible for human progress. Second-handers abdicate the responsibility of independent judgment, allowing the thinking of others to dominate their lives. They are not thinkers, they are not focused on reality, they cannot and do not build
- The âvirtue of selfishnessâ is probably the essence of Randâs philosophy. And it sounds horrible. Who likes to be around selfish people? The definition of selfish is key, though. It doesnât inherently mean that one is self-centered or lacks empathy for others. It just means one stays true to oneâs values and purpose and potentially that oneâs actions start with oneself. Iâd argue that selfishness on its own has nothing to do with whether someone is a good person or a good friend. For example, most of us like to receive gifts. But people give gifts for many different reasons â some people like to give gifts because they like to curry favor with others, other people like to give gifts because it makes them feel good. Thatâs inherently selfish. But itâs not a bad thing at all
- Finally, Iâd say another area where The Fountainhead inspires me as a CEO is in making me want to be closer to the action. Howard Roark isnât an ivory tower designer of an architect. Heâs an architect who wants to create structures that suit their purpose, their location, and their materials. He only achieves that purpose by having as much primary data on all three of those things as possible. He has skills in many of the basic construction trades that are involved in the realization of his designs â that makes him a better designer. Similarly, the more time I spend on the front lines of our business and closer to customers, the better job I can do steering the ship
One area where I struggle a little bit to reconcile the brilliance of The Fountainhead with the practice of running a company is around collaboration. Itâs one thing to talk about artistic design being the product of one manâs creativity, and that such creativity canât come from collaboration or compromise. Itâs another thing to talk about that in the context of work that inherently requires many people working on the same thing at the same time in a generalized way. Someday, I hope to really understand how to apply this point not to entrepreneurship, but to the collaborative work of a larger organization. I know firsthand and have also read that many, many entrepreneurs have cited Ayn Rand as a major influence on them over the years, so Iâm happy to have other entrepreneurs comment here and let me know how they think about this particular point.
It feels a little shallow to try to apply a brilliant 700 page book to my lifeâs work in 1,000 words. But if I have to pick one small point to illustrate the connection at the end, itâs this. I realize I havenât blogged much of late, and part of my current reboot is that I want to start back on a steady diet of blogging weekly. Why? I get a lot out of writing blog posts, and I do them much more for myself than for those who reads them. Thatâs a small example of the virtue of selfishness at work.