diff --git "a/data/PMarcaBlogs.txt" "b/data/PMarcaBlogs.txt" new file mode 100644--- /dev/null +++ "b/data/PMarcaBlogs.txt" @@ -0,0 +1,5119 @@ + +The Pmarca Blog Archives +(select posts from 2007-2009) +Marc Andreessen +copyright: Andreessen Horowitz +cover design: Jessica Hagy +produced using: Pressbooks +Contents +THE PMARCA GUIDE TO STARTUPS +Part 1: Why not to do a startup 2 +Part 2: When the VCs say "no" 10 +Part 3: "But I don't know any VCs!" 18 +Part 4: The only thing that matters 25 +Part 5: The Moby Dick theory of big companies 33 +Part 6: How much funding is too little? Too much? 41 +Part 7: Why a startup's initial business plan doesn't +matter that much +49 +THE PMARCA GUIDE TO HIRING +Part 8: Hiring, managing, promoting, and Dring +executives +54 +Part 9: How to hire a professional CEO 68 +How to hire the best people you've ever worked +with +69 +THE PMARCA GUIDE TO BIG COMPANIES +Part 1: Turnaround! 82 +Part 2: Retaining great people 86 +THE PMARCA GUIDE TO CAREER, PRODUCTIVITY, +AND SOME OTHER THINGS +Introduction 97 +Part 1: Opportunity 99 +Part 2: Skills and education 107 +Part 3: Where to go and why 120 +The Pmarca Guide to Personal Productivity 127 +PSYCHOLOGY AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP +The Psychology of Entrepreneurial Misjudgment: +Biases 1-6 +142 +Age and the Entrepreneur: Some data 154 +Luck and the entrepreneur: The four kinds of luck 162 +Serial Entrepreneurs 168 +THE BACK PAGES +Top 10 science Dction novelists of the '00s ... so far +(June 2007) +173 +Bubbles on the brain (October 2009) 180 +OK, you're right, it IS a bubble (October 2009) 186 +The Pmarca Guide to +Startups +Part 1: Why not to do a startup +In this series of posts I will walk through some of my accumulated knowledge and experience in building high-tech startups. +My speciXc experience is from three companies I have cofounded: Netscape, sold to America Online in 1998 for $4.2 +billion; Opsware (formerly Loudcloud), a public soaware company with an approximately $1 billion market cap; and now +Ning, a new, private consumer Internet company. +But more generally, I’ve been fortunate enough to be involved +in and exposed to a broad range of other startups — maybe 40 +or 50 in enough detail to know what I’m talking about — since +arriving in Silicon Valley in 1994: as a board member, as an angel +investor, as an advisor, as a friend of various founders, and as a +participant in various venture capital funds. +This series will focus on lessons learned from this entire crosssection of Silicon Valley startups — so don’t think that anything +I am talking about is referring to one of my own companies: +most likely when I talk about a scenario I have seen or something I have experienced, it is from some other startup that I +am not naming but was involved with some other way than as a +founder. +Finally, much of my perspective is based on Silicon Valley and +the environment that we have here — the culture, the people, +the venture capital base, and so on. Some of it will travel well +to other regions and countries, some probably will not. Caveat +emptor. +With all that out of the way, let’s start at the beginning: why not +to do a startup. +Startups, even in the wake of the crash of 2000, have become +imbued with a real mystique — you read a lot about how great +it is to do a startup, how much fun it is, what with the getting to +invent the future, all the free meals, foosball tables, and all the +rest. +Now, it is true that there are a lot of great things about doing a +startup. They include, in my experience: +Most fundamentally, the opportunity to be in control of your own +destiny — you get to succeed or fail on your own, and you don’t +have some bozo telling you what to do. For a certain kind of personality, this alone is reason enough to do a startup. +The opportunity to create something new — the proverbial blank +sheet of paper. You have the ability — actually, the obligation +— to imagine a product that does not yet exist and bring it +into existence, without any of the constraints normally faced by +larger companies. +The opportunity to have an impact on the world — to give people +a new way to communicate, a new way to share information, a +new way to work together, or anything else you can think of that +would make the world a better place. Think it should be easier +for low-income people to borrow money? Start Prosper. Think +television should be opened up to an inXnite number of channels? Start Joost. Think that computers should be based on Unix +and open standards and not proprietary technology? Start Sun. +The ability to create your ideal culture and work with a dream team +of people you get to assemble yourself. Want your culture to be +based on people who have fun every day and enjoy working +together? Or, are hyper-competitive both in work and play? Or, +are super-focused on creating innovative new rocket science +Part 1: Why not to do a startup 3 +technologies? Or, are global in perspective from day one? You +get to choose, and to build your culture and team to suit. +And Xnally, money — startups done right can of course be highly +lucrative. This is not just an issue of personal greed — when +things go right, your team and employees will themselves do +very well and will be able to support their families, send their +kids to college, and realize their dreams, and that’s really cool. +And if you’re really lucky, you as the entrepreneur can ultimately make profound philanthropic gias that change society +for the better. +However, there are many more reasons to not do a startup. +First, and most importantly, realize that a startup puts you on +an emotional rollercoaster unlike anything you have ever experienced. +You will Yip rapidly from a day in which you are euphorically +convinced you are going to own the world, to a day in which +doom seems only weeks away and you feel completely ruined, +and back again. +Over and over and over. +And I’m talking about what happens to stable entrepreneurs. +There is so much uncertainty and so much risk around practically everything you are doing. Will the product ship on time? +Will it be fast enough? Will it have too many bugs? Will it be +easy to use? Will anyone use it? Will your competitor beat you +to market? Will you get any press coverage? Will anyone invest +in the company? Will that key new engineer join? Will your key +user interface designer quit and go to Google? And on and on +and on… +Some days things will go really well and some things will go +really poorly. And the level of stress that you’re under generally +will magnify those transient data points into incredible highs +and unbelievable lows at whiplash speed and huge magnitude. +Sound like fun? +4 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Second, in a startup, absolutely nothing happens unless you make it +happen. +This one throws both founders and employees new to startups. +In an established company — no matter how poorly run or +demoralized — things happen. They just happen. People come +in to work. Code gets written. User interfaces get designed. +Servers get provisioned. Markets get analyzed. Pricing gets studied and determined. Sales calls get made. The wastebaskets get +emptied. And so on. +A startup has none of the established systems, rhythms, infrastructure that any established company has. +In a startup it is very easy for the code to not get written, for the +user interfaces to not get designed… for people to not come into +work… and for the wastebaskets to not get emptied. +You as the founder have to put all of these systems and routines +and habits in place and get everyone actually rowing — forget +even about rowing in the right direction: just rowing at all is +hard enough at the start. +And until you do, absolutely nothing happens. +Unless, of course, you do it yourself. +Have fun emptying those wastebaskets. +Third, you get told no — a lot. +Unless you’ve spent time in sales, you are probably not familiar +with being told no a lot. +It’s not so much fun. +Go watch Death of a Salesman and then Glengarry Glen Ross. +That’s roughly what it’s like. +You’re going to get told no by potential employees, potential +investors, potential customers, potential partners, reporters, +analysts… +Part 1: Why not to do a startup 5 +Over and over and over. +And when you do get a “yes”, half the time you’ll get a call two +days later and it’ll turn out the answer has morphed into “no”. +Better start working on your fake smile. +Fourth, hiring is a huge pain in the ass. +You will be amazed how many windowshoppers you’ll deal with. +A lot of people think they want to be part of a startup, but when +the time comes to leave their cushy job at HP or Apple, they +Yinch — and stay. +Going through the recruiting process and being seduced by a +startup is heady stuW for your typical engineer or midlevel manager at a big company — you get to participate vicariously in the +thrill of a startup without actually having to join or do any of the +hard work. +As a founder of a startup trying to hire your team, you’ll run into +this again and again. +When Jim Clark decided to start a new company in 1994, I was +one of about a dozen people at various Silicon Valley companies +he was talking to about joining him in what became Netscape. +I was the only one who went all the way to saying “yes” (largely +because I was 22 and had no reason not to do it). +The rest Yinched and didn’t do it. +And this was Jim Clark, a legend in the industry who was coming +oW of the most successful company in Silicon Valley in 1994 — +Silicon Graphics Inc. +How easy do you think it’s going to be for you? +Then, once you do get through the windowshoppers and actually hire some people, your success rate on hiring is probably +not going to be higher than 50%, and that’s if you’re good at it. +By that I mean that half or more of the people you hire aren’t +6 The Pmarca Blog Archives +going to work out. They’re going to be too lazy, too slow, easily +rattled, political, bipolar, or psychotic. +And then you have to either live with them, or Xre them. +Which ones of those sounds like fun? +Fiah, God help you, at some point you’re going to have to hire executives. +You think hiring employees is hard and risky — wait until you +start hiring for VP Engineering, VP Marketing, VP Sales, VP HR, +General Counsel, and CFO. +Sixth, the hours. +There’s been a lot of talk in Silicon Valley lately about work/life +balance — about how you should be able to do a startup and +simultaneously live a full and fulXlling outside life. +Now, personally, I have a lot of sympathy for that point of view. +And I try hard in my companies (well, at least my last two companies) to do whatever I can to help make sure that people aren’t +ground down to little tiny spots on the Yoor by the workload +and the hours. +But, it’s really diZcult. +The fact is that startups are incredibly intense experiences and +take a lot out of people in the best of circumstances. +And just because you want people to have work/life balance, it’s +not so easy when you’re close to running out of cash, your product hasn’t shipped yet, your VC is mad at you, and your Kleiner +Perkins-backed competitor in Menlo Park — you know, the one +whose employees’ average age seems to be about 19 — is kicking +your butt. +Which is what it’s going to be like most of the time. +And even if you can help your employees have proper work/life +balance, as a founder you certainly won’t. +Part 1: Why not to do a startup 7 +(In case you were wondering, by the way, the hours do compound the stress.) +Seventh, it’s really easy for the culture of a startup to go sideways. +This combines the Xrst and second items above. +This is the emotional rollercoaster wreaking havoc on not just +you but your whole company. +It takes time for the culture of any company to become “set” — +for the team of people who have come together for the Xrst time +to decide collectively what they’re all about, what they value — +and how they look at challenge and adversity. +In the best case, you get an amazing dynamic of people really +pulling together, supporting one another, and working their collective tails oW in pursuit of a dream. +In the worst case, you end up with widespread, self-reinforcing +bitterness, disillusionment, cynicism, bad morale, contempt for +management, and depression. +And you as the founder have much less inYuence over this than +you’ll think you do. +Guess which way it usually goes. +Eighth, there are lots of X factors that can come along and whup +you right upside the head, and there’s absolutely nothing you +can do about them. +Stock market crashes. +Terrorist attacks. +Natural disasters. +A better funded startup with a more experienced team that’s +been hard at work longer than you have, in stealth mode, that +unexpectedly releases a product that swialy comes to dominate +your market, completely closing oW your opportunity, and you +had no idea they were even working on it. +8 The Pmarca Blog Archives +At best, any given X factor might slam shut the fundraising +window, cause customers to delay or cancel purchases — or, at +worst, shut down your whole company. +Russian mobsters laundering millions of dollars of dirty money +through your service, resulting in the credit card companies +closing you down. +You think I’m joking about that one? +OK, now here’s the best part: +I haven’t even talked about Xguring out what product to build, +building it, taking it to market, and standing out from the crowd. +All the risks in the core activities of what your company actually +does are yet to come, and to be discussed in future posts in this +series. +Part 1: Why not to do a startup 9 +Part 2: When the VCs say "no" +This post is about what to do between when the VCs say “no” to +funding your startup, and when you either change their minds +or Xnd some other path. +I’m going to assume that you’ve done all the basics: developed a +plan and a pitch, decided that venture Xnancing is right for you +and you are right for venture Xnancing, lined up meetings with +properly qualiXed VCs, and made your pitch. +And the answer has come back and it’s “no”. +One “no” doesn’t mean anything — the VC could just be having +a bad day, or she had a bad experience with another company in +your category, or she had a bad experience with another company with a similar name, or she had a bad experience with +another founder who kind of looks like you, or her Mercedes +SLR McLaren’s engine could have blown up on the freeway that +morning — it could be anything. Go meet with more VCs. +If you meet with three VCs and they all say “no”, it could just be +a big coincidence. Go meet with more VCs. +If you meet with Xve, or six, or eight VCs and they all say no, it’s +not a coincidence. +There is something wrong with your plan. +Or, even if there isn’t, there might as well be, because you’re still +not getting funded. +Meeting with more VCs aaer a bunch have said no is probably +a waste of time. Instead, retool your plan — which is what this +post is about. +But Hrst, lay the groundwork to go back in later. +It’s an old — and true — cliche that VCs rarely actually say “no” +— more oaen they say “maybe”, or “not right now”, or “my partners aren’t sure”, or “that’s interesting, let me think about it”. +They do that because they don’t want to invest in your company +given the current facts, but they want to keep the door open in +case the facts change. +And that’s exactly what you want — you want to be able to go +back to them with a new set of facts, and change their minds, +and get to “yes”. +So be sure to take “no” gracefully — politely ask them for feedback (which they probably won’t give you, at least not completely honestly — nobody likes calling someone else’s baby +ugly — believe me, I’ve done it), thank them for their time, and +ask if you can call them again if things change. +Trust me — they’d much rather be saying “yes” than “no” — +they need all the good investments they can get. +Second, consider the environment. +Being told “no” by VCs in 1999 is a lot diWerent than being told +“no” in 2002. +If you were told “no” in 1999, I’m sure you’re a wonderful person and you have huge potential and your mother loves you +very much, but your plan really was seriously Yawed. +If you were told “no” in 2002, you probably actually were the +next Google, but most of the VCs were hiding under their desks +and they just missed it. +In my opinion, we’re now in a much more rational environment +than either of those extremes — a lot of good plans are being +funded, along with some bad ones, but not all the bad ones. +Part 2: When the VCs say "no" 11 +I’ll proceed under the assumption that we’re in normal times. +But if things get truly euphoric or truly funereal again, the rest +of this post will probably not be very helpful — in either case. +Third, retool your plan. +This is the hard part — changing the facts of your plan and what +you are trying to do, to make your company more fundable. +To describe the dimensions that you should consider as you +contemplate retooling your plan, let me introduce the onion +theory of risk. +If you’re an investor, you look at the risk around an investment +as if it’s an onion. Just like you peel an onion and remove each +layer in turn, risk in a startup investment comes in layers that +get peeled away — reduced — one by one. +Your challenge as an entrepreneur trying to raise venture capital +is to keep peeling layers of risk oW of your particular onion until +the VCs say “yes” — until the risk in your startup is reduced to +the point where investing in your startup doesn’t look terrifying +and merely looks risky. +What are the layers of risk for a high-tech +startup? +It depends on the startup, but here are some of the common +ones: +Founder risk — does the startup have the right founding team? +A common founding team might include a great technologist, +plus someone who can run the company, at least to start. Is the +technologist really all that? Is the business person capable of +running the company? Is the business person missing from the +team altogether? Is it a business person or business people with +no technologist, and therefore virtually unfundable? +Market risk — is there a market for the product (using the term +product and service interchangeably)? Will anyone want it? Will +they pay for it? How much will they pay? How do we know? +12 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Competition risk — are there too many other startups already +doing this? Is this startup suZciently diWerentiated from the +other startups, and also diWerentiated from any large incumbents? +Timing risk — is it too early? Is it too late? +Financing risk — aaer we invest in this round, how many additional rounds of Xnancing will be required for the company to +become proXtable, and what will the dollar total be? How certain +are we about these estimates? How do we know? +Marketing risk — will this startup be able to cut through the +noise? How much will marketing cost? Do the economics of customer acquisition — the cost to acquire a customer, and the revenue that customer will generate — work? +Distribution risk — does this startup need certain distribution +partners to succeed? Will it be able to get them? How? (For +example, this is a common problem with mobile startups that +need deals with major mobile carriers to succeed.) +Technology risk — can the product be built? Does it involve rocket +science — or an equivalent, like artiXcial intelligence or natural +language processing? Are there fundamental breakthroughs that +need to happen? If so, how certain are we that they will happen, +or that this team will be able to make them? +Product risk — even assuming the product can in theory be built, +can this team build it? +Hiring risk — what positions does the startup need to hire for in +order to execute its plan? E.g. a startup planning to build a highscale web service will need a VP of Operations — will the founding team be able to hire a good one? +Location risk — where is the startup located? Can it hire the right +talent in that location? And will I as the VC need to drive more +than 20 minutes in my Mercedes SLR McLaren to get there? +You know, when you stack up all these layers and look at the +Part 2: When the VCs say "no" 13 +full onion, you realize it’s amazing that any venture investments +ever get made. +What you need to do is take a hard-headed look at each of these +risks — and any others that are speciXc to your startup and its +category — and put yourself in the VC’s shoes: what could this +startup do to minimize or eliminate enough of these risks to +make the company fundable? +Then do those things. +This isn’t very much fun, since it will probably involve making +signiXcant changes to your plan, but look on the bright side: it’s +excellent practice for when your company ultimately goes public and has to Xle an S1 registration statement with the SEC, in +which you have to itemize in huge detail every conceivable risk +and bad thing that could ever possibly happen to you, up to and +including global warming. +Some ideas on reducing risk +Founder risk — the tough one. If you’re the technologist on a +founding team with a business person, you have to consider the +possibility that the VCs don’t think the business person is strong +enough to be the founding CEO. Or vice versa, maybe they +think the technologist isn’t strong enough to build the product. +You may have to swap out one or more founders, and/or add +one or more founders. +I put this one right up front because it can be a huge issue and +the odds of someone being honest with you about it in the speciXc are not that high. +Market risk — you probably need to validate the market, at a +practical level. Sometimes more detailed and analytical market +research will solve the problem, but more oaen you actually +need to go get some customers to demonstrate that the market +exists. Preferably, paying customers. Or at least credible +prospects who will talk to VCs to validate the market hypothesis. +Competition risk — is your diWerentiation really sharp enough? +14 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Rethink this one from the ground up. Lots of startups do not +have strong enough diWerentiation out of the gate, even aaer +they get funded. If you don’t have a really solid idea as to how +you’re dramatically diWerent from or advantaged over known +and unknown competitors, you might not want to start a company in the Xrst place. +Two additional points on competition risk that founders routinely screw up in VC pitches: +Never, ever say that you have no competitors. That signals +naivete. Great markets draw competitors, and so if you really +have no competition, you must not be in a great market. Even +if you really believe you have no competitors, create a competitive landscape slide with adjacent companies in related market +segments and be ready to talk crisply about how you are like and +unlike those adjacent companies. +And never, ever say your market projections indicate you’re +going to be hugely successful if you get only 2% of your +(extremely large) market. That also signals naivete. If you’re +going aaer 2% of a large market, that means the presumably +larger companies that are going to take the other 98% are going +to kill you. You have to have a theory for how you’re going to get +a signiXcantly higher market share than 2%. (I pick 2% because +that’s the cliche, but if you’re a VC, you’ve probably heard someone use it.) +Timing risk — the only thing to do here is to make more +progress, and demonstrate that you’re not too early or too late. +Getting customers in the bag is the most valuable thing you can +do on this one. +Financing risk — rethink very carefully how much money you +will need to raise aaer this round of Xnancing, and try to change +the plan in plausible ways to require less money. For example, +only serve Cristal at your launch party, and not Remy Martin +“Black Pearl” Louis XIII cognac. +Marketing risk — Xrst, make sure your diWerentiation is superPart 2: When the VCs say "no" 15 +sharp, because without that, you probably won’t be able to stand +out from the noise. +Then, model out your customer acquisition economics in detail +and make sure that you can show how you’ll get more revenue +from a customer than it will cost in sales and marketing expense +to acquire that customer. This is a common problem for startups pursuing the small business market, for example. +If it turns out you need a lot of money in absolute terms for +marketing, look for alternate approaches — perhaps guerilla +marketing, or some form of virality. +Distribution risk — this is a very tough one — if your plan has +distribution risk, which is to say you need a key distribution +partner to make it work, personally I’d recommend shelving the +plan and doing something else. Otherwise, you may need to go +get the distribution deal before you can raise money, which is +almost impossible. +Technology risk — there’s only one way around this, which is to +build the product, or at least get it to beta, and then raise money. +Product risk — same answer — build it. +Hiring risk — the best way to address this is to Xgure out which +position/positions the VCs are worried about, and add it/them +to the founding team. This will mean additional dilution for +you, but it’s probably the only way to solve the problem. +Location risk — this is the one you’re really not going to like. If +you’re not in a major center of entrepreneurialism and you’re +having trouble raising money, you probably need to move. +There’s a reason why most Xlms get made in Los Angeles, and +there’s a reason most venture-backed US tech startups happen +in Silicon Valley and handful of other places — that’s where the +money is. You can start a company wherever you want, but you +may not be able to get it funded there. +You’ll notice that a lot of what you may need to do is kick the ball +further down the road — make more progress against your plan +before you raise venture capital. +16 The Pmarca Blog Archives +This obviously raises the issue of how you’re supposed to do +that before you’ve raised money. +Try to raise angel money, or bootstrap oW of initial customers +or consulting contracts, or work on it aaer hours while keeping +your current job, or quit your job and live oW of credit cards for +a while. +Lots of entrepreneurs have done these things and succeeded — +and of course, many have failed. +Nobody said this would be easy. +The most valuable thing you can do is actually build your product. When in doubt, focus on that. +The next most valuable thing you can do is get customers — or, +for a consumer Internet service, establish a pattern of page view +growth. +The whole theory of venture capital is that VCs are investing +in risk — another term for venture capital is “risk capital” — +but the reality is that VCs will only take on so much risk, and +the best thing you can do to optimize your chances of raising +money is to take out risk. +Peel away at the onion. +Then, once you’ve done that, recraa the pitch around the new +facts. Go do the pitches again. And repeat as necessary. +And to end on a happy note, remember that “yes” can turn into +“no” at any point up until the cash hits your company’s bank +account. +So keep your options open all the way to the end. +Part 2: When the VCs say "no" 17 +Part 3: "But I don't know any VCs!" +In my last post in this series, When the VCs say “no”, I discussed +what to do once you have been turned down for venture funding for the Xrst time. +However, this presupposes you’ve been able to pitch VCs in the +Xrst place. What if you have a startup for which you’d like to +raise venture funding, but you don’t know any VCs? +I can certainly sympathize with this problem — when I was in +college working on Mosaic at the University of Illinois, the term +“venture capital” might as well have been “klaatu barada nikto” +for all I knew. I had never met a venture capitalist, no venture +capitalist had ever talked to me, and I wouldn’t have recognized +one if I’d stumbled over his checkbook on the sidewalk. Without +Jim Clark, I’m not at all certain I would have been able to raise +money to start a company like Netscape, had it even occured to +me to start a company in the Xrst place. +The starting point for raising money from VCs when you don’t +know any VCs is to realize that VCs work mostly through referrals — they hear about a promising startup or entrepreneur +from someone they have worked with before, like another +entrepreneur, an executive or engineer at one of the startups +they have funded, or an angel investor with whom they have +previously co-invested. +The reason for this is simply the math: any individual VC can +only fund a few companies per year, and for every one she +funds, she probably meets with 15 or 20, and there are hundreds +more that would like to meet with her that she doesn’t possibly +have time to meet with. She has to rely on her network to help +her screen the hundreds down to 15 or 20, so she can spend her +time Xnding the right one out of the 15 or 20. +Therefore, submitting a business plan “over the transom”, or +unsolicited, to a venture Xrm is likely to amount to just as much +as submitting a screenplay “over the transom” to a Hollywood +talent agency — that is, precisely nothing. +So the primary trick becomes getting yourself into a position +where you’re one of the 15 or 20 a particular venture capitalist +is meeting with based on referrals from her network, not one of +the hundreds of people who don’t come recommended by anyone and whom she has no intention of meeting. +But before you think about doing that, the Xrst order of business +is to (paraphrasing for a family audience) “have your stuG +together” — create and develop your plan, your presentation, +and your supporting materials so that when you do meet with a +VC, you impress her right out of the gate as bringing her a fundable startup founded by someone who knows what he — that’s +you — is doing. +My recommendation is to read up on all the things you should +do to put together a really eWective business plan and presentation, and then pretend you have already been turned down once +— then go back to my last post and go through all the diWerent +things you should anticipate and Xx before you actually do walk +through the door. +One of the reason VCs only meet with startups through their +networks is because too many of the hundreds of other startups +that they could meet with come across as amateurish and uninformed, and therefore not fundable, when they do take meetings with them. So you have a big opportunity to cut through +the noise by making a great Hrst impression — which requires +really thinking things through ahead of time and doing all the +hard work up front to really make your pitch and plan a masterpiece. +Part 3: "But I don't know any VCs!" 19 +Working backwards from that, the best thing you can walk in +with is a working product. Or, if you can’t get to a working +product without raising venture funding, then at least a beta +or prototype of some form — a web site that works but hasn’t +launched, or a soaware mockup with partial functionality, +or something. And of course it’s even better if you walk in with +existing “traction” of some form — customers, beta customers, +some evidence of adoption by Internet users, whatever is appropriate for your particular startup. +With a working product that could be the foundation of a fundable startup, you have a much better chance of getting funded +once you do get in the door. Back to my rule of thumb from +the last post: when in doubt, work on the product. +Failing a working product and ideally customers or users, be +sure to have as Ieshed out a presentation as you possibly can +— including mockups, screenshots, market analyses, customer +research such as interviews with real prospects, and the like. +Don’t bother with a long detailed written business plan. Most +VCs will either fund a startup based on a Yeshed out Powerpoint +presentation of about 20 slides, or they won’t fund it at all. +Corollary: any VC who requires a long detailed written business +plan is probably not the right VC to be working