April 08, 2007

Lessons from Entrepreneurs & VCs

Our last class in Entrepreneurship & VC featured all three of the instructors - Andy Rachleff (co-founder of Benchmark Capital), Peter Wendell (founder of Sierra Ventures), and Eric Schmidt (CEO of Google) - individually talking for 45 minutes, giving us parting advice. It was one of the best single classes I've ever had. I thought I would share here some of my key take-aways.

- Successful people listen. You have two ears and one mouth. Use them in that ratio. You learn more when you listen than when you talk.

- Putting on "the cloak" of leadership. A large part of your role is to inspire and motivate your employees, and people will look to you for confidence. If you were on a plane with engine problems, you don't want the pilot to say "I am exploring a number of options and hope that...", you want him to say, "I will do whatever it takes to land this plane."

- The importance of passion. When Warren Buffet finds people to run his business, his key criteria is to find somebody who would do the job whether they would get paid or not.

- Just when you think you've got it 100% right, you can be taken down. Look no further than what happened to JetBlue in February. In January, a mistake like this by JetBlue was almost unthinkable.

- People who are lucky make their own luck. And you only make your own luck by staying in the game.

- You will only be as good as the people you will recruit. Media & culture celebrate individuals, but teams succeed.

- The best scientists can explain complex issues in simple terms. Pretty good scientists can explain complex issues in complex terms.

- A's hire A's. B's hire C's. Always strive to hire people better than you are.

- Be a clear, fair manager. For example, when speaking to a business unit leader that isn't succeeding, say: "I want a strategy to win in 1-page and the objectives we need to hit each quarter to reach them."

- When considering a business:

- Look for change. What inflection point are you taking advantage of? Without change, there is rarely opportunity.

- Always look for the 80/20. 80 percent of the value is delivered by 20 percent of the product/service. Focus on that 20 percent.

- Does is answer a real pain? Who is the user and what is their pain point?

- Just keep selling. Not a bad default strategy to communicate to your team.

- Be humble. The markets are brutal to those who are arrogant.

- Understand what you don't do well. Surround yourself with people and resources that can do these things well.

- Practice self-discipline. Set targets, have timetables, have clear unambiguous goals. Life passes quickly - days, weeks, months, years, a lifetime.

- Be yourself. In group settings, you usually serve the group best by thoughtfully expressing exactly what you are thinking. Not necessarily what the group wants to hear.

- You've got to give trust to get trust. Treat people as you would want to be treated. Sometimes people take advantage of you. That's fine, don't do business with them again.

- Shoot for the moon.To be successful, don't follow the pack. If you want to win, don't hedge.

December 11, 2006

Entrepreneur Idol at Stanford GSB

Eidol3

Last week we had a great event at the GSB organized by Charles River Ventures and my friend John. It was called Entrepreneur Idol (see event video here). Sixty MBA students gave 30-60 second pitches of a business idea to a panel of judges, including George, Bill Tai and Susan Wu . It was a lot of fun and a great idea for an event. Check out the video above. And yes, I did give a pitch, but unfortunately didn't make it into the top three.

December 05, 2006

Ideas vs. Opportunities

Ideas

Serial entrepreneur and angel investor Audrey McLean was part of an entrepreneurs panel today in our Formation of New Ventures class. She had a great sound-bite concerning aspiring-entrepreneurs coming to her with 'ideas'.

"I don't care about ideas, I care about opportunities. You need to know what problem you're solving and which people you're solving it for. And are there enough people who have the problem who will pay enough to make a sustainable business."

November 15, 2006

At the Stanford TechNet Summit

We get some great speakers at Stanford, but this event line-up I'm currently at is ridiculous! Check out the list of speakers below. Man, sometimes I really love this school... Starts in 30 minutes.

2006 TechNet Innovation Summit at Stanford University

America's top leaders in technology will discuss emerging industry trends as well as the public policies that will shape the future of our nation. Moderated by award-winning journalist Charlie Rose, this event will be taped for broadcast and will feature:

* Brian Halla, CEO, National Semiconductor
* Reed Hastings, Founder and CEO, Netflix
* Jerry Yang, Founder, Yahoo!
* John Doerr, Partner, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
* Scott McNealy, Chairman, Sun Microsystems
* Bill Gates, Chairman, Microsoft

October 24, 2006

Meebo founders on iinnovate

Check out the new iinnovate episode, where Julio and I interview the founders of Meebo.

October 15, 2006

Market Trumps Team

In my amazing "Formation of New Ventures" class, Andy Rachleff (co-founder of Benchmark Capital) discussed which matters more in a new company, market or team.

"When great management meets lousy market, market wins.
When lousy management meets great market, market wins.
When great management meets great market, something magic happens."

Note that andy talks more about that issue in the iinnovate interview.