Environmentally Unsound
I received in the mail yesterday (by overnight priority mail, no less), a 400+ page prospectus from Mittal, a Dutch company in which I apparently own a few shares of stock through a managed mutual fund I’m part of. This book was BIG – well over 2 inches thick and big enough to have a binding strip instead of staples. And it had enough legalese in it to put anyone to sleep.
What did I do with it? After ranting about how silly it was to ever print such a thing for mass push distribution to an audience that largely doesn’t care about it — straight into the trash. With a big thud, of course.
What a ridiculous waste. Why print it on paper at all? Make it available online via pdf. Email shareholders or send them a postcard or leave an automated voicemail and ask them if they want a hard copy. Figure out which shareholders are in a managed fund, and send a single copy to the fund manager, since the individuals don’t even know they’re shareholders or don’t make decisions about individual stocks in the fund. Do something that costs less and doesn’t destroy trees that 99% of people will never read.
Shame on Mittal and their bankers, proudly displayed on the cover of the book — Goldman Sachs, Citigroup Credit Suisse, HSBC and Societe General.
I Hope I Didn’t Make You Sick, Too
I Hope I Didn’t Make You Sick, Too
Fellow entrepreneur and MyWay blogger Chris Yeh takes me to task for my post last week entitled Humbled at TED. Although his blog post was pretty harsh on me — saying essentially that I’d lost my brain and made him sick by fawning over celebrities (which I didn’t do) — his comment on my blog was a little more measured, just reminding me that people like Bill Clinton is human and puts his pants on one leg at a time just like the rest of us.
I think Chris missed my main point, and since he decided to go public blasting me, I’ll repeat here what I emailed him privately before he decided to blog this:
Oh I don’t put them on that much of a pedestal, although perhaps my post sounded like that. My comments are more driven by a combination of:
– the great things they’ve done for humanity as opposed to the more mundane commercial that most of us do
– the immense knowledge of specialists in fields I know little about
– the level of intellectual discourse among the regular attendees…more than I see on a daily basis by 10x
Plus, pedestal or not, it isn’t every day that one sees Clinton, Bezos, Khosla, Branson, and Brin/Page all in the same room at once. đ
Anyway, thanks for the comment. I may blog it and my response.
Still, Chris’s main comment to me is probably a good one, which is that “treating the successful as if they were on another plane simply perpetuates the belief that you’ll never achieve the same kind of success.” And on that point, he’s 100% right. There is greatness and success in all of us, whether we’ve tapped into it yet or not.
Guest Post: Staying Innovative as Your Business Grows (Part Two)
As I mentioned in a previous post, I write a column for The Magill Report, the new venture by Ken Magill, previously of Direct magazine and even more previously DMNews. I share the column with my colleagues Jack Sinclair and George Bilbrey and we cover how to approach the business of email marketing, thoughts on the future of email and other digital technologies, and more general articles on company-building in the online industry â all from the perspective of an entrepreneur. I recently posted George’s column on Staying Innovative as Your Business Grows (Part One). Below is a re-post of George’s second part of that column from this week, which I think my OnlyOnce readers will enjoy.
Guest Post: Staying Innovative as Your Business Grows (Part Two)
By George Bilbrey
Last month, as part of the Online Entrepreneur column, I shared some of Return Pathâs organizational techniques we use to stay innovative as we grow. In this article, Iâll talk about the process weâre using in our product management-and-development teams to stay innovative.
The Innovation Process at Return Path
As we grew bigger, we decided to formalize our process for bringing new products to market. In our early days we brought a lot of new products to market with less formal process but also with more limited resources. We did well innovating one product at a time without that kind of process largely because we had a group of experienced team members. As the team grew, we knew we had to be more systematic about how we innovated to get less experienced product managers and developers up to speed and having an impact quickly.
We had a few key objectives when designing the process:
âą We wanted to fail fast – We had a lot of new product ideas that seemed like good ones. We wanted a process that allowed us to quickly determine which ideas were actually good.