with. +Next: qualify, qualify, qualify. Do extensive research on venture capitalists and Xnd the ones who focus on the sector relevant to your startup. It is completely counterproductive to +everyone involved for you to pitch a health care VC on a consumer Internet startup, or vice versa. Individual VCs are usually +quite focused in the kinds of companies they are looking for, +and identifying those VCs and screening out all the others is +absolutely key. +Now, on to developing contacts +The best way to develop contacts with VCs, in my opinion, is to +work at a venture-backed startup, kick butt, get promoted, and +network the whole way. +20 The Pmarca Blog Archives +If you can’t get hired by a venture-backed startup right now, +work at a well-regarded large tech company that employs a lot +of people like Google or Apple, gain experience, and then go to +work at a venture-backed startup, kick butt, get promoted, and +network the whole way. +And if you can’t get hired by a well-regarded large tech company, go get a bachelor’s or master’s degree at a major research +university from which well-regarded large tech companies regularly recruit, then work at a well-regarded large tech company +that employs a lot of people like Google or Apple, gain experience, and then go to work at a venture-backed startup, kick butt, +get promoted, and network the whole way. +I sound like I’m joking, but I’m completely serious — this is the +path taken by many venture-backed entrepreneurs I know. +Some alternate techniques that don’t take +quite as long +If you’re still in school, immediately transfer to, or plan on +going to graduate school at, a large research university with +well-known connections to the venture capital community, like +Stanford or MIT. +Graduate students at Stanford are directly responsible for such +companies as Sun, Cisco, Yahoo, and Google, so needless to say, +Silicon Valley VCs are continually on the prowl on the Stanford +engineering campus for the next Jerry Yang or Larry Page. +(In contrast, the University of Illinois, where I went to school, is +mostly prowled by mutant cold-weather cows.) +Alternately, jump all over Y Combinator. This program, created by entrepreneur Paul Graham and his partners, funds +early-stage startups in an organized program in Silicon Valley +and Boston and then makes sure the good ones get in front of +venture capitalists for follow-on funding. It’s a great idea and a +huge opportunity for the people who participate in it. +Part 3: "But I don't know any VCs!" 21 +Read VC blogs — read them all, and read them very very carefully. VCs who blog are doing entrepreneurs a huge service both +in conveying highly useful information as well as frequently +putting themselves out there to be contacted by entrepreneurs +in various ways including email, comments, and even uploaded +podcasts. Each VC is diWerent in terms of how she wants to +engage with people online, but by all means read as many VC +blogs as you can and interact with as many of them as you can +in appropriate ways. +At the very least you will start to get a really good sense of which +VCs who blog are interested in which kinds of companies. +At best, a VC blogger may encourage her readers to communicate with her in various ways, including soliciting email pitches +in certain startup categories of interest to her. +Fred Wilson of Union Square Ventures has even gone so far as +to encourage entrepreneurs to record and upload audio pitches +for new ventures so he can listen to them on his IPod. I don’t +know if he’s still doing that, but it’s worth reading his blog and +Xnding out. +Along those lines, some VCs are aggressive early adopters of +new forms of communication and interaction — current examples being Facebook and Twitter. Observationally, when a VC is +exploring a new communiation medium like Facebook or Twitter, she can be more interested in interacting with various people over that new medium than she might otherwise be. So, +when such a new thing comes out — like, hint hint, Facebook or +Twitter — jump all over it, see which VCs are using it, and interact with them that way — sensibly, of course. +More generally, it’s a good idea for entrepreneurs who are +looking for funding to blog — about their startup, about interesting things going on, about their point of view. This puts an +entrepreneur in the Yow of conversation, which can lead to +interaction with VCs through the normal medium of blogging. +And, when a VC does decide to take a look at you and your company, she can read your blog to get a sense of who you are and +22 The Pmarca Blog Archives +how you think. It’s another great opportunity to put forward a +fantastic Xrst impression. +Finally, if you are a programmer, I highly encourage you, if you +have time, to create or contribute to a meaningful open source +project. The open source movement is an amazing opportunity +for programmers all over the world to not only build useful +soaware that lots of people can use, but also build their own reputations completely apart from whatever day jobs they happen +to have. Being able to email a VC and say, “I’m the creator of +open source program X which has 50,000 users worldwide, and +I want to tell you about my new startup” is a lot more eWective +than your normal pitch. +If you engage in a set of these techniques over time, +you should be able to interact with at least a few VCs in ways that +they Xnd useful and that might lead to further conversations +about funding, or even introductions to other VCs. +I’m personally hoping that the next Google comes out of a VC +being sent an email pitch aaer the entrepreneur read that VC’s +blog. Then every VC on the planet will suddenly start blogging, +overnight. +If none of those ideas work for you +Your alternatives in reverse (declining) order of preference for +funding are, in my view: angel funding, bootstrapping via consulting contracts or early customers, keeping your day job and +working on your startup in your spare time, and credit card +debt. +Angel funding — funding from individuals who like to invest +small amounts of money in early-stage startups, oaen before +VCs come in — can be a great way to go since good angels know +good VCs and will be eager to introduce you to them so that +your company goes on to be successful for the angel as well as +for you. +Part 3: "But I don't know any VCs!" 23 +This of course begs the question of how to raise angel money, +which is another topic altogether! +I am not encouraging the other three alternatives — bootstrapping, working on it part time, or credit card debt. Each has +serious problems. But, it is easy to name highly successful entrepreneurs who have followed each of those paths, so they are +worth noting. +24 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Part 4: The only thing that matters +This post is all about the only thing that matters for a new +startup. +But Xrst, some theory: +If you look at a broad cross-section of startups — say, 30 or 40 +or more; enough to screen out the pure Yukes and look for patterns — two obvious facts will jump out at you. +First obvious fact: there is an incredibly wide divergence of success — some of those startups are insanely successful, some +highly successful, many somewhat successful, and quite a few of +course outright fail. +Second obvious fact: there is an incredibly wide divergence of +caliber and quality for the three core elements of each startup +— team, product, and market. +At any given startup, the team will range from outstanding to +remarkably Yawed; the product will range from a masterpiece +of engineering to barely functional; and the market will range +from booming to comatose. +And so you start to wonder — what correlates the most to success — team, product, or market? Or, more bluntly, what causes +success? And, for those of us who are students of startup failure +— what’s most dangerous: a bad team, a weak product, or a +poor market? +Let’s start by deXning terms. +The caliber of a startup team can be deXned as the suitability of +the CEO, senior staW, engineers, and other key staW relative to +the opportunity in front of them. +You look at a startup and ask, will this team be able to optimally +execute against their opportunity? I focus on eWectiveness as +opposed to experience, since the history of the tech industry is +full of highly successful startups that were staWed primarily by +people who had never “done it before”. +The quality of a startup’s product can be deXned as how impressive the product is to one customer or user who actually uses +it: How easy is the product to use? How feature rich is it? How +fast is it? How extensible is it? How polished is it? How many (or +rather, how few) bugs does it have? +The size of a startup’s market is the the number, and growth +rate, of those customers or users for that product. +(Let’s assume for this discussion that you can make money at +scale — that the cost of acquiring a customer isn’t higher than +the revenue that customer will generate.) +Some people have been objecting to my classiXcation as follows: +“How great can a product be if nobody wants it?” In other words, +isn’t the quality of a product deXned by how appealing it is to +lots of customers? +No. Product quality and market size are completely diWerent. +Here’s the classic scenario: the world’s best soaware application +for an operating system nobody runs. Just ask any soaware +developer targeting the market for BeOS, Amiga, OS/2, or +NeXT applications what the diWerence is between great product +and big market. +So: +If you ask entrepreneurs or VCs which of team, product, or market is most important, many will say team. This is the obvious +26 The Pmarca Blog Archives +answer, in part because in the beginning of a startup, you know +a lot more about the team than you do the product, which hasn’t +been built yet, or the market, which hasn’t been explored yet. +Plus, we’ve all been raised on slogans like “people are our most +important asset” — at least in the US, pro-people sentiments +permeate our culture, ranging from high school self-esteem +programs to the Declaration of Independence’s inalienable +rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness — so the +answer that team is the most important feels right. +And who wants to take the position that people don’t matter? +On the other hand, if you ask engineers, many will say product. +This is a product business, startups invent products, customers +buy and use the products. Apple and Google are the best companies in the industry today because they build the best products. Without the product there is no company. Just try having +a great team and no product, or a great market and no product. +What’s wrong with you? Now let me get back to work on the +product. +Personally, I’ll take the third position — I’ll assert that market is +the most important factor in a startup’s success or failure. +Why? +In a great market — a market with lots of real potential customers — the market pulls product out of the startup. +The market needs to be fulXlled and the market will be fulXlled, +by the Xrst viable product that comes along. +The product doesn’t need to be great; it just has to basically +work. And, the market doesn’t care how good the team is, as +long as the team can produce that viable product. +In short, customers are knocking down your door to get the +product; the main goal is to actually answer the phone and +respond to all the emails from people who want to buy. +Part 4: The only thing that matters 27 +And when you have a great market, the team is remarkably easy +to upgrade on the Yy. +This is the story of search keyword advertising, and Internet +auctions, and TCP/IP routers. +Conversely, in a terrible market, you can have the best product +in the world and an absolutely killer team, and it doesn’t matter — you’re going to fail. +You’ll break your pick for years trying to Xnd customers who +don’t exist for your marvelous product, and your wonderful +team will eventually get demoralized and quit, and your startup +will die. +This is the story of videoconferencing, and workYow soaware, +and micropayments. +In honor of Andy RachleW, formerly of Benchmark Capital, who +crystallized this formulation for me, let me present RachleE’s +Law of Startup Success: +The #1 company-killer is lack of market. +Andy puts it this way: +• When a great team meets a lousy market, market wins. +• When a lousy team meets a great market, market wins. +• When a great team meets a great market, something special +happens. +You can obviously screw up a great market — and that has been +done, and not infrequently — but assuming the team is baseline +competent and the product is fundamentally acceptable, a great +market will tend to equal success and a poor market will tend to +equal failure. Market matters most. +And neither a stellar team nor a fantastic product will redeem a +bad market. +OK, so what? +28 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Well, Hrst question: Since team is the thing you have the most +control over at the start, and everyone wants to have a great +team, what does a great team actually get you? +Hopefully a great team gets you at least an OK product, and ideally a great product. +However, I can name you a bunch of examples of great teams +that totally screwed up their products. Great products are really, +really hard to build. +Hopefully a great team also gets you a great market — but I can +also name you lots of examples of great teams that executed +brilliantly against terrible markets and failed. Markets that don’t +exist don’t care how smart you are. +In my experience, the most frequent case of great team paired +with bad product and/or terrible market is the second- or thirdtime entrepreneur whose Xrst company was a huge success. +People get cocky, and slip up. One highly successful soaware +entrepreneur is burning through something like $80 million in +venture funding in his latest startup and has practically nothing +to show for it except for some great press clippings and a couple of beta customers — because there is virtually no market for +what he is building. +Conversely, I can name you any number of weak teams whose +startups were highly successful due to explosively large markets +for what they were doing. +Finally, to quote Tim Shephard: “A great team is a team that will +always beat a mediocre team, given the same market and product.” +Second question: Can’t great products sometimes create huge +new markets? +Absolutely. +This is a best case scenario, though. +VMWare is the most recent company to have done it — +Part 4: The only thing that matters 29 +VMWare’s product was so profoundly transformative out of the +gate that it catalyzed a whole new movement toward operating +system virtualization, which turns out to be a monster market. +And of course, in this scenario, it also doesn’t really matter +how good your team is, as long as the team is good enough to +develop the product to the baseline level of quality the market +requires and get it fundamentally to market. +Understand I’m not saying that you should shoot low in terms of quality +of team, or that VMWare’s team was not incredibly strong — +it was, and is. I’m saying, bring a product as transformative as +VMWare’s to market and you’re going to succeed, full stop. +Short of that, I wouldn’t count on your product creating a new +market from scratch. +Third question: as a startup founder, what should I do about +all this? +Let’s introduce RachleE’s Corollary of Startup Success: +The only thing that matters is getting to product/market Ft. +Product/market Xt means being in a good market with a product +that can satisfy that market. +You can always feel when product/market Ft isn’t happening. The +customers aren’t quite getting value out of the product, word +of mouth isn’t spreading, usage isn’t growing that fast, press +reviews are kind of “blah”, the sales cycle takes too long, and lots +of deals never close. +And you can always feel product/market Ft when it’s happening. The +customers are buying the product just as fast as you can make it +— or usage is growing just as fast as you can add more servers. +Money from customers is piling up in your company checking +account. You’re hiring sales and customer support staW as fast as +you can. Reporters are calling because they’ve heard about your +hot new thing and they want to talk to you about it. You start +getting entrepreneur of the year awards from Harvard Busi30 The Pmarca Blog Archives +ness School. Investment bankers are staking out your house. You +could eat free for a year at Buck’s. +Lots of startups fail before product/market Ht ever happens. +My contention, in fact, is that they fail because they never get to +product/market Xt. +Carried a step further, I believe that the life of any startup can be +divided into two parts: before product/market Ft (call this “BPMF”) +and aMer product/market Ft (“APMF”). +When you are BPMF, focus obsessively on getting to product/ +market Ht. +Do whatever is required to get to product/market Ht. Including +changing out people, rewriting your product, moving into a different market, telling customers no when you don’t want to, +telling customers yes when you don’t want to, raising that fourth +round of highly dilutive venture capital — whatever is required. +When you get right down to it, you can ignore almost everything else. +I’m not suggesting that you do ignore everything else — just that +judging from what I’ve seen in successful startups, you can. +Whenever you see a successful startup, you see one that has +reached product/market Ht — and usually along the way +screwed up all kinds of other things, from channel model to +pipeline development strategy to marketing plan to press relations to compensation policies to the CEO sleeping with the +venture capitalist. And the startup is still successful. +Conversely, you see a surprising number of really well-run +startups that have all aspects of operations completely buttoned +down, HR policies in place, great sales model, thoroughly +thought-through marketing plan, great interview processes, +outstanding catered food, 30″ monitors for all the programmers, top tier VCs on the board — heading straight oG a cliG +due to not ever Hnding product/market Ht. +Part 4: The only thing that matters 31 +Ironically, once a startup is successful, and you ask the founders +what made it successful, they will usually cite all kinds of things +that had nothing to do with it. People are terrible at understanding causation. But in almost every case, the cause was actually +product/market Xt. +Because, really, what else could it possibly be? +[Editorial note: this post obviously raises way more questions than it +answers. How exactly do you go about getting to product/market Ft if +you don’t hit it right out of the gate? How do you evaluate markets for +size and quality, especially before they’re fully formed? What actually +makes a product “Ft” a market? What role does timing play? How do +you know when to change strategy and go aMer a diEerent market or +build a diEerent product? When do you need to change out some or all +of your team? And why can’t you count on on a great team to build the +right product and Fnd the right market? All these topics will be discussed in future posts in this series.] +32 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Part 5: The Moby Dick theory of big +companies +“There she blows,” was sung out from the mast-head. +“Where away?” demanded the captain. +“Three points oE the lee bow, sir.” +“Raise up your wheel. Steady!” “Steady, sir.” +“Mast-head ahoy! Do you see that whale now?” +“Ay ay, sir! A shoal of Sperm Whales! There she blows! There she breaches!” +“Sing out! sing out every time!” +“Ay Ay, sir! There she blows! there — there — THAR she blows — bowes +— bo-o-os!” +“How far oE?” +“Two miles and a half.” +“Thunder and lightning! so near! Call all hands.” +– J. Ross Browne’s Etchings of a Whaling Cruize, 1846 +There are times in the life of a startup when you have to deal +with big companies. +Maybe you’re looking for a partnership or distribution deal. +Perhaps you want an investment. Sometimes you want a marketing or sales alliance. From time to time you need a big com- +pany’s permission to do something. Or maybe a big company +has approached you and says it wants to buy your startup. +The most important thing you need to know going into any discussion or interaction with a big company is that you’re Captain +Ahab, and the big company is Moby Dick. +“Scarcely had we proceeded two days on the sea, when about sunrise a great many Whales and other monsters of the sea, appeared. +Among the former, one was of a most monstrous size. … This came +towards us, open-mouthed, raising the waves on all sides, and beating the sea before him into a foam.” +— Tooke’s Lucian, “The True History” +When Captain Ahab went in search of the great white whale +Moby Dick, he had absolutely no idea whether he would Xnd +Moby Dick, whether Moby Dick would allow himself to be +found, whether Moby Dick would try to immediately capsize +the ship or instead play cat and mouse, or whether Moby Dick +was oW mating with his giant whale girlfriend. +What happened was entirely up to Moby Dick. +And Captain Ahab would never be able explain to himself or +anyone else why Moby Dick would do whatever it was he’d do. +You’re Captain Ahab, and the big company is Moby Dick. +“Clap eye on Captain Ahab, young man, and thou wilt Xnd that he +has only one leg.” +“What do you mean, sir? Was the other one lost by a whale?” +“Lost by a whale! Young man, come nearer to me: it was devoured, +chewed up, crunched by the monstrousest parmacetty that ever +chipped a boat! — ah, ah!” +— Moby Dick +Here’s why: +The behavior of any big company is largely inexplicable when +viewed from the outside. +34 The Pmarca Blog Archives +I always laugh when someone says, “Microsoa is going to do X”, +or “Google is going to do Y”, or “Yahoo is going to do Z”. +Odds are, nobody inside Microsoa, Google, or Yahoo knows +what Microsoa, Google, or Yahoo is going to do in any given circumstance on any given issue. +Sure, maybe the CEO knows, if the issue is really big, but you’re +probably not dealing at the CEO level, and so that doesn’t matter. +The inside of any big company is a very, very complex system +consisting of many thousands of people, of whom at least hundreds and probably thousands are executives who think they +have some level of decision-making authority. +On any given issue, many people inside the company are going +to get some kind of vote on what happens — maybe 8 people, +maybe 10, 15, 20, sometimes many more. +When I was at IBM in the early 90’s, they had a formal decision +making process called “concurrence” — on any given issue, a +written list of the 50 or so executives from all over the company +who would be aWected by the decision in any way, no matter +how minor, would be assembled, and any one of those executives could “nonconcur” and veto the decision. That’s an +extreme case, but even a non-extreme version of this process — +and all big companies have one; they have to — is mind-bendingly complex to try to understand, even from the inside, let +alone the outside. +“… and the breath of the whale is frequently attended with such an +insupportable smell, as to bring on a disorder of the brain.” +— Ulloa’s South America +You can count on there being a whole host of impinging forces +that will aWect the dynamic of decision-making on any issue at +a big company. +The consensus building process, trade-oWs, quids pro quo, politics, rivalries, arguments, mentorships, revenge for past wrongs, +Part 5: The Moby Dick theory of big companies 35 +turf-building, engineering groups, product managers, product +marketers, sales, corporate marketing, Xnance, HR, legal, channels, business development, the strategy team, the international +divisions, investors, Wall Street analysts, industry analysts, good +press, bad press, press articles being written that you don’t know +about, customers, prospects, lost sales, prospects on the fence, +partners, this quarter’s sales numbers, this quarter’s margins, the +bond rating, the planning meeting that happened last week, the +planning meeting that got cancelled this week, bonus programs, +people joining the company, people leaving the company, people getting Xred by the company, people getting promoted, people getting sidelined, people getting demoted, who’s sleeping +with whom, which dinner party the CEO went to last night, +the guy who prepares the Powerpoint presentation for the staW +meeting accidentally putting your startup’s name in too small a +font to be read from the back of the conference room… +You can’t possibly even identify all the factors that will come to +bear on a big company’s decision, much less try to understand +them, much less try to inYuence them very much at all. +“The larger whales, whalers seldom venture to attack. They stand in +so great dread of some of them, that when out at sea they are afraid +to mention even their names, and carry dung, lime-stone, juniperwood, and some other articles of the same nature in their boats, in +order to terrify and prevent their too near approach.” +— Uno Von Troil’s Letters on Banks’s and Solander’s Voyage to Iceland In 1772 +Back to Moby Dick. +Moby Dick might stalk you for three months, then jump out of +the water and raise a huge ruckus, then vanish for six months, +then come back and beach your whole boat, or alternately give +you the clear shot you need to harpoon his giant butt. +And you’re never going to know why. +A big company might study you for three months, then +approach you and tell you they want to invest in you or partner +with you or buy you, then vanish for six months, then come out +36 The Pmarca Blog Archives +with a directly competitive product that kills you, or alternately +acquire you and make you and your whole team rich. +And you’re never going to know why. +The upside of dealing with a big company is that there’s potentially a ton of whale meat in it for you. +Sorry, mixing my metaphors. The right deal with the right big +company can have a huge impact on a startup’s success. +“And what thing soever besides cometh within the chaos of this +monster’s mouth, be it beast, boat, or stone, down it goes all incontinently that foul great swallow of his, and perisheth in the bottomless gulf of his paunch.” +— Holland’s Plutarch’s Morals +The downside of dealing with a big company is that he can capsize you — maybe by stepping on you in one way or another +and killing you, but more likely by wrapping you up in a bad +partnership that ends up holding you back, or just making you +waste a huge amount of time in meetings and get distracted +from your core mission. +So what to do? +First, don’t do startups that require deals with big companies to +make them successful. +The risk of never getting those deals is way too high, no matter +how hard you are willing to work at it. +And even if you get the deals, they probably won’t work out the +way you hoped. +“‘Stern all!’ exclaimed the mate, as upon turning his head, he saw +the distended jaws of a large Sperm Whale close to the head of the +boat, threatening it with instant destruction; — ‘Stern all, for your +lives!'” +— Wharton the Whale Killer +Second, never assume that a deal with a big company is closed +Part 5: The Moby Dick theory of big companies 37 +until the ink hits the paper and/or the cash hits the company +bank account. +There is always something that can cause a deal that looks like +it’s closed, to suddenly get blown to smithereens — or vanish +without a trace. +At day-break, the three mast-heads were punctually manned +afresh. +“D’ye see him?” cried Ahab aaer allowing a little space for the light +to spread. +“See nothing, sir.” +— Moby Dick +Third, be extremely patient. +Big companies play “hurry up and wait” all the time. In the last +few years I’ve dealt with one big East Coast technology company in particular that has played “hurry up and wait” with me +at least four separate times — including a mandatory immediate cross-country Yight just to have dinner with the #2 executive +— and has never followed through on anything. +If you want a deal with a big company, it is probably going to +take a lot longer to put together than you think. +“My God! Mr. Chace, what is the matter?” I answered, “we have +been stove by a whale.” +— “Narrative of the Shipwreck of the Whale Ship Essex of Nantucket, Which Was Attacked and Finally Destroyed by a Large +Sperm Whale in the PaciXc Ocean” by Owen Chace of Nantucket, +First Mate of Said Vessel, New York, 1821 +Fourth, beware bad deals. +I am thinking of one startup right now that is extremely promising, has great technology and a unique oWering, that did two +big deals early with high-proXle big company partners, and has +become completely hamstrung in its ability to execute on its +core business as a result. +38 The Pmarca Blog Archives +FiLh, never, ever assume a big company will do the obvious +thing. +What is obvious to you — or any outsider — is probably not +obvious on the inside, once all the other factors that are +involved are taken into account. +Sixth, be aware that big companies care a lot more about what +other big companies are doing than what any startup is doing. +Hell, big companies oaen care a lot more about what other big +companies are doing than they care about what their customers +are doing. +Moby Dick cared a lot more about what the other giant white +whales were doing than those annoying little people in that +Yimsy boat. +“The Whale is harpooned to be sure; but bethink you, how you +would manage a powerful unbroken colt, with the mere appliance +of a rope tied to the root of his tail.” +— A Chapter on Whaling in Ribs and Trucks +Seventh, if doing deals with big companies is going to be a key +part of your strategy, be sure to hire a real pro who has done it +before. +Only the best and most experienced whalers had a chance at +taking down Moby Dick. +This is why senior sales and business development people get +paid a lot of money. They’re worth it. +“Oh! Ahab,” cried Starbuck, “not too late is it, even now, the third +day, to desist. See! Moby Dick seeks thee not. It is thou, thou, that +madly seekest him!” +— Moby Dick +Eighth, don’t get obsessed. +Don’t turn into Captain Ahab. +By all means, talk to big companies about all kinds of things, but +Part 5: The Moby Dick theory of big companies 39 +always be ready to have the conversation just drop and to return +to your core business. +Rare is the startup where a deal with a big company leads to success, or lack thereof leads to huge failure. +(However, see also Microsoa and Digital Research circa 1981. +Talk about a huge whale.) +Closing thought: +Diving beneath the settling ship, the whale ran quivering along +its keel; but turning under water, swialy shot to the surface +again, far oW the other bow, but within a few yards of Ahab’s +boat, where, for a time, the whale lay quiescent. +“…Towards thee I roll, thou all-destroying but unconquering whale; +to the last I grapple with thee; from hell’s heart I stab at thee; for +hate’s sake I spit my last breath at thee. Sink all coZns and all +hearses to one common pool! and since neither can be mine, let +me then tow to pieces, while still chasing thee, though tied to thee, +thou damned whale! THUS, I give up the spear!” +The harpoon was darted; the stricken whale Yew forward; with +igniting velocity the line ran through the grooves; — ran foul. Ahab +stooped to clear it; he did clear it; but the Yying turn caught him +round the neck, and voicelessly as Turkish mutes bowstring their +victim, he was shot out of the boat, ere the crew knew he was gone. +–Moby Dick +40 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Part 6: How much funding is too +little? Too much? +In this post, I answer these questions: +How much funding for a startup is too little? +How much funding for a startup is too much? +And how can you know, and what can you do about it? +The Xrst question to ask is, what is the correct, or appropriate, +amount of funding for a startup? +The answer to that question, in my view, is based my theory that +a