Title: 25%20things%20I%20learned%20about%20building%20companies
125 things I learned about building companies
2Agenda
- To entrepreneurs tips on building companies
- To VCs tips on funding companies
- To both What to do with all that money
3Tips for entrepreneurs
4Do you have what it takes to start a company?
- Q Why are most startup companies started by
mediocre people? - A The really smart ones know better!
5The single biggest mistake you can make when
starting or running a company and how to avoid it
- Hiring the wrong CEO
- (like yourself)
6Nobodys Perfect
- No perfect CEOs
- No perfect engineers
- No perfect VCs,
- The whole trick is getting people to work
effectively together to complement each other - You might be a better CEO than your Board may
believe - When you lose the respect of your team, its time
to throw in the towel
7The single most important thing to get right
- Hiring great people
- Dont settle for mediocrity just because you are
in a hurry youll regret it later - Most via referral from people you know
- A great company should have all A players
- Dont hire smart people who dont fit the culture
- Steves two strikes and youre out rule of
hiring
8Behavior changes are hard
- Hire for attitude, ability train for skills
- Behaviors are impossible to change so you are
destined to repeat the same mistakes - Surround yourself with people who fix that and
get outside your box - Example I got Ray Lane and Colin Powell to
invest in Propel
9Serial entrepreneurs win if still have the
passion
- Are you committed?
- Are you prepared to do whatever it takes to win?
- Do you believe in your vision?
- Can you adapt quickly to new data?
10Michael Robertsons success secrets
- If at first you dont succeed, try, try again
- It doesnt hurt to be
- in the right place
- at the right time
- with the right product
11Trust your (wifes) judgment
- My wife didnt like any of the people who
eventually didnt work out - Just because your whole board of directors is in
favor of something, doesnt mean its a good idea - Example Disney acquiring Infoseek
- Just because your whole board of directors is
against something, it doesnt mean they are right - Example firing the CEO
12Smart people can disagree
- Myth Given the same information, really good
smart people will come to the same conclusion - Reality Bush vs. Gore
13Keep your strategies simple
- Example
- The 2 step TOP SECRET strategy AOL uses to makes
the big money... - Make it really EASY to sign up
- Make it really HARD to cancel
14How pick a VC
- Do you like them?
- Do they like you?
- Do they understand your space?
- Do you trust them?
- Can they add value beyond money?
- Have they proven this with other investments in
your space?
15Boards
- Most board members have no clue what is really
going on in a company until it is blatently
obvious, I.e., typically the board members are
the last to figure out that the company is in
trouble - Big companies tend to have the worst boards
large and ineffective and reluctant to make hard
decisions - Putting known brand names on your board is no
guarantee of success - Example I went after Ben Horowitz for his
leadership skills, track record, and insightful
questions, not for his name
16Be really careful picking your board
- You want Board members who arent afraid of
finding out what is really going on - and supportive of efforts to effect change
- Most board members are reluctant to fire the CEO
or re-constitute the board, - even when the writing on the wall is clear to
everyone - VC board members tend to have influence beyond
their own board seat so be VERY careful picking
the partner for your board - This is because the VC will often bring in other
board members that will tend to give the VC the
benefit of the doubt in a conflict because the VC
is seen as independent
17Many VCs have unjustified big egos
- They think they are experts in building and
guiding companies even though they have no track
record of having walked the talk themselves - If the partnership is successful, they typically
all believe they can do no wrong - If they are a brand name, they may be even
worse (believing their own PR) - Ive personally heard of situation where senior
VC partners at brand name VC companies back the
wrong guy. It happens more often than you think. - Example David Dorman at PointCast was not the
right fit
18Dealing with a hostile board
- Try in this order
- Logic
- Persuasion
- Force
19When its time to replace a board member
- Lie
- Withhold information
- Reward incompetence
- Pass on confidential information
- Act outside of the parameters agreed to by the
Board - VERY difficult to get an accurate reference check
on a VC - I had one VC partner who did all these and hes
still a General Partner at a leading VC firm.
20Why VCs are like lemmings
- Wed be interested in investing if you had
another VC already committed - Its very risky for a VC to be the first to
commit to a deal - Nobody wants to risk being wrong.
- Its much safer to validate someone elses
decision because you have someone to hide behind.
21Valuation
- Valuation is set based on what people will pay,
not on some formula - Expect to see a 21 range of valuations offered
- This isnt a science!