âą We wanted to get substantial customer feedback into the process early – Weâd always involved clients in new product decisions, but generally only at the âconceptâ phase. So weâd ask something like âWould you like it if we could do this thing for you?â which often elicited a âSure, sounds cool.â And then weâd go off and build it. We wanted a process that instead would let us get feedback on features, function, service levels and pricing as we were going so we could modify and adjust what we were building based on that iterative feedback.
âą We wanted to make sure we could sell what we could build before we spent a lot of time building it – Weâd had a few âbuild it and they will comeâ projects in the past where the customers didnât come. This is where the ongoing feedback was crucial.
The Process
We stole a lot of our process from some of the leading thinkers in the âLean Startupâ space â particularly Gary Blanksâ Four Steps to the Epiphany and Randy Komisarâs Getting to Plan B. The still-evolving process we developed has four stages:
Stage 1: Confirm Need
Key Elements
âą Understand economic value and size of problem through intense client Interaction
âą Briefly define the size of opportunity and rough feasibility estimate â maybe with basic mockups
âą Key Question: Is the need valid? If yes, go on. If no, abandon project or re-work the value proposition.
Stage 2: Develop Concept
Key Elements
âą Create a high fidelity prototype of product and have clients review both concept and pricing model
âą Where applicable, use data analysis to test feasibility of product concept
âą Draft a more detailed estimate of effort and attractiveness, basically a business model
âą Key Question: Is the concept Valid? If yes, go on. If no, abandon project.
Stage 3: Pilot
Key Elements
âą Build “minimum viable product” and sell (or free beta test with agreed to post beta price) with intense client interaction and feedback
âą Develop a marketing and sales approach
âą Develop a support approach
âą Update the business model with incremental investment requirements
âą Preparation of data for case studies
âą Key Question: Is project feasible? If yes, go on. If no, abandon project or go back to an earlier stage and re-work the concept.
Stage 4: Full Development and Launch
Key Elements
âą Take client feedback from Pilot and apply to General Availability product
âą Create support tools required
âą Create sales collateral, white papers, lead generation programs, case studies and PR plan.
âą Train internal teams to sell and service.
âą Update business model with incremental investment required
âą Go forth and prosper
There are a several things to note about this process that weâve found to be particularly useful:
âą A high fidelity prototype is the key to getting great customer feedback â You get more quality feedback when you show them something that looks like the envisioned end product than talking to them about the concept. Our prototypes are not functional (they donât pull from the databases that sit behind them) but are very realistic HTML mockups of most products.
âą Selling the minimum viable product (MVP) is where the rubber meets the road â We have learned the most about salability and support requirements of new products by building an MVP product and trying to sell it.
âą Test âWhat must be true?â during the âDevelop Conceptâ and âPilot Phasesâ â When you start developing a new product, you need to know the high risk things that must be true (e.g., if youâre planning to sell through a channel, the channel must be willing and able to sell). We make a list of those things that must be true and track those in weekly team meetings.
âą This is a very cross functional process and should have a dedicated team â This kind of work cannot be done off the side of your desk. The team needs to be focused just on the new product.
While not without bumps, our team has found this process very successful in allowing us to stay nimble even as we become a much larger organization. As I mentioned in Part 1, our goal is really to leverage the strengths of a big company while not losing the many advantages of smaller, more flexible organizations.
Five Misperceptions of the CCO Role
This post was inspired by Startup CXO and was originally published by Techstars on The Line.
If youâre new to the Chief Customer Officer role, weâd like to share some advice we wish we had learned earlier in our careers. There are a few common misconceptions about customers and the service organization. If you donât realize these as misperceptions, you can spend a lot of time dealing with issues that are not real, but perceived. We have identified five of these common misperceptions, although we are sure there are more.
Misperception #1: The service organization fully controls churn (customer attrition)
In a lot of organizations youâll see the service organization be measured solely on customer churn. If you really think about it, there are many elements that come into play that impact churn, including
- How the customer is sold
- The quality of the product
- How easy it is to onboard the customer
- How easy it is to use the product
- How easy it is for the customer to understand what kind of value theyâre getting out of the product
Of course, the service functions do have a critical role, but theyâre not the only functions in a company that impact churn. The responsibility for churn also lies with sales, engineering, marketing, and other teams. One reason why you need a C-level senior person in charge of all service operations is because you need someone who understands the customer experience broadly and that person has to work cross-functionally to ensure customer retention.