startup’s life can be divided into two parts — Before Product/ +Market Fit, and AMer Product/Market Fit. +Before Product/Market Fit, a startup should ideally raise at +least enough money to get to Product/Market Fit. +ALer Product/Market Fit, a startup should ideally raise at least +enough money to fully exploit the opportunity in front of it, +and then to get to proXtability while still fully exploiting that +opportunity. +I will further argue that the deXnition of “at least enough +money” in each case should include a substantial amount of +extra money beyond your default plan, so that you can withstand bad surprises. In other words, insurance. This is partic- +ularly true for startups that have not yet achieved Product/ +Market Fit, since you have no real idea how long that will take. +These answers all sound obvious, but in my experience, a surprising number of startups go out to raise funding and do not +have an underlying theory of how much money they are raising +and for precisely what purpose they are raising it. +What if you can’t raise that much money at +once? +Obviously, many startups Xnd that they cannot raise enough +money at one time to accomplish these objectives — but I +believe this is still the correct underlying theory for how much +money a startup should raise and around which you should orient your thinking. +If you are Before Product/Market Fit and you can’t raise +enough money in one shot to get to Product/Market Fit, then +you will need get as far as you can on each round and demonstrate progress towards Product/Market Fit when you raise each +new round. +If you are ALer Product/Market Fit and you can’t raise enough +money in one shot to fully exploit your opportunity, you have +a high-class problem and will probably — but not deXnitely — +Xnd that it gets continually easier to raise new money as you +need it. +What if you don’t want to raise that much +money at once? +You can argue you should raise a smaller amount of money at +a time, because if you are making progress — either BPMF or +APMF — you can raise the rest of the money you need later, at +a higher valuation, and give away less of the company. +This is the reason some entrepreneurs who can raise a lot of +money choose to hold back. +42 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Here’s why you shouldn’t do that: +What are the consequences of not raising enough money? +Not raising enough money risks the survival of your company, +for the following reasons: +First, you may have — and probably will have — unanticipated +setbacks within your business. +Maybe a new product release slips, or you have unexpected +quality issues, or one of your major customers goes bankrupt, or +a challenging new competitor emerges, or you get sued by a big +company for patent infringement, or you lose a key engineer. +Second, the funding window may not be open when you need +more money. +Sometimes investors are highly enthusiastic about funding new +businesses, and sometimes they’re just not. +When they’re not — when the “window is shut”, as the saying +goes — it is very hard to convince them otherwise, even though +those are many of the best times to invest in startups because +of the prevailing atmosphere of fear and dread that is holding +everyone else back. +Those of us who were in startups that lived through 2001-2003 +know exactly what this can be like. +Third, something completely unanticipated, and bad, might +happen. +Another major terrorist attack is the one that I frankly worry +about the most. A superbug. All-out war in the Middle East. +North Korea demonstrating the ability to launch a true nucleartipped ICBM. Giant Yaming meteorites. Such worst-case scenarios will not only close the funding window, they might keep +it closed for a long time. +Funny story: it turns out that a lot of Internet business models +from the late 90’s that looked silly at the time actually work +Part 6: How much funding is too little? Too much? 43 +really well — either in their original form or with some tweaking. +And there are quite a few startups from the late 90’s that are +doing just great today — examples being OpenTable (which is +about to go public) and TellMe (which recently sold itself to +Microsoa for $800 million), and my own company Opsware +— which would be bankrupt today if we hadn’t raised a ton of +money when we could, and instead just did its Xrst $100 million +revenue year and has a roughly $1 billion public market value. +I’ll go so far as to say that the big diWerence between the startups +from that era that are doing well today versus the ones that no +longer exist, is that the former group raised a ton of money +when they could, and the latter did not. +So how much money should I raise? +In general, as much as you can. Without giving away control of +your company, and without being insane. +Entrepreneurs who try to play it too aggressive and hold back +on raising money when they can because they think they can +raise it later occasionally do very well, but are gambling their +whole company on that strategy in addition to all the normal +startup risks. +Suppose you raise a lot of money and you do really well. You’ll +be really happy and make a lot of money, even if you don’t make +quite as much money as if you had rolled the dice and raised +less money up front. +Suppose you don’t raise a lot of money when you can and it +backXres. You lose your company, and you’ll be really, really sad. +Is it really worth that risk? +There is one additional consequence to raising a lot of money +that you should bear in mind, although it is more important for +some companies than others. +44 The Pmarca Blog Archives +That is liquidation preference. In the scenario where your +company ultimately gets acquired: the more money you raise +from outside investors, the higher the acquisition price has to be +for the founders and employees to make money on top of the +initial payout to the investors. +In other words, raising a lot of money can make it much harder +to eWectively sell your company for less than a very high price, +which you may not be able to get when the time comes. +If you are convinced that your company is going to get bought, +and you don’t think the purchase price will be that high, then +raising less money is a good idea purely in terms of optimizing +for your own Xnancial outcome. However, that strategy has lots +of other risks and will be addressed in another entertaining post, +to be entitled “Why building to Yip is a bad idea”. +Taking these factors into account, though, in a normal scenario, +raising more money rather than less usually makes sense, +since you are buying yourself insurance against both internal +and external potential bad events — and that is more important than worrying too much about dilution or liquidation preference. +How much money is too much? +There are downside consequences to raising too much money. +I already discussed two of them — possibly incremental dilution +(which I dismissed as a real concern in most situations), and possibly excessively high liquidation preference (which should be +monitored but not obsessed over). +The big downside consequence to too much money, though, +is cultural corrosion. +You don’t have to be in this industry very long before you run +into the startup that has raised a ton of money and has become +infected with a culture of complacency, laziness, and arrogance. +Raising a ton of money feels really good — you feel like you’ve +Part 6: How much funding is too little? Too much? 45 +done something, that you’ve accomplished something, that +you’re successful when a lot of other people weren’t. +And of course, none of those things are true. +Raising money is never an accomplishment in and of itself — +it just raises the stakes for all the hard work you would have had +to do anyway: actually building your business. +Some signs of cultural corrosion caused by raising too much +money: +• Hiring too many people — slows everything down and makes +it much harder for you to react and change. You are almost +certainly setting yourself up for layoWs in the future, even if +you are successful, because you probably won’t accurately +allocate the hiring among functions for what you will really +need as your business grows. +• Lazy management culture — it is easy for a management +culture to get set where the manager’s job is simply to hire +people, and then every other aspect of management suWers, +with potentially disastrous long-term consequences to +morale and eWectiveness. +• Engineering team bloat — another side eWect of hiring too +many people; it’s very easy for engineering teams to get too +large, and it happens very fast. And then the “Mythical Man +Month” eWect kicks in and everything slows to a crawl, your +best people get frustrated and quit, and you’re in huge +trouble. +• Lack of focus on product and customers — it’s a lot easier to +not be completely obsessed with your product and your +customers when you have a lot of money in the bank and +don’t have to worry about your doors closing imminently. +• Too many salespeople too soon — out selling a product that +isn’t quite ready yet, hasn’t yet achieved Product/Market Fit +— alienating early adopters and making it much harder to go +back when the product does get right. +• Product schedule slippage — what’s the urgency? We have all +46 The Pmarca Blog Archives +this cash! Creating a golden opportunity for a smaller, +scrappier startup to come along and kick your rear. +So what should you do if you do raise a lot of money? +As my old boss Jim Barksdale used to say, the main thing is to keep +the main thing the main thing — be just as focused on product and +customers when you raise a lot of money as you would be if you +hadn’t raised a lot of money. +Easy to say, hard to do, but worth it. +Continue to run as lean as you can, bank as much of the money +as possible, and save it for a rainy day — or a nuclear winter. +Tell everyone inside the company, over and over and over, until +they can’t stand it anymore, and then tell them some more, +that raising money does not count as an accomplishment and that you +haven’t actually done anything yet other than raise the stakes +and increase the pressure. +Illustrate that point by staying as scrappy as possible on material +items — oZce space, furniture, etc. The two areas to splurge, +in my opinion, are big-screen monitors and ergonomic oZce +chairs. Other than that, it should be Ikea all the way. +The easiest way to lose control of your spending when you raise +too much money is to hire too many people. The second easiest +way is to pay people too much. Worry more about the Xrst one +than the second one; more people multiply spending a lot faster +than a few raises. +Generally speaking, act like you haven’t raised nearly as much money +as you actually have — in how you talk, act, and spend. +In particular, pay close attention to deadlines. The easiest thing to +go wrong when you raise a lot of money is that suddenly things +don’t seem so urgent anymore. Oh, they are. Competitors still +lurk behind every bush and every tree, metaphorically speaking. Keeping moving fast if you want to survive. +There are certain startups that raised an excessive amount of money, +Part 6: How much funding is too little? Too much? 47 +proceeded to spend it like drunken sailors, and went on to become +hugely successful. Odds are, you’re not them. Don’t bet your company on it. +There are a lot more startups that raised an excessive amount of +money, burned through it, and went under. +Remember Geocast? General Magic? Microunity? HAL? Trilogy +Systems? +Exactly. +48 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Part 7: Why a startup's initial +business plan doesn't matter that +much +A startup’s initial business plan doesn’t matter that much, +because it is very hard to determine up front exactly what combination of product and market will result in success. +By deXnition you will be doing something new, in a world that is +a very uncertain place. You are simply probably not going to know +whether your initial idea will work as a product and a business, or +not. And you will probably have to rapidly evolve your plan — +possibly every aspect of it — as you go. +(The military has a saying that expresses the same concept — +“No battle plan ever survives contact with the enemy.” In this +case, your enemy is the world at large.) +It is therefore much more important for a startup to aggressively +seek out a big market, and product/market Ft within that market, once +the startup is up and running, than it is to try to plan out what +you are going to do in great detail ahead of time. +The history of successful startups is quite clear on this topic. +Normally I would simply point to Microsoa, which started as +a programming tools company before IBM all but forced Bill +Gates to go into the operating system business, or Oracle, which +was a consultancy for the CIA before Larry Ellison decided to +productize the relational database, or Intel, which was a much +smaller company focused on the memory chip market until the +Japanese onslaught of the mid-80’s forced Andy Grove to switch +focus to CPUs. +However, I’ve recently been reading Randall Stross’s marvelous +book about Thomas Edison, The Wizard of Menlo Park. +Edison’s Xrst commercially viable breakthrough invention was +the phonograph — the forerunner to what you kids know as +the record player, the turntable, the Walkman, the CD player, +and the IPod. Edison went on, of course, to become one of the +greatest inventors and innovators of all time. +As our story begins, Edison, an unknown inventor running his +own startup, is focused on developing better hardware for telegraph operators. He is particularly focused on equipment for +telegraph operators to be able to send voice messages over telegraph lines. +Cue the book: +The day aaer Edison had noted the idea for recording voice messages received by a telegraphy oZce, he came up with a variation. +That evening, on 18 July 1877, when [his lab’s] midnight dinner +had been consumed… [Edison] turned around to face [his assistant +Charles Batchelor] and casually remarked, “Batch, if we had a point +on this, we could make a record of some material which we could +aaerwards pull under the point, and it would give us the speech +back.” +As soon as Edison had pointed it out, it seemed so obvious that they +did not pause to appreciate… the suggestion. Everyone jumped up +to rig a test… within an hour, they had the gizmo set up on the +table… Edison sat down, leaned into the mouthpiece… [and] delivered the stock phrase the lab used to test telephone diaphragms: +“Mary had a little lamb.” +…Batchelor reinserted the beginning of the [strip on which the +phrase had been recorded]… out came “ary ad ell am.” “It was not +Xne talking,” Batchelor recalled, “but the shape of it was there.” +The men celebrated with a whoop, shook hands with one another, +and worked on. By breakfast the following morning, they had +succeeded in getting clear articulation from waxed paper, the Xrst +recording medium — in the Xrst midnight recording session. +50 The Pmarca Blog Archives +…The discovery was treated suprisingly casually in the lab’s notebooks… +It was a singular moment in the modern history of invention, but, +in the years that would follow, Edison would never tell the story the +way it actually unfolded that summer, always moving the events +from July 1877 to December. We may guess the reason why: in July, +he and his assistants failed to appreciate what they had discovered. +At the time, they were working feverishly to develop a set of working telephones to show their best prospect… Western Union… There +was no time to pause and reYect on the incidental invention of what +was the Xrst working model of the phonograph… +The invention continued to be labeled in the notebooks with the +broader rubric “speaking telegraph”, reYecting the assumption that +it would be put to use in the telegraph oZce, recording messages. +An unidentiXed staW member draw up a list of possible names +for the machine, which included: tel-autograph, tel-autophone, +“chronophone = time-announcer = speaking clock”, “didaskophone += teaching speaker = portable teacher”, “glottophone = language +sounder or speaker”, “climatophone = weather announcer”, “klangophone = bird cry sounder”, “hulagmophone = barking sounder”… +…In October 1877, [Edison] wrote his father that he was “at present +very hard up for cash,” but if his “speaking telegraph” was successful, he would receive an advance on royalties. The commercial +potential of his still-unnamed recording apparatus remained out of +sight… +[A description of the phonograph in ScientiXc American in early +November] set oW a frenzy in America and Europe. The New York +Sun was fascinated by the metaphysical implications of an invention that could play “echoes from dead voices”. The New York +Times predicted [in an eerie foreshadowing of their bizarre coverage of the Internet in the mid-1990’s] that a large business would +develop in “bottled sermons”, and wealthy connoisseurs would take +pride in keeping “a well-stocked oratorical cellar.” +…Such was the authority of ScientiXc American’s imprimatur that +all of this extraordinary attention was lavished not on the Xrst +working phonograph made for public inspection, but merely a +description supplied by Edison’s assistant. +…By late November, Edison and his staW had caught onto the +phonograph’s commercial potential as a gadget for entertainment… +a list of possible uses for the phonograph was noted [by Edison +and his staW], assembled apparently by free association: speaking +toys (dogs, reptiles, humans), whistling toy train engines, music +Part 7: Why a startup's initial business plan doesn't matter that much 51 +boxes, clocks and watches that announced the time. There was +even an inkling of the future importance of personal music collections, here described as the machine for the whole family to +enjoy, equipped with a thousand [music recordings], “giving endless amusement.” +…The Xrst actual model, however, remained to be built… On 4 +December 1877, Batchelor’s diary laconically noted, “[staW member +John Kruesi] made phonograph today”; it received no more notice +than the other entry, “working on speaking tel”, the invention [for +telegraph operators] that continued to be at the top of the laboratory’s research agenda… +…On 7 December 1877, [Edison] walked into the New York oZce of +ScientiXc American, placed a small machine on the editor’s desk, +and with about a dozen people gathered around, turned the crank. +“How do you do?” asked the machine, introducing itself crisply. +“How do you like the phonograph?” It itself was feeling quite well, +it assured its listeners, and then cordially bid everyone a good +night… +…Having long worked within the world of telegraphic equipment, +[Edison] had been perfectly placed to receive the technical inspiration for the phonograph. But that same world, oriented to a handful of giant industrial customers, had nothing in common with the +consumer marketplace… +The story goes on and on — and you should read the book; it’s +all like this. +The point is this: +If Thomas Edison didn’t know what he had when he invented +the phonograph while he thought he was trying to create better +industrial equipment for telegraph operators… +…what are the odds that you — or any entrepreneur — is going +to have it all Xgured out up front? +52 The Pmarca Blog Archives +The Pmarca Guide to Hiring +Part 8: Hiring, managing, promoting, +and Dring executives +One of the most critical things a startup founder must do +is develop a top-notch executive team. This is a topic that could Xll a +whole book, but in this post I will provide speciXc guidelines on +how to hire, manage, promote, and Xre executives in a startup +based on my personal observations and experiences. +For the purposes of this post, deXnitions: An executive is +a leader — someone who runs a function within the company +and has primary responsibility for an organization within the +company that will contribute to the company’s success or failure. The diWerence between an executive and a manager is that +the executive has a higher degree of latitude to organize, make +decisions, and execute within her function than a manager. The +manager may ask what the right thing to do is; the executive should +know. +The general theory of executives, like managers, is, per Andy +Grove: the output of an executive is the output of her organization. +Therefore, the primary task of an executive is to maximize the +output of her organization. However, in a startup, a successful +executive must accomplish three other critical tasks simultaneously: +• Build her organization– typically when an executive arrives +or is promoted into her role at a startup, she isn’t there to be +a caretaker; rather she must build her organization, oaen +from scratch. This is a sharp diWerence from many big +company executives, who can spend their entire careers +running organizations other people built — oaen years or +decades earlier. +• Be a primary individual contributor– a startup executive +must “roll up her sleeves” and produce output herself. There +are no shortage of critical things to be done at a startup, and +an executive who cannot personally produce while +simultaneously building and running her organization +typically will not last long. Again, this is a sharp diWerence +from many big companies, where executives oaen serve +more as administrators and bureaucrats. +• Be a team player– a startup executive must take personal +responsibility for her relationships with her peers and people +throughout the startup, in all functions and at all levels. Big +companies can oaen tolerate internal rivalries and warfare; +startups cannot. +Being a startup executive is not an easy job. The rewards are +substantial — the ability to contribute directly to the startups’s +success; the latitude to build and run an organization according +to her own theories and principles; and a meaningful equity +stake that can lead to personal Xnancial independence if the +startup succeeds — but the responsibilities are demanding and +intense. +Hiring +First, if you’re not sure whether you need an executive for a function, +don’t hire one. +Startups, particularly well-funded startups, oaen hire executives +too early. Particularly before a startup has achieved product/ +market Xt, it is oMen better to have a highly motivated manager or +director running a function than an executive. +Hiring an executive too quickly can lead to someone who is +really expensive, sitting there in the middle of the room, doing +very little. Not good for the executive, not good for the rest of +Part 8: Hiring, managing, promoting, and Dring executives 55 +the team, not good for the burn rate, and not good for the company. +Hire an executive only when it’s clear that you need one: when an +organization needs to get built; when hiring needs to accelerate; +when you need more processes and structure and rigor to how +you do things. +Second, hire the best person for the next nine months, not the next +three years. +I’ve seen a lot of startups overshoot on their executive hires. +They need someone to build the soaware development team +from four people to 30 people over the next nine months, so +they hire an executive from a big company who has been running 400 people. That is usually death. +Hire for what you need now — and for roughly the next nine +months. At the very least, you will get what you need now, and +the person you hire may well be able to scale and keep going for +years to come. +In contrast, if you overhire — if you hear yourself saying, “this +person will be great when we get bigger” — you are most likely +hiring someone who, best case, isn’t that interested in doing +things at the scale you need, and worst case, doesn’t know how. +Third, whenever possible, promote from within. +Great companies develop their own executives. There are several reasons for this: +• You get to develop your best people and turn them into +executives, which is great for both them and you — this is the +single best, and usually the only, way to hold onto great +people for long periods of time. +• You ensure that your executives completely know and +understand your company culture, strategy, and ethics. +• Your existing people are the “devil you know” — anyone new +coming from outside is going to have Yaws, oaen really +serious ones, but you probably won’t Xgure out what they are +56 The Pmarca Blog Archives +until aaer you’ve hired them. With your existing people, you +know, and you minimize your odds of being shocked and +appalled. +Of course, this isn’t always possible. Which segues us directly +into… +Fourth, my list of the key things to look at, and for, when evaluating executive candidates: +• Look for someone who is hungry and driven– someone who +wants a shot at doing “their thing”. Someone who has been an +up and comer at a midsized company but wants a shot at +being a primary executive at a startup can be a great catch. +• Flip side of that: beware people who have “done it +before”.Sometimes you do run into someone who has been VP +Engineering at four companies and loves it and wants to do it +at a Xah company. More oaen, you will be dealing with +someone who is no longer hungry and driven. This is a very, +very big problem to end up with — be very careful. +• Don’t disqualify someone based on ego or cockiness– as long as +she’s not insane. Great executives are high-ego — you want +someone driven to run things, driven to make decisions, +conXdent in herself and her abilities. I don’t mean loud and +obnoxious, I mean assured and determined, bleeding over +into cocky. If a VC’s ideal investment is a company that will +succceed without him, then your ideal executive hire is someone who +will succeed without you. +• Beware hiring a big company executive for a startup.The +executive skill sets required for a big company vs a startup +are very Even great big company executives frequently +have no idea what to do once they arrive at a startup. +• In particular, really beware hiring an executive from an incredibly +successful big company. This is oaen very tempting — who +wouldn’t want to bring onboard someone who sprinkles +some of that IBM (in the 80’s), Microsoa (in the 90’s), or +Google (today) fairy dust on your startup? The issue is that +people who have been at an incredibly successful big +company oaen cannot function in a normal, real world, +Part 8: Hiring, managing, promoting, and Dring executives 57 +competitive situation where they don’t start every day with +80% market share. Back in the 80’s, you oaen heard, “never +hire anyone straight out of IBM — Xrst, let them go +somewhere else and fail, and then hire them”. Believe it. +• This probably goes without saying, but look for a pattern of +output– accomplishment. Validate it by reference checking +peers, reports, and bosses. Along the way, reference check +personality and teamwork, but look Xrst and foremost for a +pattern of output. +Fiah, by all means, use an executive recruiter, but for sourcing, not +evaluation. +There are some executive recruiters who are actually really +good at evaluation. Others are not. It’s beside the point. It’s your +job to evaluate and make the decision, not the recruiter’s. +I say this because I have never met a recruiter who lacks conXdence in his ability to evaluate candidates and pass judgment on +who’s right for a given situation. This can lull a startup founder +into relying on the recruiter’s judgment instead of really digging +in and making your own decision. Betting that your recruiter is +great at evaluation is not a risk you want to take. You’re the one +who has to Xre the executive if it doesn’t work out. +Sixth, be ready to pay market compensation, including more cash +compensation than you want, but watch for red Gags in the compensation discussion. +You want someone focused on upside — on building a company. That means, a focus on their stock option package Xrst +and foremost. +Watch out for candidates who want egregious amounts of cash, +high bonuses, restricted stock, vacation days, perks, or — worst +of all — guaranteed severance. A candiate who is focused on +those things, as opposed to the option package, is not ready to +do a startup. +On a related note, be careful about option accceleration in the +event of change of control. This is oaen reasonable for support +58 The Pmarca Blog Archives +functions such as Xnance, legal, and HR where an acquirer +would most likely not have a job for the startup executive in +any of those functions. But this is not reasonable, in my view, +for core functions such as engineering, product management, +marketing, or sales. You don’t want your key executives focused +on selling the company — unless of course you want them +focused on selling the company. Make your acceleration decisions accordingly. +Seventh, when hiring the executive to run your former specialty, be +careful you don’t hire someone weak on purpose. +This sounds silly, but you wouldn’t believe how oaen it happens. +The CEO who used to be a product manager who has a weak +product management executive. The CEO who used to be in +sales who has a weak sales executive. The CEO who used to be +in marketing who has a weak marketing executive. +I call this the “Michael Eisner Memorial Weak Executive Problem” — aaer the CEO of Disney who had previously been a brilliant TV network executive. When he bought ABC at Disney, it +promptly fell to fourth place. His response? “If I had an extra +two days a week, I could turn around ABC myself.” Well, guess +what, he didn’t have an extra two days a week. +A CEO — or a startup founder — oaen has a hard time letting +go of the function that brought him to the party. The result: you +hire someone weak into the executive role for that function so +that you can continue to be “the man” — consciously or subconsciously. Don’t let it happen to you — make sure the person you +hire into that role is way better than you used to be. +Eighth, recognize that hiring an executive is a high-risk proposition. +You oaen see a startup with a screwed up development process, +but “when we get our VP of Engineering onboard, everything +will get Xxed”. Or a startup that is missing its revenue targets, but +“when we get our VP of sales, reveue will take oW”. +Here’s the problem: in my experience, if you know what you’re +doing, the odds of a given executive hire working out will be about +Part 8: Hiring, managing, promoting, and Dring executives 59 +50/50. That is, about 50% of the time you’ll screw up and ultimately have to replace the person. (If you don’t know what +you’re doing, your failure rate will be closer to 100%.) +Why? People are people. People are complicated. People have +Yaws. You oaen don’t know what those Yaws are until aaer you +get to know them. Those Yaws are oaen fatal in an executive +role. And more generally, sometimes the Xt just isn’t there. +This is why I’m so gung ho on promoting from within. At least +then you know what the Yaws are up front. +Managing +First, manage your executives. +It’s not that uncommon to see startup founders, especially Xrsttimers, who hire executives and are then reluctant to manage +them. +You can see the thought process: I just hired this really great, really +experienced VP of Engineering who has way more experience running +development teams than I ever did — I should just let him go do his +thing! +That’s a bad idea. While respecting someone’s experience and +skills, you should nevertheless manage every executive as if she +were a normal employee. This means weekly 1:1’s, performance +reviews, written objectives, career development plans, the whole +nine yards. Skimp on this and it is very easy for both your relationship with her and her eWectiveness in the company to skew +sideways. +This even holds if you’re 22 and she’s 40, or 50, or 60! Don’t be +shy, that will just scare her — and justiXably so. +Second, give your executives the latitude to run their organizations. +This is the balancing act with the previous point, but it’s equally +important. Don’t micromanage. +The whole point of having an executive is to