- What people will pay is determined by
- How well you tell your story and how convincing
you are - Your team
- The market opportunity
- Whether they like you
- Your track record
- Current market conditions
22Fairness opinions
- They dont have to live with the results you do
- Their BIAS is to make the deal happen
- A fairness opinion is not a guarantee of
fairness it is just an opinion that can be
justified in some way - Just because you have a fairness opinion and
board concurrence, doesnt mean you should do the
deal - Best indicator research the results of past
mergers with the acquired company
23Tips for VCs
24Valuation
- Ignore valuation
- John Doerr
25My biggest mistake
- Telling Tim Koogle to take a hike because I
thought 20M for Yahoo! was overvalued
26Is Yahoo overvalued?
- If you have to ask, you just dont get it.
27My second biggest mistake
- Laughing when eBay said Infoseek could acquire
eBay for only 1B
28My third biggest mistake
- Telling Michael Robertson to pound sand when he
wanted 20M for his company (later renamed
mp3.com) - (nowadays, Im not looking like such an idiot)
29Why Im not a VC
- That should now be obviousI have poor judgment
- So I stick with what Im good at.
30Why my investor list for Propel has only 1 VC
- I wanted independent validation from
professional investors that Propel was a good
idea - Some VCs wouldnt pay the valuation I wanted
- But the partners at leading VCs who did the due
diligence invested personally! My advice If you
like everything else dont let valuation stand in
your way. An 80 chance at a 100X return in 2
years isnt so bad. - Some VCs only would invest if they got a big
enough chunk - That makes sense since VC isnt scalable. But
experienced wealthy proven entrepreneurs wont
play that game because the VC value added is
awfully expensive. - Having a VC on your board is risky
31What to do when a founder and a CEO dont mesh
- The natural assumption is that the founder is the
problem - My experience has been that in most cases, this
is a leading indicator that you goofed and hired
the wrong CEO - Another leading indicator good people who have
left cite the CEO as the reason they left - You need to roll up your sleeves and find out
what is really going on
32The perfect investmentcan you guess???
- Recurring revenue stream
- High margins/High ASP/Low cost producer
- underpaid workforce, overpriced service, no COGs,
low overhead - Large user base
- No competition
- Established, well known brand name
- Never goes out of style
- No manufacturing or shipping costs
- No need to worry about customer satisfaction
- They pay nothing in taxes
33What to do with all that dough
34(No Transcript)
35Some ideas
- House
- Vacation
- Private Jet
- Wife
- Computer gear
- Lifetime subscription to Worth
- OK so now what?
36Giving it away is enlightened self interest
- Giving is not an obligation
- Giving is an opportunity to benefit US yourself,
your family, your friends, your community, the
world - with tax advantaged dollars that otherwise
would go to the government - Pick cause(s) that interest you and make a
difference - Examples
- I give to asteroid discovery because it may save
my life (and the lives of 6B other people I dont
know) - I give to nuclear disarmament because it may save
my life - Ive gotten 2 pieces of legislation passed in
California to clean up the air because if we can
prove it can be done here, it can be done
elsewhere and the threat of global warming is
real. That affects us all.
37The 1 solution
- We set aside 1 of Propels equity to donate to
charity after we IPO - Any company can do this easily
- Its a win/win because our employees are at least
1 more productive and it helps at least 1 in
recruiting - VCs should encourage every company they invest
in to do this
38You can donate when you are locked up
- One of the best times to donate is after IPO when
your stock is locked up - Even though you cant sell your shares, you can
make a donation and the charity can short the
stock - You lock in your tax deduction, the charity locks
in your donation, and you become an instant
philanthropist
39Larry 1 A true story
- Worth 2B at IPO in December, 1999
- I suggested he put 10 into a charitable
foundation now and decide what to do with it
later - He said I dont have time
- All he had to decide was a name and the amount
- He is was worth 200M 4 months later
40Larry 2A true story
- Still a billionaire
- Gave 100M to a noted scientist and asked him to
fund cutting edge research on aging - Hes the worlds second largest funder of aging
research - He funds some of the best research in this area
- The discoveries will benefit Larry (and everyone
else too)
41Giving strategy
- Make periodic small donations as your stock rises
- Many notable philanthropists regret not having
taken advantage of this strategy. Dont make the
same mistake.