Misperception #2: The service organization is just a cost center
In many businesses, if a function isnât generating new revenue, itâs seen as âsecond class.â From our perspective revenue retained is revenue gained and the service organization has a big impact on retaining revenue. In addition, the account management portion of a service organization is often in charge of up-sale and cross-sale opportunities which can be huge areas of growth. CCOs should work within their company to alter that misperception of service as a cost center because the service organization can have a huge impact on revenues.
Misperception #3: Service teams should focus on responding to defections
Iâve recently found a situation where the customer success team is built to focus on the clients who have raised their hand and said, âI want to leave.â This reactive approach drives low job satisfaction and isnât the âbest and highest useâ of a service teamâs time. By the time a customer is frustrated enough, or isnât seeing the value enough, that they want to leave â youâve missed a window of opportunity. The right focus should be proactively helping customers reach their desired business objectives. If you can do that, most customers will stay. Thatâs the theory behind the rise of the customer success team and thatâs what great companies are doing today.
Misperception #4: Serviceâs job is to âpaper overâ gaps in the product
There is a widespread practice of covering for product issues by throwing service at the problem. That certainly can work, but itâs not optimal. The superior approach is to focus the service team on becoming a trusted advisor for customers, helping those customers achieve their desired outcomes. To do that, the CCO will have to work cross-functionally with the product team, the marketing team, and the sales team to drive a more friction-free customer experience.
Misperception #5: Service is boring and tactical
There is a wide-spread misperception that working in the service organization is boring. Itâs mundane, itâs tactical, it doesnât appeal to people who think strategy is grander than tactics. I donât agree with that at all. A great service organization starts with a strategy. It starts with an understanding of customer segmentation. It includes thinking about the different customer personas and how to define an appropriate and valuable customer experience. That core strategy actually takes a while to develop. Once the strategy takes hold, it is core to driving retention over time. And, while a lot of people perceive that the service organization jobs are boring, or just answering trouble tickets or reacting to client problems, thatâs not the whole role. It is a strategic role as well.
The Chief Customer Officer has a big impact on the success of a company, especially startups and scaleups, and their function touches nearly every aspect of a company. To give your company the best chance of scaling, the Chief Customer Officer should understand, pinpoint, and manage misperceptions so that they can devote their time, energy, and resources to the real problems that help customers.
My new Startup Board Mantra: 1-1-1
Last week, I blogged about Bolsterâs Board Benchmark survey results, which really laid bare the lack of diversity on startup boards. There are signs that this is starting to change slowly — one big one is that of all the board searches we are running at Bolster, about â of them are open to taking on first-time directors; and almost all are committed to increasing diversity on their boards.
This is also something that I would expect to take some time to change. Boards are small. Independent seats arenât necessarily easy to open up. Seats donât turn over often. And they take a while to fill, as CEOs are thorough in their recruitment and selection process.
My new mantra for Startup Boards is simple: 1-1-1.
1 member of the management team.
Then 1 independent for every 1 investor.
Simply put, this means you should grow from having 1, to 2, to 3 independent directors as your board grows from 3, to 5, to 7 members.
Here are four tough conversations you may have to have along the way, with some suggestions on how to navigate them. All of these conversations need to come with a point of view of why independence and diversity matters to your company, a lot of empathy, and appreciation for the value the person brings to the table.