have someone who +60 The Pmarca Blog Archives +can Xgure out how to build and run an organization so that you +don’t have to. Manage her, understand what she is doing, be +very clear on the results you expect, but let her do the job. +Here’s the key corollary to that: if you want to give an executive full +latitude, but you’re reluctant to do so because you’re not sure she can +make it happen, then it’s probably time to Fre her. +In my experience it’s not that uncommon for a founder or CEO +to be uncomfortable — sometimes only at a gut level — at really +giving an executive the latitude to run with the ball. That is a +sureXre signal that the executive is not working out and probably needs to be Xred. More on that below. +Third, ruthlessly violate the chain of command in order to gather data. +I don’t mean going around telling people under an executive +what to do without her knowing about it. I mean, ask questions, +continually, at all levels of the organization. How are things +going? What do you think of the new hires? How oaen are you +meeting with your manager? And so on. +You never want the bulk of your information about a function +coming from the executive running that function. That’s the +best way to be completely and utterly surprised when everything blows up. +Here’s the kicker: a great executive never minds when the CEO talks +to people in her organization. In fact, she loves it, because it means +the CEO just hears more great things about her. +If you have an executive who doesn’t want you to talk to people +in her organization, you have a bad executive. +Promoting +This will be controversial, but I am a big fan of promoting talented +people as fast as you can — promoting up and comers into executive roles, and promoting executives into bigger and broader +responsibilities. +Part 8: Hiring, managing, promoting, and Dring executives 61 +You can clearly overdo this — you can promote someone before +they are ready and in the worst case, completely screw up their +career. (Seen it. Done it.) You can also promote someone to their +level of incompetence — the Peter Principle. (Seen it. Done it.) +However, life is short, startups move fast, and you have stuE to get +done. You aren’t going to have the privilege of working with +that many great, talented, high-potential people in your career. +When you Xnd one, promote her as fast as you can. Great for +her, great for the company, and great for you. +This assumes you are properly training and managing her along the +way. That is lea as an exercise for the reader. +The surest sign someone is ready for promotion is when they’re doing +a great job running their current team. Projects are getting done, +team morale is good, new hires are top quality, people are +happy. Time to promote some people into new challenges. +I’m a Xrm believer that most people who do great things are doing +them for the Frst time. Returning to my theory of hiring, I’d rather +have someone all Xred up to do something for the Xrst time +than someone who’s done it before and isn’t that excited to do it +again. You rarely go wrong giving someone who is high potential the shot. +This assumes you can tell the high potential people apart from everyone +else. That too is lea as an exercise for the reader. +Firing +First, recognize the paradox of deciding to Fre an executive. +The paradox works like this: +It takes time to gather data to evaluate an executive’s performance. You can’t evaluate an executive based on her own output, like a normal employee — you have to evaluate her based +on the output of her organization. It takes time for her to build +and manage her organization to generate output. Therefore, it +62 The Pmarca Blog Archives +takes longer to evaluate the performance of an executive than a normal +employee. +But, an executive can cause far more damage than a normal +employee. A normal employee doesn’t work out, Xne, replace +him. An executive doesn’t work out, it can — worst case — permanently cripple her function and sometimes the entire company. Therefore, it is far more important to Fre a bad executive as fast +as possible, versus a normal employee. +Solution? There isn’t one. It’s a permanent problem. +I once asked Andy Grove, one of the world’s all-time best CEOs, +about this. He said, you always Xre a bad executive too late. If +you’re really good, you’ll Xre her about three months too late. +But you’ll always do it too late. If you did it fast enough that it +wasn’t too late, you wouldn’t have enough data, and you’d risk +being viewed as arbitrary and capricious by the rest of the organization. +Second, the minute you have a bad feeling in your gut, start gathering +data. +Back to the point on ruthlessly violating the chain of command +— get to it. Talk to everyone. Know what’s going on. Unless +you’re paranoid — and, shockingly, I have met paranoid +founders and CEOs, and not counting Andy Grove — you need +to gather the data because you’re going to need to Xre the executive — if you’re good, in about three months. +In the meantime, of course do everything you can to coach and +develop and improve the executive. If it works out, that’s great. +If not, get ready. +A few speciXc things I think are critical to look for: +• Is the executive hiring?If there are open headcount slots and +nobody’s coming in the door, you have a problem. Just as bad +is when the new hires aren’t very good — when they’re +bringing down the average quality of the organization. +• Is the executive training and developing her people?Oaen in a +Part 8: Hiring, managing, promoting, and Dring executives 63 +startup, an executive is hired to take over a function that’s +already been started, at least in rudimentary form. The +people in that function should be noticeably better at their +jobs, and highly respectful of the executive’s skills, within the +Xrst several months at the very least. If not, you have a +problem. +• What do the other executives think?Great executives are oaen +imperfect but their peers always respect them. If your other +executives are skeptical of a new executive aaer the Xrst few +months, you have a problem. +• Is it painful for you to interact with the executive?Do you try to +avoid or cancel your 1:1’s? Does talking to her give you a +headache? Do you oaen not understand what point she’s +trying to make or why she’s focused on such an odd issue? If +the answer to any of these questions is yes, you have a +problem. +Third, Fre crisply. +Firing an executive sucks. It’s disruptive to the organization. It +creates a lot of work for you — not least of which is you’ll have +to go Xnd someone else for the job. And, it risks making you +look bad, since you’re the one who hired the person in the Xrst +place. +And it always seems to happen at a critical time in your startup’s +life, when the last thing you need is a distraction like this. +Nevertheless, the only thing to do is do it, do it professionally, +make clear to the organization what will happen next, and get +on down the road. +In my opinion the two most common mistakes people make +when they Xre executives both fall in the category of pulling +one’s punches, and I highly recommend avoiding them: +• Long transition periods — tempting, but counterproductive. +Confusing, demoralizing, and just plain weird. Instead, make +a clean break, put a new person in charge — even if only on +an acting basis — and get moving. +64 The Pmarca Blog Archives +• Demotion as an alternative to Xring (or, alternately, “I know, +we’ll hire her a boss!”). Hate it. Great people don’t deal well +with getting demoted. There is an occasional exception. +Unless you are positive you have such an exception, skip it, +and move directly to the conclusion. +Fourth, don’t feel guilty. +You’re not beheading anyone. +Anyone who got a job as an executive at a startup is going to +have an easy time getting the next job. Aaer all, she can always +paint you as a crazy founder, or inept CEO. +More oaen than not, when you Xre an executive, you are doing +her a favor — you are giving her a chance to Xnd a better Xt +in a diWerent company where she will be more valued, more +respected, and more successful. This sounds mushy, but I mean +it. And if she can’t, then she has a much deeper problem and +you just dodged a huge bullet. +And on that cheery note, good luck! +Counterpoint: Ben Horowitz on +micromanagement +[This is a guest post from my business partner Ben Horowitz, reacting +to my recent post about hiring, managing, promoting, and Fring executives. I have italicized the parts where he really tears into me for your +added humor value.] +While I enjoyed Marc’s post on hiring and Xring executives, I +think that he unfairly dissed micromanagement. +Here’s why. +Everyone knows that the hyper-controlling manager with the +severe personality disorder who micromanages every crummy +decision is no fun to work for. However, it is wrong to condemn +the practice of micromanagement on that basis. +Part 8: Hiring, managing, promoting, and Dring executives 65 +SpeciXcally, there are times and situations where micromanaging executives is not just ok, but also the right thing to do. +Andy Grove has an excellent explanation of this in his classic +book High Output Management, where he describes a concept +called “Task Relevant Maturity”. Andy explains that employees +who are immature in a given task require detailed training and +instruction. They need to be micromanaged. On the other +hand, if an employee is relatively mature in a task, then it is +counterproductive and annoying to manage the details of their +work. +This is also true when managing executives. Marc might think +that he hires an executive because she has the experience and +know-how to comprehensively do her job, so any detailed +instruction would be unwise and unwarranted. Marc would be +wrong about that. It turns out that even — and maybe especially +— executives are also immature in certain tasks. +It is almost always the case that a new executive will be immature in their understanding of your market, your technology, +and your company — its personnel, processes, and culture. Will +the new head of engineering at Ning walk in the door with +Marc’s understanding of the development process or the technology base? Would it be better for this new head of engineering +to make guesses and use her own best — not so good– judgment, or for Marc to review the Xrst say 20 decisions until the +new exec is fully up to speed? +In reality — as opposed to Marc’s warped view of reality — it will +be extremely helpful for Marc [if he were actually the CEO, +which he is not] to meet with the new head of engineering daily +when she comes on board and review all of her thinking and +decisions. This level of micromanagement will accelerate her +training and improve her long-term eWectiveness. It will make +her seem smarter to the rest of the organization which will build +credibility and conXdence while she comes up to speed. Micromanaging new executives is generally a good idea for a limited +period of time. +However, that is not the only time that it makes sense to micro66 The Pmarca Blog Archives +manage executives. It turns out that just about every executive +in the world has a few things that are seriously wrong with +them. They have areas where they are truly deXcient in judgment or skill set. That’s just life. Almost nobody is brilliant +at everything. When hiring and when Hring executives, you +must therefore focus on strength rather than lack of weakness. Everybody has severe weaknesses even if you can’t see +them yet. When managing, it’s oaen useful to micromanage and +to provide remedial training around these weaknesses. Doing so +may make the diWerence between an executive succeeding or +failing. +For example, you might have a brilliant engineering executive +who generates excellent team loyalty, has terriXc product judgment and makes the trains run on time. This same executive +may be very poor at relating to the other functions in the company. She may generate far more than her share of cross-functional conYicts, cut herself oW from critical information, and +signiXcantly impede your ability to sell and market eWectively. +Your alternatives are: +(a) Macro-manage and give her an annual or quarterly objective +to Xx it, or… +(b) Intensively micromanage her interactions until she learns +the fundamental interpersonal skills required to be an eWective +executive. +I am arguing that doing (a) will likely result in weak performance. The reason is that she very likely has no idea how to be +eWective with her peers. If somebody is an executive, it’s very +likely that somewhere along the line somebody gave her feedback — perhaps abstractly — about all of her weaknesses. Yet +the weakness remains. As a result, executives generally require +more hands-on management than lower level employees to +improve weak areas. +So, micromanagement is like Xne wine. A little at the right times +will really enhance things; too much all the time and you’ll end +up in rehab. +Part 8: Hiring, managing, promoting, and Dring executives 67 +Part 9: How to hire a professional +CEO +Don’t. +If you don’t have anyone on your founding team who is capable +of being CEO, then sell your company — now. +How to hire the best people you've +ever worked with +There are many aspects to hiring great people, and various people smarter than me have written extensively on the topic. +So I’m not going to try to be comprehensive. +But I am going to relay some lessons learned through hard +experience on how to hire the best people you’ve ever worked +with — particularly for a startup. +I’m going to cover two key areas in this post: +• Criteria: what to value when evaluating candidates. +• And process: how to actually run the hiring process, and if +necessary the aaermath of making a mistake. +Criteria 7rst +Lots of people will tell you to hire for intelligence. +Especially in this industry. +You will read, hire the smartest people out there and your company’s success is all but guaranteed. +I think intelligence, per se, is highly overrated. +SpeciXcally, I am unaware of any actual data that shows a cor- +relation between raw intelligence, as measured by any of the +standard metrics (educational achievement, intelligence tests, or +skill at solving logic puzzles) and company success. +Now, clearly you don’t want to hire dumb people, and clearly +you’d like to work with smart people. +But let’s get speciXc. +Most of the lore in our industry about the role of intelligence +in company success comes from two stratospherically successful companies — Microsoa, and now Google — that are famous +for hiring for intelligence. +Microsoa’s metric for intelligence was the ability to solve logic +puzzles. +(I don’t know if the new, MBA-heavy Microsoa still does this, +but I do know this is how Microsoa in its heyday worked.) +For example, a classic Microsoa interview question was: “Why +is a manhole cover round?” +The right answer, of course, is, “Who cares? Are we in the manhole business?” +(Followed by twisting in your chair to look all around, getting +up, and leaving.) +Google, on the other hand, uses the metric of educational +achievement. +Have a PhD? Front of the line. Masters? Next. Bachelor’s? Go to +the end. +In apparent direct contraction to decades of experience in the +computer industry that PhD’s are the hardest people to motivate to ship commercially viable products — with rare exception. (Hi, Tim! Hi, Diego!) +Now, on the one hand, you can’t question the level of success of +either company. +70 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Maybe they’re right. +But maybe, just maybe, their success had a lot to do with other +factors — say, huge markets, extreme aggressiveness, right time/ +right place, key distribution deals, and at least in one case, great +products. +Because here’s the problem: I’m not aware of another Microsoa +that’s been built by hiring based on logic puzzles. And I’m not +aware of another Google that’s been built by hiring PhD’s. +So maybe there are other hiring criteria that are equally, or +more, important. +Here’s what I think those criteria are. +Drive +I deXne drive as self-motivation — people who will walk right +through brick walls, on their own power, without having to be +asked, to achieve whatever goal is in front of them. +People with drive push and push and push and push and push +until they succeed. +Winston Churchill aaer the evacuation of Dunkirk: +“We shall not Yag or fail. We shall go on to the end, we shall +Xght in France, we shall Xght on the seas and oceans, we shall +Xght with growing conXdence and growing strength in the air, +we shall defend our Island, whatever the cost may be, we shall +Xght on the beaches, we shall Xght on the landing grounds, we +shall Xght in the Xelds and in the streets, we shall Xght in the +hills; we shall never surrender.” +That’s what you want. +Some people have it and some people don’t. +Of the people who have it, with some of them it comes from +guilt, oaen created by family pressure. +How to hire the best people you've ever worked with 71 +With others, it comes from a burning desire to make it big. +With others, it comes from being incredibly Type A. +Whatever… go with it. +Drive is independent of educational experience, grade point +averages, and socioeconomic background. +(But Marc, isn’t a 4.0 GPA a sure sign of drive? Well, it’s a sign +that the person is driven to succeed on predeXned tests with +clear criteria and a grader — in an environment where the student’s parents are oaen paying a lot of money for the privilege +of having their child take the tests. That may or may not be the +same thing as being driven to succeed in the real world.) +Drive is even independent of prior career success. +Driven people don’t tend to stay long at places where they can’t +succeed, and just because they haven’t succeeded in the wrong +companies doesn’t mean they won’t succeed at your company +— if they’re driven. +I think you can see drive in a candidate’s eyes, and in a candidate’s background. +For the background part, I like to see what someone has done. +Not been involved in, or been part of, or watched happen, or +was hanging around when it happened. +I look for something you’ve done, either in a job or (oaen better +yet) outside of a job. +The business you started and ran in high school. +The nonproXt you started and ran in college. +If you’re a programmer: the open source project to which +you’ve made major contributions. +Something. +If you can’t Xnd anything — if a candidate has just followed the +72 The Pmarca Blog Archives +rules their whole lives, showed up for the right classes and the +right tests and the right career opportunities without achieving +something distinct and notable, relative to their starting point — +then they probably aren’t driven. +And you’re not going to change them. +Motivating people who are fundamentally unmotivated is not +easy. +But motivating people who are self-motivated is wind at your +back. +I like speciXcally looking for someone for which this job is their +big chance to really succeed. +For this reason, I like hiring people who haven’t done the speciXc job before, but are determined to ace it regardless. +I also like speciXcally looking for someone who comes from +some kind of challenging background — a diZcult family situation, say, or someone who had to work his/her way through +school — who is nevertheless on par with his/her more fortunate peers in skills and knowledge. +Finally, beware in particular people who have been at highly +successful companies. +People used to say, back when IBM owned the industry: never +hire someone straight out of IBM. First, let them go somewhere +else and fail. Then, once they’ve realized the real world is not +like IBM, hire them and they’ll be great. +And remember, an awful lot of people who have been at hugely +successful companies were just along for the ride. +Career success is great to look for — but it’s critical to verify that +the candidates out of hugely successful companies actually did +what they claim in their roles at those companies. And that they +really get it, that the real world is a lot tougher than being IBM +in the 80’s, or Microsoa in the 90’s, or Google today. +How to hire the best people you've ever worked with 73 +Curiosity +Curiosity is a proxy for, do you love what you do? +Anyone who loves what they do is inherently intensely curious +about their Xeld, their profession, their craa. +They read about it, study it, talk to other people about it… +immerse themselves in it, continuously. +And work like hell to stay current in it. +Not because they have to. +But because they love to. +Anyone who isn’t curious doesn’t love what they do. +And you should be hiring people who love what they do. +As an example, programmers. +Sit a programmer candidate for an Internet company down and +ask them about the ten most interesting things happening in +Internet soaware. +REST vs SOAP, the new Facebook API, whether Ruby on Rails +is scalable, what do you think of Sun’s new Java-based scripting +language, Google’s widgets API, Amazon S3, etc. +If the candidate loves their Xeld, they’ll have informed opinions +on many of these topics. +That’s what you want. +Now, you might say, Marc, that’s great for a young kid who has a +lot of spare time to stay current, but what about the guy who has +a family and only has time for a day job and can’t spend nights +and weekends reading blogs and staying that current? +Well, when you run into a person like that who isn’t current in +their Xeld, the other implication is that their day job isn’t keeping them current. +74 The Pmarca Blog Archives +If they’ve been in that job for a while, then ask yourself, is the +kind of person you’re looking for really going to have tolerated +staying in a day job where their skills and knowledge get stale, +for very long? +Really? +Remember — because of the Internet, staying current in any +Xeld no longer costs any money. +In my experience, drive and curiosity seem to coincide pretty +frequently. +The easiest way to be driven is to be in a Xeld that you love, and +you’ll automatically be curious. +Ethics +Ethics are hard to test for. +But watch for any whiW of less than stellar ethics in any candidate’s background or references. +And avoid, avoid, avoid. +Unethical people are unethical by nature, and the odds of a +metaphorical jailhouse conversion are quite low. +Priests, rabbis, and ministers should give people a second +chance on ethics — not hiring managers at startups. +‘NuW said. +One way to test for an aspect of ethics — honesty — is to test for +how someone reacts when they don’t know something. +Pick a topic you know intimately and ask the candidate increasingly esoteric questions until they don’t know the answer. +They’ll either say they don’t know, or they’ll try to bullshit you. +Guess what. If they bullshit you during the hiring process, +they’ll bullshit you once they’re onboard. +How to hire the best people you've ever worked with 75 +A candidate who is conXdent in his own capabilities and ethical +— the kind you want — will say “I don’t know” because they +know that the rest of the interview will demonstrate their +knowledge, and they know that you won’t react well to being +bullshitted — because they wouldn’t react well either. +How to run the hiring process +First, have a written hiring process. +Whatever your hiring process is — write it down, and make sure +everyone has a copy of it, on paper. +It’s continually shocking how many startups have a random hiring process, and as a result hire apparently randomly. +Second, do basic skills tests. +It’s amazing how many people come in and interview for jobs +where their resume says they’re qualiXed, but ask them basic +questions about how to do things in their domain, and they Yail. +For example, test programmers on basic algorithms — linked +lists, binary searches. +Just in pseudocode — it doesn’t matter if they know the relevant +Java library calls. +It does matter if they are unable to go up to the whiteboard and +work their way through something that was covered in their Xrst +algorithms course. +A lot of people come in and interview for programming jobs +who, at their core, can’t program. +And it’s such a breath of fresh air when you get someone who +just goes, oh yeah, a linked list, sure, let me show you. +The same principle applies to other Xelds. +For a sales rep — have them sell you on your product all the way +to a closed deal. +76 The Pmarca Blog Archives +For a marketing person — have them whiteboard out a launch +for your new product. +Third, plan out and write down interview questions ahead of +time. +I’m assuming that you know the right interview questions for +the role — and frankly, if you don’t, you probably shouldn’t be +the hiring manager for that position. +The problem I’m addressing is: most people don’t know how to +interview a candidate. +And even people who do know how, aren’t necessarily good at +coming up with questions on the Yy. +So just make sure you have questions planned out and assigned +to each interviewer ahead of time. +I do this myself — always enter the room with a list of questions +pre-planned — because I don’t want to count on coming up with +them on the Yy. +The best part is that you can then iteratively reXne the questions +with your team as you interview candidates for the position. +This is one of the best ways for an organization to become really +good at hiring: by iterating the questions, you’re reXning what +your criteria are — and how you screen for those criteria. +Fourth, pay attention to the little things during the interview +process. +You see little hints of things in the interview process that blow +up to disasters of unimaginable proportions once the person is +onboard. +Person never laughs? Probably hard to get along with. +Person constantly interrupts? Egomaniac, run for the hills. +Person claims to be good friends with someone you know but +How to hire the best people you've ever worked with 77 +then doesn’t know what the friend is currently doing? Bullshitter. +Person gives nonlinear answers to simple questions? Complete +disorganized and undisciplined on the job. +Person drones on and on? Get ready for hell. +Fiah, pay attention to the little things during the reference +calls. +(You are doing reference calls, right?) +Most people soaball deXciencies in people they’ve worked with +when they do reference calls. +“He’s great, super-smart, blah blah blah, but…” +“Sometimes wasn’t that motivated” — the person is a slug, +you’re going to have to kick their rear every morning to get +them to do anything. +“Could sometimes be a little hard to get along with” — hugely +unpleasant. +“Had an easier time working with men than women” — raging +sexist. +“Was sometimes a little moody” — suWering from clinical +depression, and unmedicated. +You get the picture. +Sixth, Hx your mistakes fast… but not too fast. +If you are super-scrupulous about your hiring process, you’ll +still have maybe a 70% success rate of a new person really working out — if you’re lucky. +And that’s for individual contributors. +If you’re hiring executives, you’ll probably only have a 50% success rate. +78 The Pmarca Blog Archives +That’s life. +Anyone who tells you otherwise is hiring poorly and doesn’t +realize it. +Most startups in my experience are undisciplined at Xxing hiring mistakes — i.e., Xring people who aren’t working out. +First, realize that while you’re going to hate Xring someone, +you’re going to feel way better aaer the fact than you can currently imagine. +Second, realize that the great people on your team will be happy +that you’ve done it — they knew the person wasn’t working out, +and they want to work with other great people, and so they’ll +be happy that you’ve done the right thing and kept the average +high. +(The reason I say “not too fast” is because your great people are watching to see how you Xre people, and if you do it too +fast you’ll be viewed as arbitrary and capricious — but trust me, +most startup managers do not have this problem, they have the +opposite problem.) +Third, realize that you’re usually doing the person you’re Xring +a favor — you’re releasing them from a role where they aren’t +going to succeed or get promoted or be valued, and you’re giving them the opportunity to Xnd a better role in a diWerent company where they very well might be an incredible star. +(And if they can’t, were they really the kind of person you +wanted to hire in the Xrst place?) +One of the good things about our industry is that there are +frequently lots of new jobs being created and so you’re almost +never pushing someone out onto the street — so don’t feel that +you’re dooming their families to the poorhouse, because you +aren’t. +You’re not that important in their lives. +How to hire the best people you've ever worked with 79 +I can name a number of people I’ve Xred or participated in Xring who have gone on to be quite successful at other companies. +They won’t necessarily talk to me anymore, though :-). +Finally, although this goes without saying: value the hell out of +the great people you do have on your team. Given all of the +above, they are incredibly special people. +80 The Pmarca Blog Archives +The Pmarca Guide to Big +Companies +Part 1: Turnaround! +So you’ve been hired/promoted/brought out of retirement to +become CEO of and turn around your NASDAQ/NYSE/LSElisted 5,000+ employee soMware/semiconductor/media company +that’s recently been getting trounced by competitors, brutalized +by the press, and savaged in the stock market. +Here’s your turnaround plan in 9 easy steps. +Step 1: Go dark and execute. +Your predecessor in the CEO job inevitably spent way too much +time explaining to reporters, investors, analysts, and anyone else +who would listen why your company was actually doing just Xne +and how brighter times were just around the corner as your +competitive position deteriorated and your Xnancial results fell +apart, and nobody believed it anyway. +Money talks, hype walks — when you’re hitting your numbers, +everyone thinks you’re a genius and believes everything you +say, no matter how silly. When you’re not hitting your numbers, +everyone thinks you’re a moron and won’t believe anything you +say, no matter how true. +So go dark, focus on the business, and don’t talk publicly for at +least six months. +Step 2: But Frst, throw your predecessor completely under the bus. +Can’t forget this one! Tell Wall Street that your predecessor +was such an incredibly dim bulb that in retrospect you can’t +even understand how he got past security and into the building, +much less was picked to be CEO. He completely fouled the +Xnancials and sabotaged the business and as a result, earnings +for the next several quarters are going to come in way below +expectations. +The fun part about this one is that your stock won’t even drop +because everyone has already Xgured that out. +Step 3: Identify the 3-5 things that are working surprisingly well in +your business, and double down on those. +Any big company, no matter how moribund and poorly run, has +a number of products and projects that are going better than +expected — and usually come as a complete surprise. +Drawing on Peter Drucker’s classic admonition to “focus on +opportunities, not problems”, Xgure out what these surprise successes are and double down on them. +Promote their general managers, elevate their business units in +the organization, give them more funding, and get out of the +way. +Step 4: Identify the 3-5 things that are consuming a lot of money and +time and yet going nowhere, and kill those. +A good starting point is your predecessor’s pet projects — line +‘em up and shoot ‘em. +Frankly, they don’t even have to be consuming that much +money. They’re almost certainly consuming time and management bandwidth, and they need to go. +You can also consider this a warmup exercise for Step 5. +Step 5: Lay oE a third of the workforce. +Here’s why: +History shows that you’re going to have to ultimately do it anyPart 1: Turnaround! 83 +way, either via death of a thousand cuts (or six to eight distinct +rounds of layoWs), or all at once. +So do it all at once. +A company that requires a turnaround has, in all likelihood, hired +too many people for the size of the business opportunity it actually +has. This impairs proXtability, driving away investors and submergingthestockpriceatpreciselythetimethecompanyneedsahealthy +acquisition currency; this demotivates your great people by surrounding them by too many mediocre people and too much +bureaucracy; and this slows everything in your company to a crawl +because there are simply too many people running around who have to talk +about everything before anything gets done. +Grit your teeth, oWer the most generous severance and assistance packages you possibly can, and get it done. +Your ability to continue to employ the other two-thirds of your +people is at stake. +Step 6: Reduce layers, then promote up and comers and put them +clearly in charge. +A company that requires a turnaround has, in all likelihood, too +many layers of management. Nuke as many of them as you can. +Then develop a list of your top 20 or 30 up and comers — +strong, sharp, aggressive, ambitious director- or VP-level managers who want to succeed and want your company to succeed. +And promote them, and put them in sole charge of clearly identiXed teams and missions. (And give them big ol’ fresh option +packages.) +As CEO, you should only have at most one executive between +you and these 20 or 30 up and comers once you are done promoting them and putting them in charge of their teams and +missions. +If you don’t know who those top 20 or 30 up and comers are, if +you don’t promote them, if you don’t put them clearly in charge +of the things that matter, or if you have more than one layer of +84 The Pmarca Blog Archives +management between you and them when you’re done, you’re +probably doomed. +Step 7: Figure out the single most important thing your company has +to win at, and put your single best person in charge of winning at it. +‘NuW said. +Step 8: Look at the market, Fgure out 3-5 new areas in which your +company is not currently playing or winning, but are clearly going to +grow a lot — and acquire the best company in each of those areas. +Here you’re looking for growth — for products, trends, perhaps +phenomena outside but adjacent to your current products and +markets, that are going to grow a lot in the next few years. +You have to acquire, because if you’re in a turnaround situation, +you aren’t going to have the time or bandwidth to build them +in-house — unless you’re the very rare exception. +When you do acquire, you’re going to have to pay up, because +new things that are growing really fast in growth markets are +always expensive — whether private or public — especially +compared to the PE multiple of a big company in turnaround. +So here’s hoping you did a great job at Step 5. +Step 9: In six months, relaunch the company with a single, crisp, +coherent message and strategy. +Then go dark again and go right back to work. +Of course, there’s more to being the CEO of a turnaround than +these 9 steps. There are a thousand other things you’re going to +have to do. But these are the 9 most important. +To quote the great Tommy Lasorda: “This fucking job ain’t that +fucking easy.” +Appendix for media companies only: +Step 10: For God’s sake, stop suing your customers. +Part 1: Turnaround! 85 +Part 2: Retaining great people +This post is about retaining great people, particularly at big companies in industries like technology, where stock options matter +and where people can relatively easily move from one company +to another. +Actually, I lied. This post isn’t really about retention at all. +It’s about winning. +Let me explain: +Companies that are winning — even really big, old ones — never +have a retention problem. Everyone wants to stay, and when someone does leave, it’s really easy to get someone great to take her +place. +Companies that have a retention problem usually have a winning problem. Or rather, a “not winning” problem. +The typical case is a company that used to be a hot growth company, but the growth has Yattened out, causing the stock to tank +and everyone to be in a bad mood. Or, alternately, an older +big company that did really well for a while but more recently +hasn’t been doing so well, causing the stock to tank and everyone to be in a bad mood. +In other words, a company in transition — from winning at one +point, to not winning now. +The only way a company in that situation can retain great people is to start winning again. +Great people want to work at a winner. +All the raises, perks, and HR-sponsored “company values” draaing sessions in the world won’t help you retain great people if +you’re not winning — not even the $6,000 heated Japanese toilets in all the restrooms, the $30,000 Olympic lap pool out back, +and the free $4 bottles of organic orange juice in all the snack +rooms. +This seems deeply unfair when you’re going through it, because +when you’re not winning, that’s exactly when you need all those +great people the most! +Oh well. That’s the price we pay for living in a society where +jobs aren’t for life anymore. +So the right question is, how can we start +winning again? +In this post, I’m going to punt on large parts of the answer to +that question, as follows: +• I already discussed the big company turnaround scenarioin +my last post in this series, which describes how to take a big +company that is no longer winning and set it up to win again. +• A company that was a hot startup a few years ago and grew +fast but is now seeing growth slow has a slightly diWerent +problem — your original product cycle has peaked and you +need to Xnd a new product cycle. That’s your big challenge, +way beyond retention. But I’ll talk about that in a future post. +Retention follows from the steps you are taking to orchestrate +the turnaround and/or get to the next big product cycle. +Having adroitly sidestepped most of what you need to do, let +me now address some things you can do to help the retention +Part 2: Retaining great people 87 +situation while you are addressing the deeper issues required to +win again. +First, don’t give up. I am particularly talking about the former hot +startup that is now a large slow-growth company. It is easy to +say, well, we’re not a startup anymore, we’re not a growth company anymore — now we’re a big company, and we need to +change our culture and our methods to attract and retain the +kinds of people who like to work at big companies. +Doing that will make your situation far worse, by causing the +remaining great people you do have to abandon ship even +faster. Who wants to work for a company that has given up on +having energy and drive and ambition? And then you will end +up with a staW that only knows how to be a big company — +that only knows how to maintain something that someone else +has already built — which is death in any industry where things +change all the time. +Second, focus. In a technology company, focus on retaining the +great architects and managers. In other kinds of companies, +focus on retaining the equivalent people — the people who are +the magnets for retaining other great people and hiring more +great people. +You have to retain the magnets — or at least a critical mass of +them — because without them, you’re going to lose everyone +else. +If you bear down and focus on retaining the magnets, retaining +everyone else — for example, in a soaware company, the junior +programmers, the product managers, the user interface designers, the salespeople, the sales engineers, the marketing staW, and +so on — will be much easier. +Third, clean house. Any company with a retention problem probably also has an overstaZng problem and a mediocrity problem +and needs to Xx both of those at the same time. +Identify and eliminate the jobs of the following categories of +people: +88 The Pmarca Blog Archives +• People who are “vesting in peace” — so called “VIPs”. VIPs are +a particular problem at the former hot startup that has +plateaued. They suck the life out of their environment and +have to go. +• “Summertime soldiers” — people who only joined in the Xrst +place because you were already successful and have no +interest in really bearing down and applying themselves to a +challenge. Again, a classic problem for the former hot +startup. Look particularly hard at the people who joined in +the two years following the IPO — some of them are +undoubtedly very hard working, but others are summertime +soldiers and have to go. +• Mediocre performers — every company has some, unless +you have been routinely Xring your bottom 10% every year, +and even then you probably have some. +Taking out the people who fall into these categories will make +your remaining great people feel better immediately, and will +save you a lot of money and stock options that you can reallocate to better purposes — such as new compensation packages +for your remaining great people. +Fourth, promote your best people — especially into the jobs vacated +by the more senior of the people you just Xred — and give them +very interesting challenges. +That is so fundamental that I’m not even going to discuss it further here. +FiMh, simplify and clarify your organizational structure to make sure +that your best people have direct responsibility for their projects. +Companies coming oW a period of signiXcant success usually +have grown a lot and/or bought a lot of other companies, and +typically have messy or overly complex org structures. This is a +great opportunity to clean that up — and in particular, to move +to an organizational model where each of your stars has clear, +direct, and comprehensive responsibility for a critical mission. +Part 2: Retaining great people 89 +Nuke all matrices. Nuke all dual reporting structures. And nuke +as many shared services functions as you possibly can. +For example, in a soaware company, break up the centralized +documentation group, QA group, build group, etc. and disperse +those people into the individual product divisions. Give your +product division heads complete responsibility for everything +they need to ship great products — except for sales. And then in +sales, give your territory heads everything they need to kill their +numbers. +A great general rule of thumb for this kind of organizational +redesign is that you want to tolerate overlap. So each product +division has its own QA team — so what? Your division heads — +who are now your best people — will be able to move so much +faster that way that it’s worth it. Plus, you saved so much money +taking out the VIPs, summertime soldiers, and mediocre people +that you’re still ahead on headcount expense. +Remember, it’s generally a good idea, once you do all of this +restructuring, to end up with smaller team sizes than you had +before. By reducing the size of a team, and increasing the average quality level within the team, you will usually speed things +up, while saving money. +Finally, be sure to take out layers — especially at the top of the +company. The best people who are now running all the key projects and divisions should be no more than one layer away from +the CEO, and usually that means you can take out at least one +layer, maybe two, and (shudder) maybe even more. +Sixth, put the recruiters to work, aggressively — but don’t rely on them +for everything. +Notably, for the really critical open jobs, go out and recruit the +right person yourself, or better yet promote from within. +And here’s a neat trick that actually works. Go out and re-recruit +the best people who already lea. Some of them have since +discovered that the grass isn’t actually greener at whatever +mediocre startup they joined or whatever other big company +90 The Pmarca Blog Archives +they jumped to. Give them fat packages against the new mission +and get them back. +Seventh, ramp up college recruiting. This will be very important for +you over the next couple years. College recruiting is the best +way to get a bunch of new Xred up people into your company +who are hungry and who don’t realize quite how badly you suck. +(That was a joke.) +Eighth, communicate within — tell everyone in your company +clearly and unambiguously, we are here to win and here’s how +we’re going to do it. It won’t be easy, but we can do it and we will do +it, and we will have amazing stories to tell our grandchildren. +You don’t need to be certain of all the answers! Colin Powell +says, “You know you’re a good leader when people follow you, if +only out of curiosity.” So project boldness, and have that glint in +your eye where people know you’re up to something big. +Ninth, shake things up. Directly on Powell’s curiosity point — +change the story to something new. Overhaul the organization, +move people around, Xre people, promote other people, cancel +products, double down on other products, do some acquisitions, +cut some big deals, do some spinoWs, whatever — but change +the story. Reintroduce curiosity. +When all else fails, do a “shake and bake” — do a big transformative deal that you’re not sure will work but which you think +has a real shot. That will at the very least inject energy back into +the situation. +I am being deliberately cavalier about this tactic, especially the +“shake and bake” part. You can easily destroy your company +with this kind of move. +But — and this is a very important but — a company in crisis +oaen has a severe narrative or “story” problem that accompanies its business problems, and it can be hard to get people +inside and outside the company motivated to reengage without +you forcing a dramatic change to the story in some fundamental +way. +Part 2: Retaining great people 91 +Stories don’t change by themselves. Change the story. +Next topic: how to talk a great person out +of going to a startup +I’m assuming based on all of the above that if you do the blocking and tackling right, you’re going to be able to convince a lot +of your great people to not go to a diWerent big company. +Talking someone out of going to a startup is a separate challenge. +Someone usually wants to move from a big company to a +startup for one or more of the following four reasons: +First, she wants to build a new company instead of being a caretaker in +someone else’s company. +You can talk someone out of this if you can show her how, if +she stays with you for two more years, you are going to concretely better train and prepare her to kick butt at a startup when +she does make such a move — particularly if she is on the management track. +Give her a promotion, a big new job with a big new challenge, +and clear responsibility. And tell her that if she kicks butt at this +more signiXcant challenge, she’ll not only be better prepared to +be out on her own, but you will personally give her glowing recommendations and help her Xnd the perfect startup or the perfect VC for her — in two years. +Then, two years later, you can do the same thing again. +I believe you are doing someone a huge favor when you do this. +Most startups aren’t very good and have no prospect of real success, and most big company people aren’t very good at picking +‘em, although they never believe that. And by staying, your great +person is gaining incredibly valuable experience by taking on +new challenges and new responsibilities at your company that +will help her succeed and Yourish down the road wherever she +ultimately decides to go. +92 The Pmarca Blog Archives +It’s not that unusual to see a young superstar division head or +senior vice president at a big company who has been promoted +rapidly over the last several years who has also been periodically +on the verge of going to a startup and stayed each time for a new +challenge instead. And there she is, running 100 or 500 or 2,000 +people and doing incredibly well in her career. Win/win. +Now, if you’re not willing to promote ‘em, that’s another story. +Second, she has a killer idea for a startup, or has fallen in love with a +startup’s killer idea. +In this case, you’re probably better oW letting her go to the +startup. +This isn’t the case nearly as oaen as you’d think. Some of the +startups I’ve seen great people join — including very recently — +boggle my brain at how bad the ideas were. +Third, she wants the Fnancial upside of a startup. +Visions of being the next Larry Page (Larriett Page?) are dancing +in her head. +You can oaen defeat this by simply explaining the realities of +the compensation package she’s being oWered. +Explain to her how her options will likely be worthless when +the startup fails, how small a percentage of the company she’s +actually being oWered, how much she’s going to be diluted by +future Xnancing rounds, how far below market her package is +overall, and how bad the medical and dental beneXts are for her +kids. And if she hasn’t changed her mind by that point, tell her a +cramdown round story. +Fourth, she can’t function in a large environment. It’s too frustrating, +too boring, too many rules, too much management, whatever. +In this case, you are probably also better oW letting her go to the +startup. +Things not to do when trying to retain great people: +Part 2: Retaining great people 93 +Now we’re getting into personal opinion, but for what it’s +worth… +Don’t create a new group or organization within your company whose +job is “innovation”. This takes various forms, but it happens reasonably oaen when a big company gets into product trouble, +and it’s hugely damaging. +Here’s why: +First, you send the terrible message to the rest of the organization that they’re not supposed to innovate. +Second, you send the terrible message to the rest of the organization that you think they’re the B team. +That’s a one-two punch that will seriously screw things up. +Instead, focus on boosting the innovation culture of the entire +company. +Don’t do arbitrary large spot bonuses or restricted stock grants to try to +give a small number of people huge Fnancial upside. +An example is the Google Founders’ Awards program, which +Google has largely stopped, and which didn’t work anyway. +It sounds like a great idea at the time, but it causes a severe +backlash among both the normal people who don’t get it (who +feel like they’re the B team) and the great people who don’t get it +(who feel like they’ve been screwed). +Closing thought +In general, the intangibles that keep great people are: the quality +of the people they’re working with, the interestingness level of +their projects, and whether they are learning and growing. +The tangibles are: winning, and a high stock price. +As the leader, you have to really believe that you can get your company back to winning andtherefore back to ahighstockprice. +94 The Pmarca Blog Archives +If not, you should sell the company. +Part 2: Retaining great people 95 +The Pmarca Guide to +Career, Productivity, and +Some Other Things +Introduction +In real life — as opposed to blogging — one of my least favorite +things to do is give career planning advice. Most people who +say they want career planning advice aren’t actually looking for +advice — they just want validation of the path they have already +chosen. Because of that, giving someone career planning advice +is one of the surest ways to end up feeling like an a******. +However, as with so many other things, career planning is a +topic about which I have plenty of opinions. And since I started +this blog, I’ve received a lot of questions from people who are +looking for career planning advice. So, this series of posts will +present my opinions on career planning in today’s world. +Disclaimers: +• These posts are aimed at high-potential people who want to +excel throughout their careers and make a signiXcant impact +on their Xelds and the world. These posts are not appropriate +for people for whom work/life balance is a high priority or +for whom lifestyle is particularly important — if that’s you, +there are plenty of existing career planning resources for you +already! +• My background is biased towards high-tech companies and +Silicon Valley, and my advice will be most relevant to people +entering either my industry or other industries that are like +my industry — fast moving, rapidly changing, and +characterized by lots of new companies and lots of +opportunity for new people. Some of this advice may be +applicable to people entering other kinds of Xelds — but I +wouldn’t know and I won’t guarantee it. +• I’ll use a lot of words like “ambition” and “promotion” and +“gaining more responsibility”. It may seem like I’m talking +about moving up through the management ranks and +managing more and more people, but my intention is for all +of this advice to be equally relevant to people in purely +technical careers, such as soaware programming. If you +aren’t interesting in managing people, then when I talk about +promotion and advancement, just think about getting +broader latitude to work on or lead more complex technical +projects, assuming more technical seniority within a +company, and the like. +• Everything that follows is purely personal opinion — +speciXcally, these are the things I would want to know if I +were entering college today. I’m sure there are many equally +valid counterpoints to each of my points, and I look forward +to reading them on other people’s blogs! +98 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Part 1: Opportunity +The Hrst rule of career planning: Do not plan your career. +The world is an incredibly complex place and everything is +changing all the time. You can’t plan your career because you have +no idea what’s going to happen in the future. You have no idea what +industries you’ll enter, what companies you’ll work for, what +roles you’ll have, where you’ll live, or what you will ultimately +contribute to the world. You’ll change, industries will change, +the world will change, and you can’t possibly predict any of it. +Trying to plan your career is an exercise in futility that will only +serve to frustrate you, and to blind you to the really signiXcant +opportunities that life will throw your way. +Career planning = career limiting. +The sooner you come to grips with that, the better. +The second rule of career planning: Instead of planning your +career, focus on developing skills and pursuing opportunities. +I’ll talk a lot about skills development in the next post. But for +the rest of this post, I’m going to focus in on the nature of opportunities. +Opportunities are key. I would argue that opportunities fall loosely +into two buckets: those that present themselves to you, and +those that you go out and create. Both will be hugely important +to your career. +Opportunities that present themselves to you are the consequence — at least partially — of being in the right place at the +right time. They tend to present themselves when you’re not +expecting it — and oaen when you are engaged in other activities +that would seem to preclude you from pursuing them. And +they come and go quickly — if you don’t jump all over an opportunity, someone else generally will and it will vanish. +I believe a huge part of what people would like to refer to as +“career planning” is being continuously alert to opportunities +that present themselves to you spontaneously, when you happen to be in the right place at the right time. +• A senior person at your Xrm is looking for someone young +and hungry to do the legwork on an important project, in +addition to your day job. +• Your former manager has jumped ship to a hot growth +company and calls you three months later and says, come +join me. +• Or, a small group of your smartest friends are headed to +Denny’s at 11PM to discuss an idea for a startup — would you +like to come along? +I am continually amazed at the number of people who are presented with an opportunity like one of the above, and pass. +There’s your basic dividing line between the people who shoot up in +their careers like a rocket ship, and those who don’t — right there. +The second bucket of opportunities are those you seek out and +create. A lot of what will follow in future posts in this series +will discuss how to do that. However, let me say up front that I +am also continually amazed at the number of people who coast +through life and don’t go and seek out opportunities even when +they know in their gut what they’d really like to do. Don’t be one +of those people. Life is way too short. +The world is a very malleable place. If you know what you want, +and you go for it with maximum energy and drive and passion, +100 The Pmarca Blog Archives +the world will oaen reconXgure itself around you much more +quickly and easily than you would think. +Now, I’m not proposing that you simply ping pong from +opportunity to opportunity randomly. You can have a strategy. +And here’s how I think that strategy should work. +People who manage money professionally don’t think about +individual investments in isolation; they think of those investments as part of an overall portfolio. Each investment has its +potential return — the beneXt you get from owning it — and its +potential risks — the things that can go wrong. A portfolio, then, +is a set of investments, and the portfolio assumes the return and +risk characteristics of all of the investments blended together. +Viewed in that context, it is oaen logical to have individual +investments within a portfolio that are far more risky than one +would normally Xnd comfortable — if the potential return is +good enough. Or, investments that are far less risky and have far +less return potential than one would normally want — to protect one’s downside. The risk of any individual investment is not +important; what is important is how the risks — and the potential returns — of all of the investments combine in the overall +portfolio. +I believe you should look at your career as a portfolio of jobs/ +roles/opportunities. Each job that you take, each role that you +choose to Xll, each opportunity you pursue, will have a certain +potential return — the beneXts you can get from taking it, +whether those beneXts come in the form of income, skill development, experience, geographic location, or something else. +Each job will also have a certain risk proXle — the things that +could go wrong, from getting Xred for not being able to handle +the job’s demands, to having to move somewhere you don’t +want to, to the company going bankrupt, to the opportunity cost +of not pursuing some other attractive opportunity. +Once you start thinking this way, you can think strategically +about your career over its likely 50+ year timespan. +For example, when you are just out of school and have a low +Part 1: Opportunity 101 +burn rate and geographic Yexibility, you can take jobs with a +certain return/risk proXle. If you get married and have kids, you +will take jobs with a diWerent return/risk proXle. Later, when +your kids grow up and you are once again free to move about +and you don’t have to worry about tuition payments and a +mortgage on a big house in a great school district, but you now +have far more experience than you did when you were Xrst +starting out, you can take jobs with a third return/risk proXle. +Most people do not think this way. They might occasionally +think this way, but they don’t do it systematically. So when +an opportunity pops up, they evaluate it on a standalone basis +— “boy, it looks risky, I’m not sure I should do it”. What you +should automatically do instead is put it in context with all of +the other risks you are likely to take throughout your entire +career and decide whether this new opportunity Fts strategically into +your portfolio. +Let’s dig into the concept of risk a little more. +I’m not talking about the form of risk that you think of when +you think of stepping out into the crosswalk and getting run +over by an Escalade. I’m talking about the form of risk that +Xnancial professionals deal with (see the classic book Against +the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk for more on this), and +startup entrepreneurs deal with, and that you deal with any time +you make any decision. There are a set of potential downsides to +almost any decision — but they can be analyzed, and oMen quantiFed, +and thereby brought under control. +Which is important, because in life, there is generally no opportunity +without risk. Doing the legwork on that extra project for the +senior person at your Xrm? You risk exhausting yourself and +doing your day job poorly. Joining your former manager at +that hot growth company? Maybe it tanks six months later and +then your current employer won’t rehire you. Join those smart +friends at Denny’s and start a new company with them? Maybe +it completely fails, and you have to explain why you were so +foolish at every job interview you do for the rest of your +102 The Pmarca Blog Archives +life. There are always real and legitimate reasons why people oMen pass +on opportunities — they see the risks and they wish to avoid them. +The issue is that without taking risk, you can’t exploit any +opportunities. You can live a quiet and reasonably happy life, +but you are unlikely to create something new, and you are +unlikely to make your mark on the world. +To quote Aaron Brown — a legendary Morgan Stanley derivatives trader and poker expert — from his extraordinary +book The Poker Face of Wall Street, when talking about hiring +traders at an investment bank: +What I listen for is someone who really wanted something that +could be obtained only through taking the risk, whether that risk +was big or small. +It’s not even important that she managed the risk skillfully; it’s only +important that she knew it was there, respected it, but took it anyway. +Most people wander through life, carelessly taking whatever risk +crosses their path without compensation, but never consciously +accepting extra risk to pick up the money and other good things +lying all around them. +Other people reYexively avoid every risk or grab every loose dollar +without caution. +I don’t mean to belittle these strategies; I’m sure they make sense to +the people who pursue them. I just don’t understand them myself. +I do know that none of these people will be successful traders. +…or successful at anything important in life. +So, when you are presented with an opportunity, carefully +analyze its risks, but: +• Do so within the context if your likely lifetime portfolio of +risks… +• And do so realizing that taking risk can be a good thing when +it leads to pursuing the best opportunities. +Part 1: Opportunity 103 +All that said, here are some of my opinions about the kinds of +risks you should take and when: +• When you are just out of school — and assuming that you are +relatively free to move and have a low burn rate — is when +you should optimize for the rate at which you can develop +skills and acquire experiences that will serve you well later. +You should speciXcally take income risk in order to do that. +Always take the job that will best develop your skills and give +you valuable experiences, regardless of its salary. This is not +the time in your career to play it safe. +• When you have family obligations — a spouse, two and a half +kids, a dog, and a picket fence — that’s obviously the time to +crank back on the income risk and instead take a little risk +that you might not learn as much or advance as quickly or +join that hot new startup. However, even this is not black and +white! In Silicon Valley, for example, it can still make a lot of +sense for a young parent to take a risk on a hot new startup +because it will usually be easy to get another job if the startup +fails — especially if one has developed more useful skills and +experiences along the way. +• There may be times when you realize that you are +dissatisXed with your Xeld — you are working in enterprise +soaware, for example, but you’d really rather be working on +green tech or in a consumer Internet company. Jumping +from one Xeld into another is always risky because your +speciXc skills and contacts are in your old Xeld, so you’ll have +less certainty of success in the new Xeld. This is almost always a +risk worth taking– standing pat and being unhappy about it +has risks of its own, particularly to your happiness. And it is +awfully hard to be highly successful in a job or Xeld in which +one is unhappy. +• Likewise with