The conversation with your co-founder about only one founder/executive on the board. This one will be the most personally difficult, since you likely have a strong personal bond. Expect to hear things like âArenât we partners in this business?â and âHow come my vote doesnât count?â Just let your co-founder know that while of course theyâre a key partner, the company has a limited number of board seats to fill — each one is a golden opportunity to get an outside perspective on your business and get really good mindshare of an industry expert and create a new brand ambassador. You already have 100% of the mindshare and ambassadorship your co-founder has to offer. You can make that person a board observer, you can make sure theyâre in all the key board conversations, and you can even give the person some special voting right in your charter or by-laws if you need to. But do not put them on the board. Itâs obviously easier to do this from the beginning as opposed to removing them from the board down the road, but at least try to have the conversation up front that someday, itâs going to happen (note this could be a different dynamic if the person is a founder but no longer active in the business).
The conversation with an existing VC about leaving the board to make room for new investors or an independent. This one will be less personally difficult but will require you to be very artful since the VC is likely contractually given a board seat – meaning youâll have to get them to give it up voluntarily. You may also want to align with another VC on your board to help the conversation or process along. Depending on the circumstances at hand, your key points of logic could be one of the following: (1) you donât own as high a percentage of the company as you once did, and Iâd like to make room for the new lead investor to join the board without compromising our independents or making the board too big; or (2) Iâd like to replace you with an independent director who brings operator perspective and comes from an underrepresented group – itâs important to me that we build a diverse board, and itâs not great that we have don’t have gender or race/ethnic diversity on our board in this day and age. As with a co-founder, you could change this personâs designation to a board observer so theyâre still present for key conversations, youâre not changing their Information Rights, which are likely contractually given in your charter, and if required, you can give the person or firm some sort of special voting rights if thereâs something they can no longer block (but which they have a contractual right to block) by losing their board vote.
The conversation with a new potential investor about not taking a board seat. If you have a big new lead investor writing a $40mm check into a growth round, you may not have a leg to stand on. But new investors who write smaller checks as you get larger, who might only be buying a 5-10% stake in the business…there, you might have some wiggle room to negotiate. Your best bet is to do it early in the process before you have a term sheet, and do it as an exploratory conversation. Otherwise, your talking points are the same as talking to an existing investor above. Investors are starting to realize the power of a diverse board, and may be open to this conversation. Some are making this a proactive practice, notably two of my long-time investors and directors Fred Wilson and Brad Feld (and some of their partners at Union Square Ventures and Foundry Group) — and those investors have also been willing to mentor the new, first time board members once they join.
The conversation with an existing independent director about leaving the board when their term is up. Perhaps you have an existing independent director who is not adding to the diversity of the board, but you already have a full board. Or perhaps your existing independent director isnât doing a great job or has grown stale in the role. Once a director is fully vested, you have an easy opportunity to thank them graciously and publicly for their service, extend their option exercise period multiple years, and affirm that theyâll still take your call if you need help on something. You should set this expectation up front when you give the director their initial grant. If they ask why youâre not renewing them, you can simply say something like âWeâd like to add some fresh outside perspective to the team.â One thing to think about, particularly for early stage companies, is only giving new directors a 1 or 2-year vest on their first option grant, so you can make sure theyâre a high value director…and so you can have the option of an easy exit (or re-up) in a shorter period of time than a traditional 4-year vest.
The net of it is that as CEO of a venture-backed company, you wield an enormous amount of (mostly soft) power around the composition of your board – probably a lot more than you think. You just have to wield that power gently and focus on the importance of building a diverse board in terms of both experience and demographics.
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.
Does size matter?
Does size matter?
It is the age-old question — are you a more important person at your company if you have more people reporting into you?  Most people, unfortunately, say yes.
I’m going to assume the origins of this are political and military. The kingdom with more subjects takes over the smaller kingdom. The general has more stars on his lapel than the colonel. And it may be true for some of those same reasons in more traditional companies. If you have a large team or department, you have control over more of the business and potentially more of the opportunities. The CEO will want to hear from you, maybe even the Board.
In smaller organizations, and in more contemporary organization structures that are flatter (either structurally or culturally) or more dynamic/fluid, I’m not sure this rule holds any more. Yes, sure, a 50-person team is going to get some attention, and the ability to lead that team effectively is incredibly important and not easy to come by. But that doesn’t mean that in order to be important, or get recognized, or be well-compensated, you must lead that large team.