geography risk. You start out in one city — say, +working at a soaware company in Philadelphia — and you’re +doing well. You get the opportunity to jump to a faster +growing soaware company in Silicon Valley. Should you take +the risk of moving geographies — to a place where you don’t +know anybody, and where the cost of living is higher? Almost +104 The Pmarca Blog Archives +certainly — the additional risks of not having an extensive +personal network and of tolerating a lower standard of living +for some period of time are almost certainly overcome by +the upside of being at a better company, relocating yourself +to the heart of your industry, and setting yourself up to +exploit many more great opportunities over the next +decades. +• Working for a big company is, I believe, much risker than it +looks. I’ll talk about this more in the next post, but people +who work at big companies are subject to impersonal layoWs +at any time, and oaen forego the opportunity to develop +skills and gain experiences as rapidly as they would at +someplace smaller and faster growing. And then Xve or ten +years pass, and you realize your skills and experiences are +only relevant for jobs at other big companies — and then you +have a real problem. +• Finally, pay attention to opportunity cost at all times. Doing +one thing means not doing other things. This is a form of risk +that is very easy to ignore, to your detriment. +Those are just a few examples. You will run into speciXc return/ +risk situations that nobody can predict ahead of time. When you +do, just sit down and tease apart the risks — and think hard about +whether, in the context of your overall career portfolio, they are +really so scary that they justify passing on the return potential +of a great opportunity. They oaen won’t. +One more quote, this time from Nassim Nicholas Taleb in The +Black Swan: +Seize any opportunity, or anything that looks like opportunity. They are rare, much rarer than you think… +Many people do not realize they are getting a lucky break in life +when they get it. If a big publisher (or a big art dealer or a movie +executive or a hotshot banker or a big thinker) suggests an appointment, cancel anything you have planned: you may not see such a +window open up again. +Of course, if you really are high-potential, you’re naturally +going to be seeking out risks in your career in order to maxPart 1: Opportunity 105 +imize your level of achievement, so you’re thinking, c’mon, +Andreessen, get to the next point. For which, see the next post! +106 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Part 2: Skills and education +[Please read my opening disclaimers. Note especially that these +are only personal views; I am not trying to malign anyone else’s +choice of career or education path. These are simply the +things I would want to be told if I were entering college today.] +This post discusses skills acquisition throughout your lifetime, +including your formal education. So I will start with college and +move on from there. +What should I study in college? +Some people argue that college will be your one chance in life +to pursue your passion — to spend four years doing nothing but +studying whatever you love the most, whether that’s Renaissance literature or existential philosophy. +I disagree. +If you intend to have an impact on the world, the faster you start +developing concrete skills that will be useful in the real world, the +better — and your undergrad degree is a great place to start. +Once you get into the real world and you’re primed for success, then you can pursue your passion. +A typical liberal arts degree will be almost useless on its own. So +you usually won’t have the option of immediately entering the +workforce in a high-impact way when you graduate, and you’ll +have to go get a useful graduate degree. +And even if you are already planning to get a useful graduate +degree, you are much better oW combining it with a substantive +undergraduate degree — thereby becoming a “double threat”. +More on this in a bit. +Which undergraduate degrees are useful in +the real world? +Typically, those that have a technical element of some form — +that teach you how to do something substantive. +Engineering degrees obviously qualify. The current myth that +engineering and computer science degrees are less useful +because all the jobs are going to India and China is silliness; +ignore it. +Hard science degrees — physics, chemistry — also clearly qualify, as do mathematics and economics. +Why do I take this stance? +• Technical degrees teach you how to do something diZcult +and useful that matters in the real world. Even if you don’t +end up actually doing what the degree teaches you how to do, +going through the experience of learning how to do it will +help you go through other serious learning experiences in +your career. Complexity and diZculty will not faze you. +• Plus, technical degrees teach you how think like an engineer, +a scientist, an economist, or a mathematician — how to use +reason, logic, and data. This is incredibly useful in the real +world, which generally demands rigorous thinking on the +path to doing anything big. +• Plus, technical degrees indicate seriousness of purpose to +future employers and partners. You get coded right up front +as someone who is intent on doing real things. +Graduating with a technical degree is like heading out into the real +108 The Pmarca Blog Archives +world armed with an assault riGe instead of a dull knife. Don’t miss +that opportunity because of some fuzzy romanticized view of +liberal arts broadening your horizons. +What graduate degrees are useful in the +real world? +Generally, if you have a useful undergrad degree, I think graduate degrees are overrated. You can usually hit the workforce in a +real job with just an undergraduate degree and progress rapidly +according to your own ability and energy from there. +Of course, you’re hearing this from someone who could barely +stand to stay in school long enough to Xnish undergrad, so take +that for what it’s worth. +If you don’t have a useful undergrad degree, then a useful graduate degree is deFnitely a great idea. Business, math, economics, +science — something practical, substantive. +Quite a few people in business have paired a liberal arts undergrad degree with an MBA. They seem to do just Xne. But I think +that’s a missed opportunity — much better would be an MBA +on top of an engineering or math undergraduate degree. People with that combination are invaluable, and there aren’t nearly +enough of them running around. +As far as PhDs are concerned — some of my best friends have +PhDs. However, most of the people who have a huge impact +on the world — outside of pure research and education — do +not have PhDs. Draw from that whatever conclusion you think +makes sense. +What college or university should I go to? +Try very very hard to go to one of the best colleges or universities in the world for your chosen Xeld. +Don’t worry about being a small Fsh in a big pond — you want to +always be in the best pond possible, because that’s how you will get +Part 2: Skills and education 109 +exposed to the best people and the best opportunities in your +Xeld. +If you can’t start out in one of the top schools for your Xeld, then +work your butt oW and get great grades and transfer as fast as +you possibly can into a top school. +And if you can’t do that — if you end up getting your undergrad +at a school that’s not one of the top in your Xeld — then strongly +consider pursuing a graduate degree in your Xeld at a great +school for your Xeld. +In this way, even if your only option is starting out at a community college, by the time you Xnish 4-6 years of education, you +can vault yourself into the top tier of your Xeld. +What should I do while I’m in school? +I’m a huge fan of gaining practical experience in school by working during the school year, and then doing as many internships +and co-op programs as you can. +Particularly at research universities — where you want to be — +there are lots of on-campus jobs that will give you highly valuable work experience. Take a job that will teach you something useful +and practical — the two obvious examples are working for a professor in your Xeld with an active research program who needs +undergrads to do some of the work, and being a staW member at +a campus computer lab or research lab. +And then aggressively pursue internship and co-op programs — to +get real-world working experience at companies in your Xeld, +before you even graduate. Target the best companies in your +Xeld, and go aaer the opportunities early and oaen. +If you do this right, by the time you graduate even with just an +undergrad degree, you can have a year and a half of real working experience at high-quality companies plus another four +years of practical experience from an on-campus job under +your belt. +110 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Plus, you will be implicitly demonstrating to future employers how determined you are to succeed and how hard you are willing +to work. +In contrast, almost any other way you can spend your time +while in school aside from getting reasonably good grades is a +mistake. +How should I think about skills +development once I’m out of school? +You should view graduating from school as just the beginning of +your development of a whole portfolio of useful skills. +One of the single best ways you can maximize the impact you +will have on the world and the success you will have in your +career is by continuously developing and broadening your base of +skills. +My favorite way of thinking about this is: +Seek to be a double/triple/quadruple threat. +Scott Adams — the creator of Dilbert — nails it: +If you want an average successful life, it doesn’t take much planning. Just stay out of trouble, go to school, and apply for jobs you +might like. But if you want something extraordinary, you have two +paths: +• Become the best at one speciXc thing. +• Become very good (top 25%) at two or more things. +The Xrst strategy is diZcult to the point of near impossibility. Few +people will ever play in the NBA or make a platinum album. I don’t +recommend anyone even try. +The second strategy is fairly easy. Everyone has at least a few areas +in which they could be in the top 25% with some eWort. In my case, +I can draw better than most people, but I’m hardly an artist. And +I’m not any funnier than the average standup comedian who never +makes it big, but I’m funnier than most people. The magic is that +few people can draw well and write jokes. It’s the combination of +the two that makes what I do so rare. And when you add in my busiPart 2: Skills and education 111 +ness background, suddenly I had a topic that few cartoonists could +hope to understand without living it. +…Get a degree in business on top of your engineering degree, law +degree, medical degree, science degree, or whatever. Suddenly +you’re in charge, or maybe you’re starting your own company +using your combined knowledge. +Capitalism rewards things that are both rare and valuable. You +make yourself rare by combining two or more “pretty goods” until +no one else has your mix… +It sounds like generic advice, but you’d be hard pressed to Xnd any +successful person who didn’t have about three skills in the top 25%. +The fact is, this is even the secret formula to becoming a CEO. All +successful CEO’s are like this. They are almost never the best +product visionaries, or the best salespeople, or the best marketing people, or the best Xnance people, or even the best managers, but they are top 25% in some set of those skills, and +then all of a sudden they’re qualiXed to actually run something +important. +You can apply this principle to the degrees you can choose to +get in school. +I already talked about combining an undergrad engineering +degree with an MBA. I’ll hire as many of those people as I possibly can. +An MBA plus a law degree can be a great combination — and +probably far more useful than either of those degrees by themselves. +Or even combine two undergrad degrees — computer science +plus physics, say, or physics plus economics. +You can also apply this principle to skills that you develop once +you leave school. +Let me cite as examples Fve skills that you can develop once you +leave school that, in combination with your degree or degrees +and your other skills, can help maximize your potential: +112 The Pmarca Blog Archives +First, communication. +Back to Scott Adams: +I always advise young people to become good public speakers (top +25%). Anyone can do it with practice. If you add that talent to any +other, suddenly you’re the boss of the people who have only one +skill… +At least one of the skills in your mixture should involve communication, either written or verbal. +The great thing about communication is that most people are +terrible at it, because they never take it seriously as a skill to +develop. +This is particularly true of engineers and technical people, who +oaen quaintly believe that the world works logically and that +people will automatically recognize the quality of things. +Ha! +Of course, communication is critically important because it’s +how you convey information and concepts to lots of people in +ways that will cause them to change their behavior. +This is one good argument for certain liberal arts undergrad +degrees, such as English. But you don’t need speciXc college +training to be a good communicator — you can learn communication many other ways, including by doing, by practicing, by +taking classes (how about a class in standup comedy? I’m serious!), and by reading a lot. And communication in combination +with some other useful skill is much more powerful than communication alone. +An engineer or a Xnance person or a lawyer who can communicate is hugely more valuable than one who cannot. +And in the long run, you are going to have a very hard time ever +changing the world if you can’t communicate really well. +Second, management. +If at all possible, learn how to manage people. +Part 2: Skills and education 113 +The best way is to learn from a great manager. +Early in your career, make sure you are working for a great +manager — you’ll know her when you see her in action — and +then ask her to teach you how to do it. +And then give it a shot — ask for and get responsibility for a +team of people whom you manage. +Even if your career path won’t involve managing lots of people, +being able to manage will give you a highly valuable tool that +you can pull out whenever you need it, instead of forcing you to +always be reliant on other people to manage. +Worst case, you’ll understand a lot more about why companies +work the way they do and why people are the way they are. +Which is hugely helpful when you set about doing something +new. +Third, sales. +Learn how to sell. +I don’t mean, learn how to sell someone a set of steak knives +they don’t need — although I hear that can be quite an education by itself. +I mean, learn how to convince people that something is in their +best interest to do, even when they don’t realize it up front. +Think of this as the art of being able to interact with people +such that they will do what you want, predictably and repeatedly, as long as you are making sense and oWering them something they should want. +This is another terribly underrated skill, at least among people +who aren’t professional salespeople. But it’s an incredibly general skill that can be helpful not only in your career but +throughout your entire life. Knowing how to sell can also help +you recruit, raise money, talk to investors, create business partnerships, +deal with reporters and analysts, and more — even, God help you, +in your marriage and with your kids. +114 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Spending a year or more in an actual salesforce can be a superb +idea even if you have no intention of making your career in +sales. John Doerr once told me that the year he spent “carrying +a bag” in sales at Intel in the late 70’s was the most valuable year +of his life in terms of skills development — skills he now uses +every day as one of the world’s most successful venture capitalists. If you’ve ever had John Doerr try to talk you into something, you’ll know what he means. +Fourth, Hnance. +A strong level of Xnancial literacy — Xnancial theory, understanding Xnancial statements, budgeting and planning, corporate structure, how equity and debt markets work — will be a +huge boost for almost any career. +Again, this is a more general skill that it appears to be — having +Xnancial skills will also help you in your personal life, as well as +in any nonproXt organizations in which you participate. +And if you ever want to start your own company, being Xnancially literate will be a huge help. +If you’re, for example, a programmer working at a tech company and you don’t know anything about Xnance, go Xnd a +Xnance person and oWer to teach her all about soaware in return +for her teaching you all about Xnance. +Otherwise, Xnance is something you can easily learn by taking +classes, or by reading books. +Also, make an investment in yourself by reading the Financial +Times and the Wall Street Journal every day. Read those two +papers cover to cover for Xve years and you’ll know a lot of +what you need to know. (This recommendation will be even +more practical once Rupert Murdoch makes the Wall Street Journal web site free. The Financial Times just announced its web site +is becoming free for casual readers. But even still, if I were you, +I’d get paper subscriptions to those two papers, and every day +take an hour and sit in a corner and read them cover to cover +Part 2: Skills and education 115 +— except of course for the Journal‘s op-ed pages; those will rot +your brain.) +FiLh, international. +Time spent on the ground in other countries and in other cultures will pay oW in many diWerent ways throughout your +career. +If your company, or university, oWers you the opportunity to +spend a year in another country, it’s probably a pretty good idea +to take it. +Personally I’d incline towards spending that time in younger, +faster growing market economies — like China, India, South +Korea, or Argentina — versus older, slower growing market +economies like France or Germany. But almost any international exposure is likely to be helpful. +This is another of those skills where there’s both a pragmatic +beneXt — you will have experience on the ground with people +in a speciXc country — and a general beneXt — you will know +how to think more broadly than the average American, or +American president, who has never been out of the country. +There aren’t very many interesting businesses anymore that +don’t have a strong international element — in fact, many +American companies now generate the majority of their revenue and proXt outside the US. Having a global perspective can +only help you maximize your future opportunities. +Any 7nal thoughts on education? +Yes. +If you’re in college now, or about to graduate from college, and +you come from an upper middle class background — especially +if you are going to an Ivy League school — take the time to +read a provocative essay David Brooks wrote several years ago +called “The Organization Kid”. +116 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Some excerpts: +I asked several [Ivy League] students to describe their daily schedules, and their replies sounded like a session of Future Workaholics +of America: crew practice at dawn, classes in the morning, residentadviser duty, lunch, study groups, classes in the aaernoon, tutoring +disadvantaged kids in Trenton, a cappella practice, dinner, study, +science lab, prayer session, hit the StairMaster, study a few hours +more… +[N]owhere did I Xnd any real unhappiness with this state of aWairs; +nowhere did I Xnd anybody who seriously considered living any +other way. These super-accomplished kids aren’t working so hard +because they are compelled to… It’s not the stick that drives them +on, it’s the carrot. Opportunity lures them… [I]n a rich informationage country like America, promises of enjoyable work abound — at +least for people as smart and ambitious as these. “I want to be this +busy,” one young woman insisted, aaer she had described a daily +schedule that would count as slave-driving if it were imposed on +anyone… +That doesn’t mean that these leaders-in-training are money-mad +(though they are certainly career-conscious). It means they are +goal-oriented. An activity — whether it is studying, hitting the +treadmill, drama group, community service, or one of the student +groups they found and join in great numbers — is rarely an end +in itself. It is a means for self-improvement, résumé-building, and +enrichment. College is just one step on the continual stairway of +advancement, and they are always aware that they must get to the +next step (law school, medical school, whatever) so that they can +progress up the steps aaer that… +They’re not trying to buck the system; they’re trying to climb it, +and they are streamlined for ascent… +Kids of all stripes [today] lead lives that are structured, supervised, +and stuWed with enrichment… Today’s elite kids are likely to spend +their aaernoons and weekends shuttling from one skill-enhancing +activity to the next. By the time they reach college, they take this +sort of pace for granted… +In short, at the top of the meritocratic ladder we have in America +a generation of students who are extraordinarily bright, morally +earnest, and incredibly industrious. They like to study and socialize +in groups. They create and join organizations with great enthusiasm. They are responsible, safety-conscious, and mature. They feel +no compelling need to rebel — not even a hint of one. They not +only defer to authority; they admire it. “Alienation” is a word one +Part 2: Skills and education 117 +almost never hears from them. They regard the universe as beneficent, orderly, and meaningful. At the schools and colleges where +the next leadership class is being bred, one Xnds not angry revolutionaries, despondent slackers, or dark cynics but the Organization +Kid. +Now, if your parents are middle class, or lower middle class, +and you’re attending a state school or a local college, and you’re +working your way through school in order to pay for tuition, +you can stop reading now; you probably don’t have anything to +worry about. But if you read Brooks’ essay and recognize yourself, read on. +The good news is that Brooks’ fundamental thesis is correct: kids +graduating from top colleges and universities today are in many ways +better prepared for achievement and success than ever before. As a +group, you are better educated, better trained, more motivated, +and more serious than many of your predecessors. And that is +fantastic. +The risk, however, is this: +If you have lived an orchestrated existence, gone to great +schools, participated in lots of extracurricular activities, had +parents who really concentrated hard on developing you +broadly and exposing you to lots of cultural experiences, and +graduated from an elite university in the Xrst 22 or more years +of your life, you are in danger of entering the real world, being +smacked hard across the face by reality, and never recovering. +What do I mean? It’s possible you got all the way through those +Xrst 22 or more years and are now entering the workforce without ever really challenging yourself. This sounds silly because +you’ve been working hard your whole life, but working hard +is not what I’m talking about. You’ve been continuously surrounded by a state of the art parental and educational support +structure — a safety net — and you have yet to make tough decisions, +by yourself, in the absence of good information, and to live with the +consequences of screwing up. +In my opinion, it’s now critically important to get into the real +world and really challenge yourself — expose yourself to risk +118 The Pmarca Blog Archives +— put yourself in situations where you will succeed or fail by +your own decisions and actions, and where that success or failure will be highly visible. +By failure I don’t mean getting a B or even a C, but rather: having +your boss yell at you in front of your peers for screwing up a +project, launching a product and seeing it tank, being unable to +meet a ship date, missing a critical piece of information in a +Xnancial report, or getting Xred. +Why? If you’re going to be a high achiever, you’re going to be +in lots of situations where you’re going to be quickly making decisions in the presence of incomplete or incorrect information, under +intense time pressure, and oMen under intense political pressure. You’re +going to screw up — frequently — and the screwups will have +serious consequences, and you’ll feel incredibly stupid every +time. It can’t faze you — you have to be able to just get right back up +and keep on going. +That may be the most valuable skill you can ever learn. Make +sure you start learning it early. +Part 2: Skills and education 119 +Part 3: Where to go and why +When picking an industry to enter, my favorite rule of thumb is +this: +Pick an industry where the founders of the industry — the +founders of the important companies in the industry — are +still alive and actively involved. +This is easy to Xgure out — just look at the CEO, chairman or +chairwoman, and board of directors for the major companies in +the industry. +If the founders of the companies are currently serving as CEO, chairman or chairwoman, or board member of their companies, it’s a good +industry to enter. It is probably still young and vital, and there are +probably still opportunities to exploit all over the place, either +at those companies or at new companies in that industry. +If not — if the industry’s founders are dead, or old and out of +touch — beware. That industry is now dominated by companies +that are being run by second or third or even fourth generation managers who inherited their companies pre-built, and are +serving as caretakers. +If you are young and want to have an impact, you want to be in +an industry where there is a lot of growth and change and Iux +and opportunity. +As an industry ages, the vitality drains out until all that’s lea is a +set of ossiXed remnants in the form of oligopolostic entities of +which you would Xnd being a part to be completely soul-killing. +The exception comes when an industry has gotten so old and +ossiXed that the clear opportunity exists to up-end it and introduce a new order, a new way of doing things, and therefore a +new set of companies. +In some industries this happens routinely — e.g. every 10-20 +years. This is the case in technology, for example, and Xnancial +services. +It doesn’t seem to happen ever in certain other industries which +I won’t name for fear of being permanently cut oW from my +necessary supply of oil, gas, music, and movies. +If you’re going to enter an old industry, make sure to do it on +the side of the forces of radical change that threaten to up-end +the existing order — and make sure that those forces of change +have a reasonable chance at succeeding. +Second rule of thumb: +Once you have picked an industry, get right to the center of it +as fast as you possibly can. +Your target is the core of change and opportunity — Xgure +out where the action is and head there, and do not delay your +progress for extraneous opportunities, no matter how lucrative +they might be. +Never worry about being a small Hsh in a big pond. Being a big +Xsh in a small pond sucks — you will hit the ceiling on what you +can achieve quickly, and nobody will care. Optimize at all times +for being in the most dynamic and exciting pond you can Fnd. That is +where the great opportunities can be found. +Apply this rule when selecting which company to go to. Go to +the company where all the action is happening. +Or, if you are going to join a startup or start your own company, +always make sure that your startup is aimed at the largest and +Part 3: Where to go and why 121 +most interesting opportunity available — the new markets that +are growing fast and changing rapidly. +Also apply this rule when selecting which city to live in. Go to +the city where all the action is happening. +For technology, at least in the US, this is Silicon Valley. For +entertainment, this is Los Angeles. For politics, Washington DC. +For coWee, Seattle. For Xnancial services, New York — unless +you are convinced that there are equally compelling opportunities someplace else, like London or Hong Kong or Shanghai. +In my opinion, living anywhere other than the center of your industry +is a mistake. A lot of people — those who don’t live in that place +— don’t want to hear it. But it’s true. Geographic locality is still +— even in the age of the Internet — critically important if you +want to maximize your access to the best companies, the best +people, and the best opportunities. You can always cite exceptions, +but that’s what they are: exceptions. +No one cares who the top Xlmmaker in Chicago is — hell, people oaen don’t even care who the top Xlmmaker in New York is, +and quite a lot of Xlms get made out of New York. On the other +hand, the top 50 Xlmmakers in Los Angeles are all very important people in their industry. +Let’s Yavor all of the above with a little nuance: +“Current importance” may not be the same as “greatest +change”. +Whenever you believe that the currently dominant companies, +or cities, are not the places of greatest change and opportunity, +you have a decision to make. +Perhaps New York, while clearly the Xnancial services capital of +the world, is not the place of greatest opportunity for someone +new. Perhaps, for you, that would be Dubai, or Buenos Aires, or +Prague, or Macau. +And perhaps Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Lehman Brothers, Citigroup, and JP Morgan Chase, while clearly the most +122 The Pmarca Blog Archives +important Xnancial services companies in the world, are not the +companies of greatest opportunity for someone new. Perhaps, +for you, that’s a totally diWerent kind of Xnancial services company, like Paypal. +Then you have a decision to make — whether to tilt a little +conservative and stick with the currently most important place +and companies under the rationale that they are still the major +agents of change in the industry, or tilt aggressive and go someplace or to some Xrm that’s up and coming and might represent +disruptive change and therefore even greater opportunity. +Either way, to quote Pink Floyd, “set the controls for the heart of +the sun” — be sure you’re heading where the action is, where the +biggest opportunities in your Xeld are, as you’ve chosen to think +about it. Don’t fart around in second and third tier companies +that don’t have a clear mission to dominate their markets. +Third rule: +In a rapidly changing Held like technology, the best place to +get experience when you’re starting out is in younger, highgrowth companies. +(This is not necessarily true in older and more established +industries, but those aren’t the industries we’re talking about.) +There are a bunch of great things that you get when you go to +a younger, high-growth company: +• You’ll get to do lots of stuE.There will be so much stuW to do in +the company that you’ll be able to do as much of it as you +can possibly handle. Which means you’ll gain skills and +experience very quickly. +• You’ll probably get promoted quickly.Fast-growing companies are +characterized by a chronic lack of people who can step up to +all the important new leadership jobs that are being created +all the time. If you are aggressive and performing well, +promotions will come quickly and easily. +• You’ll get used to being in a high-energy, rapidly-changing +environment with sharp people and high expectations.It’s like +Part 3: Where to go and why 123 +training for a marathon while wearing ankle weights — if you +ever end up going to a big company, you’ll blow everyone +away. And if you ever go to a startup, you’ll be ready for the +intensity. +• Reputational beneFt.Having Silicon Graphics from the early +90’s, or Netscape from the mid-90’s, or eBay