Consider the superstar enterprise sales rep or BD person. This person is likely an individual contributor. But this person might well be the most highly paid person in the company. And becoming a sales manager might be a mistake — the qualities that make for a great rep are quite different from those that make a great sales manager. We have lost a few great sales reps over the years for this very reason. They begged for the promotion to manager, we couldn’t say no (or we would lose them), then they bombed as sales managers and refused as a matter of pride to go back to being a sales rep.
Or consider a superstar engineer, also often an individual contributor. This person may be able to write code at 10x the rate and quality of the rest of the engineering organization and can create a massive amount of value that way. But everything I wrote above about sales reps moving into management holds for engineers as well. Â The main difference we’ve seen over the years is that on average, successful engineers don’t want to move into management roles at the same rate as successful sales reps.
It’s certainly true that you can’t build a company consisting of only individual contributors. But that isn’t my point. My point is that you can add as much value to your organization, and have as much financial or psychic reward, by being a rock star individual contributor as you can by being the leader of a large team.
Selecting Your Investors
Selecting Your Investors
Fred Wilson has been a venture investor and director in Return Path since 2000, first with Flatiron Partners and then with Union Square Ventures. Weâve been through a lot of wars together. In a couple of weeks, he and I are team-teaching a class in Entrepreneurship at Princeton, and the professor gave us the assignment of writing two pairs of blog posts to tee up discussion with the class. This is the first oneâŠand Fredâs post on the other side of the topic is here. Next week, weâll address the topic of building a successful CEO-VC partnership once itâs established.
If youâre fortunate enough to have built a really strong early stage company, you will find yourself in the position of being able to pick from a number of potential venture investors. The better your business and the more exciting the space youâre trying to tackleâŠthe more investors youâll find circling around you. Here are a few tips for ending up with the best long-term partner as an investor.
- Look for VC portfolios that have a lot of âlikeâ companies (B2B, B2C, media, tech, etc.). One of the strongest points of value that venture investors bring to the table is pattern matching, and you can maximize that by making sure the investor you end up with has seen a multitude of companies like yours
- Check references carefully. Donât be shy â prospective VCs are checking up on you, and you have every right to do the same with them.  When Fred first invested in Return Path, he gave me a list of every CEO he had ever worked with and said âCall anyone you want on the list. Some of these guys I worked well with, a couple I fired.  But theyâll all tell you what Iâm like to work with.â First prize is the VC who volunteers this information. Second prize is the VC who gives it to you when you ask. A distant third price is the VC who gives you two names and ask for time to prep them ahead of time
- Focus on the person first, the firm second. Having a good venture firm is important. But at the end of the day, youâre dealing with a person first and foremost. Thatâs who will be on your board giving you advice and measuring your performance. Better to have an A person at a B firm than a B person at an A firm (of course, even better to have an A person at an A firm). This means two things â selecting a great person to be on your Board, and also making sure you end up with a person who has enough juice within his or her firm to get things done on your behalf with the partnership
- Always have a BATNA (Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement â a fancy way of saying Plan B).  This is probably the most important piece of advice I can offer.  And this is true of any negotiation, not just a term sheet.  Itâs often said that good choices come from good options. Sometimes, you have to walk away from a deal where youâve invested a lot of time, energy, and emotion.  But as an entrepreneur, you can mitigate the number of times you have to walk away by developing good alternative options to a particular deal. That way, if one option doesnât pan out as youâd hoped, another very good option is waiting in the wings. If you negotiate with two or three VCs, youâll have a great backstop and wonât let the emotional investment in the deal get the best of you.  Yes, you will spend twice to three times the amount of time on the process, but itâs well worth it
- Donât be swayed by promises of help. Iâve heard VCs say it all. Theyâll help you fill out your management team. Theyâll get you customers. Theyâll help with your back office. Theyâre loaded up with value-add. If venture investor has staffed his or her firm with support personnel who are available free of charge to portfolio companies (this does happen once in a while), then assume your VC will be as helpful as possible, but no more or less helpful than another investor