from the late +90’s, or Paypal from the early 00’s, or Google from the +mid-00’s on your resume is as valuable as any advanced +degree — it’s a permanent source of credibility. +In contrast to going to a big company: working for a big company +teaches you how to work for big companies. The way things +work at a big company is usually unique to big companies. So, +working for a big company is oaen a statement that you plan +to spend your career at big companies — and lots of people are +very happy doing that, but I doubt that’s your intention or you +wouldn’t be reading this post. +In contrast to going to a startup: when you are Xrst starting your +career, you should realize that raw startups are highly variable in +terms of the experiences you will have. Some can be great, but +many are very poorly managed and go nowhere. You will probably be better oW going somewhere that’s already succeeding, +gain skills and experience, and then go to a startup. +In contrast to going to a mediocre small or mid-sized company that’s +not growing: those are great places to go if you don’t want to go +anywhere yourself. If you Xnd yourself stuck in one, either Xgure out how to get the company unstuck and on a fast growth +path, or get yourself unstuck. +There is a caveat to all this, which is as follows: +Don’t just be a “summertime soldier” — don’t go someplace +because it’s already successful, and then bail when things get +tough. +Any hiring manager for the rest of your career will be able to +read that on your resume just by looking at the dates. +High-growth companies virtually always hit speed bumps, or even huge +124 The Pmarca Blog Archives +potholes. StuW goes wrong. Going through the experience of gutting through the hard parts and coming out the other end will +be a key part of your real-world education and will serve you +very well down the road, especially if you ever start your own +company. +Then, once you’ve racked up killer skills and experiences at a +high-growth company, feel free to go to a startup. +Picking which startup to join probably deserves its own post. +However, in a nutshell, look for one where you understand the product, see how it might Ft into a very large market, and really like and +respect the people who are already there. +Or, start your own company. +If your startup fails, try another one. If that one fails, get back +into a high-growth company to reset your resume and get more +skills and experiences. Then start another company. Repeat as +necessary until you change the world. +Finally, every job you take and every role you Hll will always +be a tactical opportunity and a strategic opportunity. +The tactical opportunity is obvious: kick ass and take names — +gain skills and experiences that will be valuable to you in the +future, and do so well that everyone you work with is singing +your praises for decades to come. +The strategic opportunity is less obvious and oaen overlooked. +Every job, every role, every company you go to is an opportunity to learn how a business works and how an industry works. +Learn everything you can about the business and the industry +in which you Xnd yourself. +Think strategically: how would I start a Xrm like this today? Or, if I +were starting a company in this industry today, how would it be +diWerent than this Xrm? Why is this Xrm and other Xrms in this +industry doing what they do? What are the assumptions underneath their behavior? Should those assumptions be changing? +Part 3: Where to go and why 125 +How might this industry work diWerently? Which customers +are being underserved? What new technologies might change +things completely? How were things working 10 years ago, versus today, versus 10 years from now? And, my favorite: if the +creators of this industry were starting out today, what would +they be doing now? +In FX’s great new series Damages, a young attorney named Ellen +Parsons has gone to work for a famous law Xrm called Hewes +and Associates, run by the legendary, ruthless, and amoral Patty +Hewes. Ellen, rattled by the intensity of her experience at Hewes +and Associates, asks her mentor Hollis Nye what she should do: +Hollis Nye: My advice to you, Ellen, is to stop trying to Xgure Patty +out. You’ll never change her, but she’ll change you. +Ellen: How? +Nye: By giving you access to how she thinks. You signed up for this; +now, keep your head down, and do the work. That’s why you’re +there, isn’t it? +Ellen: Yes. +Nye: Then don’t be shortsighted. Start using her. Learn everything +you can, then get the hell out of there before it’s too late. +Ellen: How exactly will I know when that is? +Nye: Ah. That’s for another walk. +…and another post. +126 The Pmarca Blog Archives +The Pmarca Guide to Personal +Productivity +One of my all-time favorite guilty pleasures is indulging in productivity porn. +Productivity porn (or, for those really in the know, “productivity +pr0n”) consists of techniques, tactics, and tricks for maximizing +personal productivity — or, as they say, “getting things done”. +Having enjoyed such Xne purveyors of prodporn as Merlin +Mann, Danny O’Brien, Gina Trapani, David Allen, and Tim Ferriss, I’d like to return the favor with the following: the Pmarca +Guide to Personal Productivity. +The techniques that follow work together as an integrated set +for me, but they probably won’t for you. Maybe you’ll get one or +two ideas — probably out of the ideas I stole from other people. +If so, I have succeeded. +And here we go; let’s start with a bang: +Don’t keep a schedule +He’s crazy, you say! +I’m totally serious. If you pull it oW — and in many structured +jobs, you simply can’t — this simple tip alone can make a huge +diWerence in productivity. +By not keeping a schedule, I mean: refuse to commit to meetings, appointments, or activities at any set time in any future +day. +As a result, you can always work on whatever is most important +or most interesting, at any time. +Want to spend all day writing a research report? Do it! +Want to spend all day coding? Do it! +Want to spend all day at the cafe down the street reading a book +on personal productivity? Do it! +When someone emails or calls to say, “Let’s meet on Tuesday at +3″, the appropriate response is: “I’m not keeping a schedule for +2007, so I can’t commit to that, but give me a call on Tuesday at +2:45 and if I’m available, I’ll meet with you.” +Or, if it’s important, say, “You know what, let’s meet right now.” +Clearly this only works if you can get away with it. If you have +a structured job, a structured job environment, or you’re a CEO, +it will be hard to pull oW. +But if you can do it, it’s really liberating, and will lead to far +higher productivity than almost any other tactic you can try. +This idea comes from a wonderful book called A Perfect Mess, +which explains how not keeping a schedule has been key to +Arnold Schwarzenegger’s success as a movie star, politician, and +businessman over the last 20 years. +If you have at any point in your life lived a relatively structured +existence — probably due to some kind of job with regular oZce +hours, meetings, and the like — you will know that there is nothing more liberating than looking at your calendar and seeing +nothing but free time for weeks ahead to work on the most +important things in whatever order you want. +This also gives you the best odds of maximizing Yow, which is a +whole ‘nother topic but highly related. +128 The Pmarca Blog Archives +I’ve been trying this tactic as an experiment in 2007, as those of +you who have emailed me to suggest we get together or that I +go to a conference or to a meeting will attest. And I am so much +happier, I can’t even tell you. I get so much more time to focus +on the things that really matter — in my case, my two companies, my nonproXt boards, and my lovely wife. +The other great thing about this tactic is that it doesn’t have to +be all or nothing — there are quite a few things that still sneak +onto my calendar that I really can’t get out of. But one is still +able to draw the line between “must do” and “sounds interesting +but I’m not keeping a schedule”. +Keep three and only three lists: a Todo List, +a Watch List, and a Later List. +The more into lists you are, the more important this is. +Into the Todo List goes all the stuW you “must” do — commitments, obligations, things that have to be done. A single list, possibly subcategorized by timeframe (today, this week, next week, +next month). +Into the Watch List goes all the stuW going on in your life that +you have to follow up on, wait for someone else to get back to +you on, remind yourself of in the future, or otherwise remember. +Into the Later List goes everything else — everything you might +want to do or will do when you have time or wish you could do. +If it doesn’t go on one of those three lists, it goes away. +Each night before you go to bed, prepare a +3×5 index card with a short list of 3 to 5 +things that you will do the next day. +And then, the next day, do those things. +I sit down at my desk before I go to sleep, pull up my Todo List +The Pmarca Guide to Personal Productivity 129 +(which I keep in Microsoa Word’s outline mode, due to long +habit), and pick out the 3 to 5 things I am going to get done +tomorrow. I write those things on a fresh 3×5 card, lay the card +out with my card keys, and go to bed. Then, the next day, I try +like hell to get just those things done. If I do, it was a successful +day. +People who have tried lots of productivity porn techniques will +tell you that this is one of the most successful techniques they +have ever tried. +Once you get into the habit, you start to realize how many days +you used to have when you wouldn’t get 3 to 5 important/significant/meaningful things done during a day. +Then, throughout the rest of the day, use the back of the 3×5 +card as your Anti-Todo List. +This isn’t a real list. And the name is tongue Xrmly in cheek. +What you do is this: every time you do something — anything +— useful during the day, write it down in your Anti-Todo List +on the card. +Each time you do something, you get to write it down and you +get that little rush of endorphins that the mouse gets every time +he presses the button in his cage and gets a food pellet. +And then at the end of the day, before you prepare tomorrow’s +3×5 card, take a look at today’s card and its Anti-Todo list and +marvel at all the things you actually got done that day. +Then tear it up and throw it away. +Another day well spent, and productive. +I love this technique — being able to put more notches on my +accomplishment belt, so to speak, by writing down things on my +Anti-Todo list as I accomplish them throughout the day makes +me feel marvelously productive and eZcient. Far more so than +if I just did those things and didn’t write them down. +Plus, you know those days when you’re running around all day +130 The Pmarca Blog Archives +and doing stuW and talking to people and making calls and +responding to emails and Xlling out paperwork and you get +home and you’re completely exhausted and you say to yourself, +“What the hell did I actually get done today?” +Your Anti-Todo list has the answer. +By the way, in order to do this, you have to carry a pen with +you everywhere you go. I recommend the Fisher Space Pen. +It’s short and bullet-shaped so it won’t poke you in the thigh +when it’s in your pocket, it’s wonderfully retro, it helped save +the Apollo 11 mission, and it writes upside down. What’s not to +like? +Structured procrastination +This is a great one. +This one is liaed straight from the genius mind of John Perry, +a philosophy professor at Stanford. (Read his original description, by all means. You even get to see a photo of him practicing +jumping rope with seaweed on a beach while work awaits. Outstanding.) +The gist of Structured Procrastination is that you should never +Xght the tendency to procrastinate — instead, you should use it +to your advantage in order to get other things done. +Generally in the course of a day, there is something you have to +do that you are not doing because you are procrastinating. +While you’re procrastinating, just do lots of other stuW instead. +As John says, “The list of tasks one has in mind will be ordered +by importance. Tasks that seem most urgent and important are +on top. But there are also worthwhile tasks to perform lower +down on the list. Doing these tasks becomes a way of not doing +the things higher up on the list. With this sort of appropriate +task structure, the procrastinator becomes a useful citizen. +Indeed, the procrastinator can even acquire, as I have, a reputation for getting a lot done.” +The Pmarca Guide to Personal Productivity 131 +Reading John’s essay was one of the single most profound +moments of my entire life. +For example, I hate making phone calls. Hate it. Love sending +emails, enjoy seeing people face to face (sometimes), but I hate +making phone calls. +I can get so much done while I am avoiding making a phone call +that I need to make, I can barely believe it. +In fact, that’s what’s happening right now. +The other key two-word tactic… +Strategic incompetence +The best way to to make sure that you are never asked to do +something again is to royally screw it up the Xrst time you are +asked to do it. +Or, better yet, just say you know you will royally screw it up — +maintain a strong voice and a clear gaze, and you’ll probably get +oW the hook. +Of course, this assumes that there are other things that are more +important at which you are competent. +Which, hopefully, there are. +Organizing the company picnic, sending faxes or Fedexes, +negotiating with insurance brokers, writing in plain English… +the list of things at which one can be strategically incompetent +is nearly endless. +Do email exactly twice a day +— say, once Xrst thing in the morning, and once at the end of +the workday. +Allocated half an hour or whatever it takes, but otherwise, keep +your email client shut and your email notiHcations turned oG. +132 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Anyone who needs to reach you so urgently that it can’t wait +until later in the day or tomorrow morning can call you, or send +a runner, or send up smoke signals, or something else. +Or, more likely, Xnd someone else who can do whatever it is that +needs doing. +(If you communicate with your spouse or key family members +via email during the day, then just set up a separate email +account just for them and leave that open all day, but keep +your primary email closed. And never give out the family email +address to anyone noncritical — including your boss.) +Only doing email twice a day will make you far more productive +for the rest of the day. +The problem with email is that getting an email triggers that +same endorphin hit I mentioned above — the one that a mouse +gets when he bonks on the button in the cage and gets a food +pellet. +Responding to an email triggers that same hit. +The pleasure chemical hits your neocortex and you go “ahhh” +inside and feel like you’ve done something. +So you sit and work with your mail client open and you interrupt your work every time an email comes in and you answer it +and you send another email and you feel great in the moment. +But what you’re really doing is fracturing your time, interrupting your Yow, and killing your ability to focus on anything long +enough to get real high-quality work done. +This one is far easier to say than do. And it won’t be feasible +during projects where lots of updates during the day really are +important — raising money, for example, or closing a big deal. +Me, I’m just trying to get down to checking email only a half +dozen times per day. +The Pmarca Guide to Personal Productivity 133 +When you do process email, do it like this +First, always Hnish each of your two daily email sessions with a +completely empty inbox. +I don’t know about you, but when I know I have emails in my +inbox that haven’t been dealt with, I Xnd it hard to concentrate +on other things. +The urge to go back to my email is nearly overpowering. +(I am apparently seriously addicted to endorphins.) +Second, when doing email, either answer or Hle every single +message until you get to that empty inbox state of grace. +Not keeping a schedule helps here, a lot, if you can pull it oW — +you can reply to a lot of messages with “I’m sorry, I’m not keeping a schedule in 2007, I can’t commit to that.” +Third, emails relating to topics that are current working projects or pressing issues go into temporary subfolders of a +folder called Action. +You should only have Action subfolders for the things that really +matter, right now. +Those subfolders then get used, and the messages in them +processed, when you are working on their respective projects in +the normal course of your day. +Fourth, aside from those temporary Action subfolders, only +keep three standing email folders: Pending, Review, and Vault. +Emails that you know you’re going to have to deal with again — +such as emails in which someone is committing something to +you and you want to be reminded to follow up on it if the person doesn’t deliver — go in Pending. +Emails with things you want to read in depth when you have +more time, go into Review. +Everything else goes into Vault. +134 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Every once in a while, sweep through your Action subfolders +and dump any of them that you can into Vault. +(And do the same thing for messages in your Pending folder — +most of the things in there you will never look at again. Actually, +same is true for Review.) +That’s it. +You can get away with this because modern email clients are so +good at search (well, most of them — and you can always move +to GMail) that it’s not worth the eWort to try to Xle emails into +lots of diWerent folders. +Obviously you may need some additional permanent folders +for important things like contracts, or emails from your doctor, +or the like, but these are exceptions and don’t change your standard operating procedure. +Don’t answer the phone +Let it go to voicemail, and then every few hours, screen your +voicemails and batch the return calls. +Say, twice a day. +Cell phones and family plans are so cheap these days that I think +the best thing to do is have two cell phones with diWerent numbers — one for key family members, your closest friends, and +your boss and a few coworkers, and the other for everyone else. +Answer the Xrst one when it rings, but never answer the second +one. +Hide in an iPod +One of the best and easiest ways to avoid distractions in the +workplace is to be wearing those cute little IPod earbud headphones (or any other headphones of your choice). +The Pmarca Guide to Personal Productivity 135 +People, for some reason, feel much worse interrupting you if +you are wearing headphones than if you’re not. +It’s great — a lot of the time, people will walk up to you, start +to say something, notice the headphones, apologize (using exaggerated mouth motions), and walk away. +This is great — half the time they didn’t actually need to talk to +you, and the other half of the time they can send an email that +you can process at the end of the day during the second of your +two daily email sweeps. +Here’s the best part: you don’t actually have to be listening to +anything. +Hell, you don’t even have to have the headphones plugged into +anything. +Sleeping and Eating +I’m not going to talk a lot about getting up early or going to +bed late or anything else related to the course of a typical day, +because everyone’s diWerent. +Personally I go back and forth between being a night owl (99% of +the time) and a morning person (1% — I’m going to try to push +it to 2%). +But the thing that matters almost more than anything in determining whether I’ll have a happy, satisfying day is this: no matter what time you get up, start the day with a real, sit-down +breakfast. +This serves two purposes. +First, it fuels you up. Study aaer study have shown that breakfast +is, yes, the most important meal of the day. It’s critical to properly fuel the body for the day’s activities and it’s also critical to +staying lean or losing weight. (People who don’t have breakfast +tend to eat more, and worse, at lunch.) +Second, it gives you a chance to calmly, peacefully collect your +136 The Pmarca Blog Archives +thoughts and prepare mentally and emotionally for the day +ahead. +This works whether you do it with kids and/or a partner, or +you’re solo. +Personally I think it’s worth whatever eWort is involved to go to +bed early enough to wake up early enough to have a good solid +45 minutes or an hour for breakfast each morning, if you can +pull it oW. +Only agree to new commitments when both +your head and your heart say yes +This one is from the great Robert Evans. (Hold out for +the audiobook — trust me.) +It’s really easy to get asked to do something — a new project, a +nonproXt activity, a social event — and to have your head say +yes and your heart say no, and then your mouth says yes. +The next thing you know, you’re piled up with all kinds of things +on your schedule that sounded like a good idea at the time but +you really don’t want to do. +And distract you from the things that really matter. +And make you angry, and bitter, and sullen, and hostile. +(Oh, wait, I’m projecting.) +In my experience, it takes time to tell the diWerence between +your head saying yes and your heart saying yes. +I think the key is whether you’re really excited about it. +If you get that little adrenaline spike (in a good way) when you +think about it, then your heart is saying yes. +The corollary, of course, is that when your head says no and +your heart says yes, your mouth should generally say yes as well +:-). +The Pmarca Guide to Personal Productivity 137 +But not when your head says yes and your heart says no. +Do something you love +As you’ve probably concluded by now, most of the tactics +described in this post involve keeping oneself as free as possible +to pursue one’s core interests, and dreams. +If you’re not doing something you love with the majority of +your time, and you have any personal freedom and Yexibility +whatsoever, it’s time for a change. +And this doesn’t mean something that you love doing in theory +— but rather, the core thing you love doing in practice. +And that’s it. +Please feel free to nominate additions to the list! Next time +my mobile wiki-based GTD Outlook synchronized hipster PDA +reminds me, I’ll check ‘em out. +Notes based on reader feedback: +Turns out Robert Benchley wrote about structured procrastination back in 1949. Wonderful essay — highly recommended. +The sharpest reaction has been to my theory of not keeping a +schedule. I’ll stick to my theory but make (or re-make) a couple +of clarifying points. +First, it is certainly true that many people have jobs and responsibilities where they can’t do that. Or maybe can only do it partially. And many people enjoy living a highly structured life and +obviously this approach is not for them. +But if your reaction is, “boy, I wish I could do that”, then it may +well be worth rethinking your approach to your career. +I can tell you from personal experience that being stuck in a role +where you have a lot of structure but feel like you never get any138 The Pmarca Blog Archives +thing done is not the optimal way to advance in one’s profession, +or maximize one’s job satisfaction. +Second, I do not recommend pursuing this approach in one’s +personal life :-). +On another topic, the tactic of each night, write down the 3 to +5 things you need to do the next day has struck some people as +too simplistic. +That may be the case for some people, but I can’t tell you how +many times I’ve arrived home at night and am at a loss as to +what I actually got done that day, despite the fact that I worked +all day. +And I also can’t tell you how oaen I’ve had a huge, highly-structured todo list in front of me with 100 things on it and I stare +at it and am paralyzed into inaction (or, more likely, structured +procrastination). +So a day when I get 3 to 5 concrete, actionable things done in +addition to all the other stuW one has to do to get through the +day — well, that’s a good day. +A few people have said, why not just use GTD (David Allen’s +“Getting Things Done” approach). +While I Xnd GTD to be highly inspiring, in practice I think it’s +awfully complex. At least if your job is based on project work (as +opposed to having a highly structured role like CEO or head of +sales). +For me, an organization system that requires signiXcant time to +deal with in and of itself is not optimal. Much better, for me at +least, is to focus on stripping away nonessentials and freeing up +as much time as possible to deal with whatever is most important. +Finally, I discovered aaer writing this post that Paul Graham talks a bit about the role of time and focus in personal productivity in his essay on “The Power of the Marginal”. +The Pmarca Guide to Personal Productivity 139 +Thanks for all the comments! +140 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Psychology and +Entrepreneurship +The Psychology of Entrepreneurial +Misjudgment: Biases 1-6 +Charlie Munger is an 80-something billionaire who cofounded +top-tier law Xrm Munger, Tolles & Olson and is Warren +Buffett’s long-time partner and Vice-Chairman at Berkshire +Hathaway, one of the most successful companies of all time. +Some people, including me, consider Mr. Munger to be an even +more interesting thinker and writer than Mr. BuWett, and +recently a group of Mr. Munger’s friends assembled a compilation book of his most interesting thoughts and speeches +called Poor Charlie’s Almanack, inspired by Ben Franklin’s Poor +Richard’s Almanack. (The Munger book is only available on Amazon in used form, although you can apparently buy a new +copy here.) +Mr. Munger’s magnum opus speech, included in the book, +is The Psychology of Human Misjudgment — an exposition of 25 +key forms of human behavior that lead to misjudgment and +error, derived from Mr. Munger’s 60 years of business experience. Think of it as a practitioner’s summary of human psychology and behavioral economics as observed in the real world. +In this series of blog posts, I will walk through all 25 of the biases +Mr. Munger identiXes, and then adapt them for the modern +entrepreneur. In each case I will start with relevant excerpts of +Mr. Munger’s speech, and then aaer that add my own thoughts. +One: Reward and Punishment +Superresponse Tendency +I place this tendency Xrst in my discussion because almost everyone thinks he fully recognizes how important incentives and disincentives are in changing cognition and behavior. But this is not +oaen so. For instance, I think I’ve been in the top Xve percent of +my age cohort almost all my adult life in understanding the power +of incentives, and yet I’ve always underestimated that power. Never +a year passes but I get some surprise that pushes a little further my +appreciation of incentive superpower. +…We [should] heed the general lesson implicit in the injunction of +Ben Franklin in Poor Richard’s Almanack: “If you would persuade, +appeal to interest and not to reason.” This maxim is a wise guide +to a great and simple precaution in life: Never, ever, think about +something else when you should be thinking about the power of +incentives… +One of the most important consequences of incentive superpower +is what I call “incentive caused bias.” A man has an acculturated +nature making him a pretty decent fellow, and yet, driven both +consciously and subconsciously by incentives, he drias into +immoral behavior in order to get what he wants, a result he facilitates by rationalizing his bad behavior [like a salesman who harms +her customers by selling them the wrong product because she gets +paid more for selling it, versus the right product — see, e.g., the +mutual fund industry]. +…Another generalized consequence of incentive caused bias is that +man tends to “game” all human systems, oaen displaying great +ingenuity in wrongly serving himself at the expense of others. +Antigaming features, therefore, constitute a huge and necessary +part of almost all system design. +…Military and naval organizations have very oaen been extreme +in using punishment [the inverse of reward] to change behavior, +probably because they needed to cause extreme behavior. Around +the time of Caesar, there was a European tribe that, when the +assembly horn blew, always killed the last warrior to reach his +assigned place, and no one enjoyed Xghting this tribe. +Human response to incentives is indeed a huge behavioral +motivator, and I think Mr. Munger is right that once you think +you realize how big it is, you need to assume it’s even bigger. +The Psychology of Entrepreneurial Misjudgment: Biases 1-6 143 +This is why stock options work so well in startups — and the +fewer people in a startup, the better stock options work, since +when there are only a few people in a company, it’s usually crystal clear to each person how her work will impact the value of +the company. +There is a wrong-headed and dangerous theory afoot that +restricted stock (grants of fully in-the-money shares of stock) is +a more appropriate motivator of employees of tech companies +than stock options: +Mr. Gates wanted Mr. BuWett’s input on whether to drop options in +favor of restricted stock at Microsoa. [Gates] recalls asking: “How +will employees respond to getting a lottery ticket that gives them a +deXnite amount instead of one that could amount to nothing or a +ridiculous sum?” +Mr. BuWett’s reply, according to Mr. Gates, was: “My wife would +rather have a ticket for one fur coat, than a ticket that gave her two +or nothing.” +Overt sexism aside, from an incentive standpoint the result of +shiaing from stock options to restricted stock should be obvious: current employees will be incented to preserve value instead +of creating value. And new hires will by deXnition be people who +are conservative and change-averse, as the people who want +to swing for the fences and get rewarded for creating something new will go somewhere else, where they will receive stock +options — in typically greater volume than anyone will ever +grant restricted stock — and have greater upside. +And sure enough, in the wake of shiaing towards restricted +stock and away from stock options, Microsoa’s stock has been +Yat as a pancake. The incentive works. +Now, against that, it is true that stock options, particularly for +public companies, have an oaen-destructive random component: they tend to increase in value in rising stock market environments and decrease in value (potentially to zero) in falling +stock market environments, regardless of whether value is being +created inside your particular company. +For that reason, in the long run it probably makes sense for +144 The Pmarca Blog Archives +some new approach to stock-based compensation to be developed that both preserves the motivation to create as opposed +to preserve value, but factors out the environmental swings of +rising and falling stock markets. Some form of indexing against +market averages would probably do the trick. This has been +tried from time to time, and I expect it to be tried more in the +future, at least for public companies. +As a company grows, stock options and other forms of equitybased motivation become less and less useful as an incentive +tool, since it becomes harder for many employees in a large +company to see how their individual behavior would have any +eWect on the stock price of the overall corporation. So, more tactical incentives kick in, such as cash bonuses. +The design of tactical incentives — e.g. bonuses — is a whole +topic in and of itself, and is critically important as your company grows. The most signiXcant thing to keep in mind is that +how the goals are designed really matters — as Mr. Munger says, +people tend to game any system you put in place, and then they +tend to rationalize that gaming until they believe they really are +doing the right thing. +I think it was Andy Grove who said that for every goal you put in +front of someone, you should also put in place a counter-goal to restrict +gaming of the Frst goal. +So, for example, if