- Handle the negotiation yourself, in person as much as possible. The best way to get to know someoneâs character is to negotiate a deal with him. This gives you lots of opportunities to look for reasonableness, and to see if he or she is able to focus on the big picture. The biggest warning sign to look for is someone who says things like âyou have to agree on this term, because this is how we always do deals.â By the way, how you handle yourself in this negotiation is equally important. The financing is the line of demarcation between you and the VC courting each other, and the VC joining your board and effectively becoming your boss
- âPay upâ for quality and for a clean security. There is a world of difference between good VCs and bad VCs (both the individual partners and the firms) that will ultimately have a lot to do with how successful your company can become.  The quality of your VC isnât more important than the quality of your product or your team, but itâs right up there.  But â and this is an important but â you should expect to âpayâ for quality in the form of slightly weaker terms (whether valuation or type of security).  Similarly, Iâd always sacrifice valuation for a clean security.  Everyone always thinks that price/valuation is the most important thing to maximize in a deal. However, the structure of the security can be much more important in the long run.  Whether the VCs buy 33 percent of your company or 30 percent of your company is much less important than having a capital structure thatâs easy for an outsider to understand and want to join
As with all things, there are probably another dozen items that could be added to this list, but itâs a good starting point. However, your more important role as CEO is to put your company in a position where you can select from a number of high quality investors, so start there!
Two Ears, One Mouth
Two Ears, One Mouth
Brace yourself for a post full of pithy quotes from others. Iâm not sure how we missed this one when drafted our original values statements at Return Path years ago, because itâs always been central to the way we operate. We arenât just the worldâs biggest data-driven email intelligence company â we are a data-driven organization. So another one of our newly written Core Values is:
Two Ears, One Mouth: We ask, listen, learn, and collect data. We engage in constructive debate to reach conclusions and move forward together.
Iâm not sure which of my colleagues first said this to me, but Iâm going to give credit to Anita, our long-time head of sales (almost a decade!), for saying âThereâs a reason God gave you two ears and one mouth.â The meaning? Listen (and look, I suppose) more than you speak.
This value really has two distinct components to it, though theyâre closely related. First, we always look to collect data when we need to understand a situation or make a decision. To quote our long-time investor, Board member, and friend Brad Feld, âthe plural of anecdote is not data.â That means we are always looking far and wide for facts, numbers, and multiple perspectives. Some of us are better than others at relying on second-hand data and observations from trusted colleagues, which means often times, many of us are collecting data ourselves to inform a situation. But regardless, we always start with the data.
Second, we use data as the foundation of our decision-making process. I heard another great quote about this once, which is something like, âIf we are going to make a decision based on data, the data will make the decision for us. If weâre going to use opinion, letâs use mine.â And while Iâm at it, Iâll throw in another great quote from Winston Churchill who famously said âFacts are stubborn things.â While we do have constructive debates all across our organization, those debates are driven by facts, not emotion.
Finally, when this value says that âwe move forward together,â that is the combination of the points in the two prior paragraphs. People may have different opinions entering a debate. Even with a lot of data behind a decision, they may still have different opinions after a decision has been made. But we work very deliberately to all support a decision, even one we may disagree with, and we are able to do that, move forward together, and explain the decision to the organization, because the decision is data-driven.
Learning Through Extremes, or Shifting Gears part II
OnlyOnce is 8 years old this week, which is hard to believe. So it is fitting that I got halfway through a new post this morning, then a little alarm bell went off in my head that I had written something similar before. Â The topic is around moderation versus extremes. Â I first wrote about this topic in 2005 in a post called Shifting Gears but I have thought about it more recently in a different way.Â
Instead of phrasing this as a struggle between “Meden Agan,” which is Greek for “everything in moderation,” and “Gor oder gornischt,” which is Yiddish for “all or nothing,” I’d like to focus here on the value of occasionally going to an extreme. And that value is around learning. Let me give three examples:
-We were having a buy vs. build conversation at work a few months back as we were considering an acquisition. Some people in the room had an emotional bias towards buy; others toward build. So we framed the debate this way: Â “Would you acquire the company for $1 instead of building the technology?” (Yes!) “Would you buy it for $10mm?” (No!) Taking the conversation to the extremes allowed us to focus on a rational answer as opposed to an emotional one — where is the price where buy and build are in equilibrium?
–Â With my colleague Andrea, I completed a 5-day juice fast a few weeks back. It was good and interesting on a bunch of levels. But I came away with two really interesting learnings that I only got from being extreme for a few days: Â I like fruits and veggies (and veggie juices) a lot and don’t consume enough of them; and I sleep MUCH better at night on a relatively empty stomach
– Last year, I overhauled my “operating system” at work to stop interviewing all candidates for all jobs and stop doing 90-day 1:1 meetings with all new employees as well. I wrote about this in Retail, No Longer. What finally convinced me to do it was something one of my colleagues said to me, which was “Will you be able to keep these activities up when we have 500 employees?” (No) “So what is the difference if you stop now and save time vs. stopping in 6 months?” Thinking about the extreme got me to realize the full spectrum
It may not be great to live at the extremes, but I find extremes to be great places to learn and develop a good sense of what normal or moderate or real is.
Second Lap Around the Track
I wrote a little bit about the experience of being a multi-time founder in this post where I talked about the value of things like a hand-picked team, hand-picked cap table, experience that drives efficient execution, and starting with a clean slate. The second lap around the track (and third, and fourth) is really different from the first lap.
Based on what we do at Bolster, and my role currently, I spend a lot of time meeting with CEOs of all sizes and stages and sectors of company, as they’re all clients or prospects or people I’m coaching. Lately, I’ve noticed a distinct set of work and behaviors and desires among CEOs who are multi-time founders and operators that is different from those same things in first-time founders. Not every single multi-time founder has every single one of these traits, but they all have a majority of them and form a pretty common pattern. I’ve noticed this with non-profit founders as well as for-profit ones.
- They have an Easier Time Recruiting team members and investors. That may sound obvious, but there are significant benefits to it. They also tend to have Much Cleaner Cap Tables, because they lived the horrors of a messy cap table when they exited their last company without thinking about that topic ahead of time!
- They have a Big Vision. Once you’ve had an exit, whether successful or not or somewhere in between, you don’t want to focus on something niche. You want to go all-in on a big problem.
- They are interested in creating Portfolio Effect. A number of repeat founders want to start multiple business at the same time, are actually doing it, or are creating some kind of studio model that creates multiple businesses. Once you have a big team, a track record with investors, and a field of deep expertise, it’s interesting to think about creating multiple related paths (and hedges) to success.
- They are driving to be Efficient in Execution and Find Leverage wherever they can. One multi-time founder I talked to a few weeks ago was bragging to me about how few people he has in his finance team. At Bolster, our objective is to build a big business on a small team, looking for opportunities to use our own network of fractional and project-based team members wherever possible.
- They are Impatient for Progress. While being mindful that good software takes time to build no matter how many engineers you hire, repeat founders tend to have fleshed out their vision a couple layers deep and are always eager to be 6 months ahead of where they are in terms of execution, which leads me to the next point, that…
- They are equally Impatient for Success (or Failure). More than just wanting to be 6 months ahead of where they are in seeing their vision come to life, they want to get to “an answer” as soon as possible. No one likes wasting time, but when you’re on your second or third company, you value your time differently. As a friend of mine says in a sales context, “The best answer you can get from a prospect is ‘yes’ – the second best answer you can get is a fast ‘no’.” The same logic applies to success in your nth startup. Succeed or Fail – you want to find out fast.
- They are Calm and Comfortable in Their Own Skin. At this stage in the game, repeat founders are more relaxed. They know their strengths and weaknesses and have no problem bringing in people to shore those things up. They know that if things don’t work out with this one, there’s more to life.
- They are stronger at Self Management. They are more efficient. They exercise more. They sleep more. They spend more time with family and friends. They work fewer hours.
Anyone else ever notice these traits, or others, in repeat founders?