you are incenting your recruiters on the +number of new employees recruited and hired, you need to +also give them a counter-goal (and tie it to their compensation) +that measures the quality of the new hires three months in. +Otherwise the recruiters are guaranteed to give you what +you don’t want: a lot of mediocre new hires. +One of the great unwritten Silicon Valley skewed incentive stories was a major datacenter vendor in the late 90’s that incented +its salespeople based on bookings of long-term datacenter leases, +without suZcient counter-goals tied to revenue collection or +the customer’s ability to pay. Sure enough, soon the company’s +reported bookings were heading straight up, revenue was Yat, +and cash headed straight down, resulting in a truly spectacular +The Psychology of Entrepreneurial Misjudgment: Biases 1-6 145 +bankruptcy. The salespeople got paid, though, so they were +happy. +More recently, skewed incentives in the mortgage industry — +mortage issuers getting paid based on quantity of mortgages +issued, versus ability to pay — caused many of the current catastrophic Wall Street Xnancial meltdowns you get to read about +every day. +Even engineers need counter-goals: incent engineers based +purely on a ship date, and you’ll get a shipping product with lots +of bugs. Incent based on number of bugs Xxed, and you’ll never +get any new features. And so on. +Especially in smaller companies, peer pressure can be a very +eWective form of incentive. This is greatly enabled and abetted +by transparency. People hate to be embarrassed in front of their +peer group, so if it’s crystal clear who’s performing well and who +isn’t, poor performers will be highly motivated to improve — +and if they’re not, that’s good to know, since obviously then you +really need to Xre them. +Finally, any entrepreneur should be highly attuned to incentives +when hiring outside executives, especially a CEO. Hire a CEO +and give her a large stock-option grant with four-year vesting, +and you can guarantee she will sell the company in year four. +Give her a stock-option grant with accelerated vesting on +change of control and she will sell the company sooner than +that. Founders can get tripped up on this because they naturally +have an emotional incentive to see the company succeed that +hired executives oaen do not share. +And of course, never get caught between a venture capitalist and +her incentives. +Two: Liking/Loving Tendency +…[W]hat will a man naturally come to like and love, apart from his +parent, spouse and child? Well, he will like and love being liked and +loved… [M]an will generally strive, lifelong, for the aWection and +approval of many people not related to him. +146 The Pmarca Blog Archives +One very practical consequence of Liking/Loving Tendency is that +it acts as a conditioning device that makes the liker or lover tend +(1) to ignore faults of, and comply with wishes of, the object of his +aWection, (2) to favor people, products, and actions merely associated with the object of his aWection (as we shall see when we get +to “InYuence-from-Mere-Association Tendency”), and (3) to distort +other facts to facilitate love. +The application of this principle to entrepreneurs is obvious: +entrepreneurs want to be liked just like everyone else, and wanting to be liked can be a major impediment to entrepreneurial +success due to at least two major reasons. +First, an entrepreneur, like any CEO, has to make tough decisions about what her company will do, and those decisions will +oaen run counter to the preferences of her employees. You +don’t have to be involved in that many startups to Xnd one +where the entrepreneur knows she needs to make a tough decision — such as change strategy, or cancel a Yawed project — but +can’t quite do it because employees won’t like it. Of course this +always backXres: employees also don’t like leaders who don’t +make the tough decisions that have to be made. +Second, an entrepreneur, like any manager, has to Xre people +who aren’t great or who aren’t right for the tasks at hand. This +naturally makes people not like you, particularly the people you +Xre. But again, not doing this backXres: nobody great wants to +be in a company populated by mediocre or ill-Xtting peers. +I think these pressures are intensiXed in a small company versus +a larger company, because in a small company everyone tends +to know everyone else and people naturally form strong personal relationships within the group — so the desire to be liked +is stronger, and the perceived risk from making decisions that +people won’t like is higher. +A speciXc form of this dynamic in a startup is when you have +multiple founders, of whom one is the CEO. The founder who +is the CEO inevitably discovers that it becomes very hard to stay +close personal friends with the other founders. As they say, it’s +lonely at the top — if you’re doing your job right. +The Psychology of Entrepreneurial Misjudgment: Biases 1-6 147 +Finally, some entrepreneurs have emotional resistance to pursuing a strategy that does not meet with immediate approval +from press, analysts, and other entrepreneurs. This is worth +watching carefully — if everyone agrees right up front that +whatever you are doing makes total sense, it probably isn’t a new +and radical enough idea to justify a new company. +Three: Disliking/Hating Tendency +In a pattern obverse to Liking/Loving Tendency, the newly arrived +human is also “born to dislike and hate” as triggered by normal and +abnormal triggering forces in its life… +As a result, the long history of man contains almost continuous +war… +Disliking/Hating Tendency also acts as a conditioning device that +makes the disliker/hater tend to (1) ignore virtues in the object of +dislike, (2) dislike people, products, and actions merely associated +with the object of his dislike, and (3) distort other facts to facilitate +hatred. +If this is a problem inside your company, then you have bigger +issues than I can help you with. +However, I think this dynamic kicks in for a startup when thinking about competitors. +I see two destructive consequences of this bias in startups with +competitors: +First, I believe startups oaen overfocus on their competitors. It’s +the easiest thing in the world to orient yourself in opposition to +another company in the same market, and to plan your actions +based on what will cause damage to the competitor or block the +competitor from getting business. +In the startup world, that oaen leads to multiple competitors +engaged in a shooting war in a market that’s still too small for +anyone to succeed. +I think it’s much better for a startup to focus on creating and +148 The Pmarca Blog Archives +developing a large market, as opposed to Xghting over a small +market. +So when your startup’s competitive juices get Yowing — especially for the Xrst time — and you Xnd yourself Xxated on a +competitor, be sure to take a step back and say, is this really +what we want to be focused on right now — is the market we’re +both in really large enough to warrant this? If so, sure, go for it, +guns blazing. But if not, stepping back and thinking about how +to focus instead on creating a large market might be more valuable. +A variant on this dynamic is letting your competitor determine +your strategy by watching what he does and then making countermoves. The issue here is that it’s highly likely that neither +one of you actually knows that much about what you are doing +yet — since you are in a new market, by deXnition — and while +you know you don’t know that much about what you’re doing +yet, you only observe your competitors’s deliberate actions as +opposed to seeing their equivalent or greater level of internal +confusion. So they seem like they know what they’re doing, and +so you fall into assuming they know more than you do, when +they probably don’t. +Second, when you are in a truly competitive situation, this bias +can easily lead you to underestimate your competitor by, as Mr. +Munger says, “ignoring virtues in the object of dislike”. +His product sucks, his salespeople aren’t as good, his venture +capitalists are those morons who backed that large datacenter +vendor that went bankrupt — and so on. +Notably, this attitude can become cultural in your company +very quickly. I think that if you’re in a shooting war, even if you +privately think your competitor is an amoral pinhead, that you +establish a tone that says, we’ll assume that he’s highly competent and has many Xne virtues, which we will respect and then +systematically target with our own strengths and virtues until we +have killed him. +The Psychology of Entrepreneurial Misjudgment: Biases 1-6 149 +Four: Doubt-Avoidance Tendency +The brain of man is programmed with a tendency to quickly +remove doubt by reaching some decision. +It is easy to see how evolution would make animals, over the eons, +dria toward such quick elimination of doubt. Aaer all, the one +thing that is surely counterproductive for a prey animal that is +threatened by a predator is to take a long time in deciding what to +do… +So pronounced is the tendency in man to quickly remove doubt +by reaching some decision that behavior to counter the tendency is +required from judges and jurors. Here, delay before decision making is forced. And one is required to so comport himself, prior to +conclusion time, so that he is wearing a “mask” of objectivity. And +the “mask” works to help real objectivity along, as we shall see when +we next consider man’s Inconsistency-Avoidance Tendency… +What triggers Doubt-Avoidance Tendency? Well, an unthreatened +man, thinking of nothing in particular, is not being prompted to +remove doubt through rushing to some decision. As we shall see +later when we get to Social-Proof Tendency and Stress-InYuence +Tendency, what usually triggers Doubt-Avoidance Tendency is +some combination of (1) puzzlement and (2) stress. +This is probably a good one for entrepreneurs. You’d better not +have a lot of doubts about what you are doing because everyone +else will, and if you do too, you’ll probably give up. +Of course, an entrepreneur’s doubt avoidance is only a plus +right up to the point where it becomes pigheaded stubbornness +that interferes with her ability to see reality, particularly when a +strategy is not working. +In my view, entrepreneurial judgment is the ability to tell the +diWerence between a situation that’s not working but persistence +and iteration will ultimately prove it out, versus a situation that’s +not working and additional eWort is a destructive waste of time +and radical change is necessary. +I don’t believe there are any good rules for being able to tell the +diWerence between the two. Which is one of the main reasons +starting a company is so hard. +150 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Five: Inconsistency-Avoidance Tendency +[People are] reluctant to change, which is a form of inconsistency +avoidance. We see this in all human habits, constructive and +destructive. Few people can list a lot of bad habits that they have +eliminated, and some people cannot identify even one of these. +Instead, practically every one has a great many bad habits he has +long maintained despite their being known as bad. Given this situation, it is not too much in many cases to appraise early-formed +habits as destiny. When Marley’s miserable ghost says, “I wear the +chains I forged in life,” he is talking about chains of habit that were +too light to be felt before they became too strong to be broken. +[T]ending to be maintained in place by the anti-change tendency +of the brain are one’s previous conclusions, human loyalties, reputational identity, commitments… +It is easy to see that a quickly reached conclusion, triggered by +Doubt-Avoidance Tendency, when combined with a tendency to +resist any change in that conclusion, will naturally cause a lot of +errors in cognition for modern man. And so it observably works +out. We all deal much with others whom we correctly diagnose +as imprisoned in poor conclusions that are maintained by mental +habits they formed early and will carry to their graves… +And so, people tend to accumulate large mental holdings of Xxed +conclusions and attitudes that are not oaen reexamined or +changed, even though there is plenty of good evidence that they +are wrong… +As Lord Keynes pointed out about his exalted intellectual group at +one of the greatest universities in the world, it was not the intrinsic +diZculty of new ideas that prevented their acceptance. Instead, the +new ideas were not accepted because they were inconsistent with +old ideas in place… +We have no less an authority for this than Max Planck, Nobel laureate, Xnder of “Planck’s constant.” Planck is famous not only for +his science but also for saying that even in physics the radically +new ideas are seldom really accepted by the old guard. Instead, said +Planck, the progress is made by a new generation that comes along, +less brain-blocked by its previous conclusions… +One corollary of Inconsistency-Avoidance Tendency is that a person making big sacriXces in the course of assuming a new identity +will intensify his devotion to the new identity. Aaer all, it would +be quite inconsistent behavior to make a large sacriXce for something that was no good. And thus civilization has invented many +The Psychology of Entrepreneurial Misjudgment: Biases 1-6 151 +tough and solemn initiation ceremonies, oaen public in nature, +that intensify new commitments made. +This goes hand-in-hand with doubt-avoidance, and again is +usually a plus for a startup, since it leads to greater commitment +on the part of the entrepreneur and the team. (And yes, I am in +favor of blood oaths for startups.) +Perhaps this bias is most relevant to how new markets develop. +Sometimes you get lucky — you bring a new product to market, +and the target customers all go, great, we’ll take it! However, +oaen you get a level of resistance from the market that can be +puzzling — “can’t they see that our new product would be better +for them than what they have now?” +This in turn leads to the odd dynamic you oaen see where a +startup will Xeld a new product, nobody wants it, and the startup +goes belly up. Then three or four or Xve years later, another +startup launches with a very similar product, and this time the +market says, hell yes! +I think this is something that every entrepreneur needs to watch +very carefully. Sometimes it’s simply a matter of timing — and +if people just aren’t ready for a new idea, you usually can’t make +them ready, and you have to wait for them to change or for a +new generation of customers to come along. +My favorite way around this problem is the one identiXed by +Clayton Christensen in The Innovator’s Dilemma: don’t go aaer +existing customers in a category and try to get them to buy +something new; instead, go Xnd the new customers who weren’t +able to aWord or adopt the incarnation of the status quo. +For example, when the personal computer was invented, the +desirable market was not the universe of people who were +already buying computers — a.k.a. mainframe and minicomputer buyers — but rather the universe of the people who +couldn’t aWord a mainframe or minicomputer and therefore +had never had a computer before. +Similarly, the desirable market for Hotmail in the early days was +not existing email aXcionados who were already using sophisti152 The Pmarca Blog Archives +cated email desktop soaware, but rather the universe of people +who were coming on the Internet for the Xrst time who didn’t +even have email yet and for whom web-based email was by far +the easiest way to start. +Conversely, one of the reasons that today’s consumer Internet +companies have the wind at our backs versus our peers 10 years +ago is that a whole new generation of consumers has come of +age in the last 10 years for whom the Internet is their primary +medium — time and demographics are on our side now. That +makes life a lot easier, let me tell you. Meanwhile, the average +age of television viewers continues driaing higher and higher… +Six: Curiosity Tendency +This is, frankly, an odd one for Mr. Munger to include, since it’s +primarily a plus, and he doesn’t really identify a downside. +The only important thing I can think to add — aside from +the importance of hiring curious people — is that lack of curiosity can be a huge danger to a startup in the following way: oaen, +your initial strategy won’t quite work, but you can learn as you +go based on other things that happen in the market and eventually iterate into a strategy that does work. Obviously, insuZcient curiosity can prevent you from seeing the new data and +lead you to continue to pursue a losing strategy even when you +wouldn’t have to. +The Psychology of Entrepreneurial Misjudgment: Biases 1-6 153 +Age and the Entrepreneur: Some +data +A short time back, several smart bloggers engaged in an enthusiastic debate about age and entrepreneurs — some taking the +position that kids have a leg up on older entrepreneurs at least +for certain categories of startups, and others theorizing that age +is largely irrelevant (or as Ali G would put it, “geezers is good +entrepreneurs as well, man”). +I have opinions on this topic, but rather than just mouthing oW +like I would normally do, I decided to go get some data. +I’m not aware of any systematic data on age and high-tech +entrepreneurs. As far as I’m aware, all we have are anecdotes. +However, a professor of psychology at University of California +Davis named Dean Simonton has conducted extensive research +on age and creativity across many other Xelds, including science, literature, music, chess, Xlm, politics, and military combat. +Dr. Simonton’s research is unparalleled — he’s spent his career +studying this and related topics and his papers make for +absolutely fascinating reading. +For this post, I’ll be concentrating on his paper Age and Outstanding Achievement: What Do We Know Aaer a Century of +Research? from 1988. I haven’t been able to Xnd a PDF of the +paper online but you can read a largely intact cached HTML +version courtesy of Google Scholar. +Let’s go to the paper: +For centuries, thinkers have speculated about the association +between a person’s age and exceptional accomplishment: Is there +an optimal age for a person to make a lasting contribution to +human culture or society? When during the life span can we expect +an individual to be most proliXc or inYuential? +You can see why I think this is relevant. +Here we adopt the product-centered approach, that is, our focus +is on real-life achievements rather than performance on abstract… +measures. … +[A]chievement [takes] the form of noteworthy creativity… the goal +is to assess how productivity changes over the life span… [I] focus +on individual accomplishment in such endeavors as science, philosophy, literature, music, and the visual arts. … +[Studies like these focus] on three core topics: (a) the age curve that +speciXes how creative output varies over the course of a career, (b) +the connection between productive precocity, longevity, and rate +of output, and (c) the relation between quantity and quality of output (i.e., between “productivity” and “creativity”). +Dr. Simonton also discusses leadership as distinct from creative +production, but I’m ignoring the leadership part for now since +it’s quite diWerent. +One empirical generalization appears to be fairly secure: If one +plots creative output as a function of age, productivity tends to rise +fairly rapidly to a deXnite peak and thereaaer decline gradually +until output is about half the rate at the peak. +This is the centerpiece of Dr. Simonton’s overall theory across +many domains. And is probably not unexpected. But here’s +where it gets really interesting: +[T]he location of the peak, as well as the magnitude of the postpeak +decline, tends to vary depending on the domain of creative +achievement. +At one extreme, some Xelds are characterized by relatively early +peaks, usually around the early 30s or even late 20s in chronological units, with somewhat steep descents thereaaer, so that the output rate becomes less than one-quarter the maximum. This ageAge and the Entrepreneur: Some data 155 +wise pattern apparently holds for such endeavors as lyric poetry, +pure mathematics, and theoretical physics… +The typical trends in other endeavors may display a leisurely rise +to a comparatively late peak, in the late 40s or even 50s chronologically, with a minimal if not largely absent drop-oW aaerward. This +more elongated curve holds for such domains as novel writing, history, philosophy, medicine, and general scholarship. +Well, that’s interesting. +It must be stressed that these interdisciplinary contrasts do not +appear to be arbitrary but instead have been shown to be invariant +across diWerent cultures and distinct historical periods. +As a case in point, the gap between the expected peaks for poets +and prose authors has been found in every major literary tradition +throughout the world and for both living and dead languages. +Indeed, because an earlier productive optimum means that a writer +can die younger without loss to his or her ultimate reputation, +poets exhibit a life expectancy, across the globe and through history, about a half dozen years less than prose writers do. +You know what that means — if you’re going to argue that +younger entrepreneurs have a leg up, then you also have to +argue that they will have shorter lifespans. Fun with math! +You may not be surprised to Xnd that in creative Xelds, the +power law rule — also known as the 80/20 rule — deXnitely +applies: +A small percentage of the workers in any given domain is responsible for the bulk of the work. Generally, the top 10% of the most +proliXc elite can be credited with around 50% of all contributions, +whereas the bottom 50% of the least productive workers can claim +only 15% of the total work, and the most productive contributor is +usually about 100 times more proliXc than the least. +Here’s where it gets really interesting again: +Precocity, longevity, and output rate are each strongly associated +with Xnal lifetime output — that is, those who generate the most +contributions at the end of a career also tend to have begun their +careers at earlier ages, ended their careers at later ages, and produced at extraordinary rates throughout their careers. … +156 The Pmarca Blog Archives +These three components are conspicuously linked with each other: +Those who are precocious also tend to display longevity, and both +precocity and longevity are positively associated with high output +rates per age unit. +OK, so on to the main question, which is, when’s the peak? +Those creators who make the most contributions tend to start +early, end late, and produce at above-average rates, but are the +anticipated career peaks unchanged, earlier, or later in comparison +to what is seen for their less proliXc colleagues? Addressing this +question properly requires that we Xrst investigate the relation +between quantity and quality, both within and across careers. … +This is a very complex topic and Dr. Simonton goes into great +detail about it throughout his work. I’m going to gloss over it a +bit, but if you are interested in this topic, by all means dig into it +more via Google Scholar. +First, if one calculates the age curves separately for major and +minor works within careers, the resulting functions are basically +identical… +Second… minor and major contributions… Yuctuate together. +Those periods in a creator’s life that see the most masterpieces also +witness the greatest number of easily forgotten productions, on the +average. +Another way of saying the same thing is to note that the “quality +ratio,” or the proportion of major products to total output per age +unit, tends to Yuctuate randomly over the course of any career. The +quality ratio neither increases nor decreases with age… +These outcomes are valid for both artistic and scientiXc modes of +creative contribution. What these two results signify is that… age +becomes irrelevant to determining the success of a particular contribution. +OK, that’s interesting. Quality of output does not vary by age… +which means, of course, that attempting to improve your batting average of hits versus misses is a waste of time as you +progress through a creative career. Instead you should just focus +on more at-bats — more output. Think about that one. +If this sounds insane to you, Dr. Simonton points out that the +periods of Beethoven’s career that had the most hits also had the +Age and the Entrepreneur: Some data 157 +most misses — works that you never hear. As I am always fond +of asking in such circumstances, if Beethoven couldn’t increase +his batting average over time, what makes you think you can? +[C]reativity is a probabilistic consequence of productivity, a relationship that holds both within and across careers. +Within single careers, the count of major works per age period +will be a positive function of total works generated each period, +yielding a quality ratio that exhibits no systematic developmental +trends. +And across careers, those individual creators who are the most productive will also tend, on the average, to be the most creative: Individual variation in quantity is positively associated with variation +in quality. +Wow. +OK, next step: +[This] constant-probability-of-success model has an important +implication for helping us understand the relation between total +lifetime output and the location of the peak age for creative +achievement within a single career. +Because total lifetime output is positively related to total creative +contributions and hence to ultimate eminence, and given that a +creator’s most distinguished work will appear in those career periods when productivity is highest, the peak age for creative impact +should not vary as a function of either the success of the particular +contribution or the Xnal fame of the creator. … +Thus, even though an impressive lifetime output of works, and +subsequent distinction, is tied to precocity, longevity, and production rate, the expected age optimum for quantity and quality of +contribution is dependent solely on the particular form of creative +expression. +Wow, again. +Anyone who demonstrates… an age decrement in achievement is +likely to provoke controversy. Aaer all, aging is a phenomenon easy +enough to become defensive about, and such defensiveness is especially probable among those of us who are already past the putative +age peak for our particular Xeld of endeavor… +158 The Pmarca Blog Archives +I think Dr. Simonton is ready to start blogging. +His paper then goes on to discuss many possible extrinsic factors such as health that could impair later-life output, but in the +end he concludes that the data is pretty conclusive that such +extrinsinc factors serve as “random shocks” to any individual’s +career that do not aWect the overall trends. +He then goes on to discuss possible intrinsic factors that could +explain a relationship between age and creative accomplishment: +G. M. Beard was not merely the earliest contributor [in 1874] to the +empirical literature on age and achievement but its Xrst theorist as +well. According to him, creativity is a function of two underlying +factors, enthusiasm and experience. Enthusiasm provides the +motivational force behind persistent eWort, yet enthusiasm in the +absence of the second factor yields just original work. Experience +gives the achiever the ability to separate wheat from chaW and to +express original ideas in a more intelligible and persistent fashion. +Yet experience in the absence of enthusiasm produces merely routine contributions. Genuine creativity requires the balanced cooperation of both enthusiasm and experience. +Beard postulates, however, that these two essential components +display quite distinctive distributions across the life span. Whereas +enthusiasm usually peaks early in life and steadily declines thereaaer, experience gradually increases as a positive monotonic function of age. The correct equilibrium between the two factors is +attained between the ages of 38 and 40, the most common age +optima for creative endeavors. Prior to that expected peak, an individual’s output would be excessively original, and in the postpeak +phase the output would be overly routine. The career Yoruit in the +late 30s thus represents the uniquely balanced juxtaposition of the +rhapsodies of youth and the wisdom of maturity. +Hmmmmmm… +Beard’s theory is not without attractive features… Beard’s account, +for all its simplicity, can boast a respectable amount of explanatory +power. Besides handling the broad form of the age curve, this theory leads to an interpretation of why diWerent endeavors may peak +at distinct ages. +The contrast between poetic and prose literature, for instance, can +be interpreted as the immediate consequence of the assumption +Age and the Entrepreneur: Some data 159 +that the two domains demand a diWerent mix of the two factors: +poetry, more enthusiasm, and prose, more experience. Indeed, in +Xelds in which expertise may be far more crucial than emotional +vigor, most notably in scholarship, we would anticipate little if any +decline with age, and such is the case. +Dr. Simonton, however, then goes on to explain that this theory +does not really match the data — for example, the data shows +that quality of output in practically all Xelds does not decline +systematically with age, which is what you’d expect from Beard’s +theory. +The paper then digs into possible correlations between intelligence as measured by such metrics as IQ, and creative output: +[E]ven if a minimal level of intelligence is requisite for achievement, beyond a threshold of around IQ 120 (the actual amount +varying across Xelds), intellectual prowess becomes largely irrelevant in predicting individual diWerences in… creativity. +So what have we learned in a nutshell? +Generally, productivity — output — rises rapidly from the start +of a career to a peak and then declines gradually until retirement. +• This peak in productivity varies by Xeld, from the late 20s to +the early 50s, for reasons that are Xeld-speciXc. +• Precocity, longevity, and output rate are linked. “Those who +are precocious also tend to display longevity, and both +precocity and longevity are positively associated with high +output rates per age unit.” High producers produce highly, +systematically, over time. +• The odds of a hit versus a miss do not increase over time. +The periods of one’s career with the most hits will also have +the most misses. So maximizing quantity — taking more +swings at the bat — is much higher payoW than trying to +improve one’s batting average. +• Intelligence, at least as measured by metrics such as IQ, is +largely irrelevant. +160 The Pmarca Blog Archives +So here’s my Xrst challenge: to anyone who has an opinion on +the role of age and entrepreneurship — see if you can Xt your +opinion into this model! +And here’s my second challenge: is entrepreneurship more like +poetry, pure mathematics, and theoretical physics — which +exhibit a peak age in one’s late 20s or early 30s — or novel writing, history, philosophy, medicine, and general scholarship — +which exhibit a peak age in one’s late 40s or early 50s? And how, +and why? +Age and the Entrepreneur: Some data 161 +Luck and the entrepreneur: The +four kinds of luck +In the last few weeks, I’ve been reading huge stacks of books on +the psychology of creativity and motivation — which is the reason for the relative scarcity of substantive blog posts. Said post +situation will be remedied shortly, by a series of posts on — surprise! — the psychology of creativity and motivation. +But Xrst, to complement my post on age and the entrepreneur from a few days ago, this post begins a series of occasional +posts about luck and the entrepreneur. +Luck is something that every successful entrepreneur will tell +you plays a huge role in the diWerence between success and failure. Many of those successful entrepreneurs will only admit this +under duress, though, because if luck does indeed play such a +huge role, then that seriously dents the image of the successful +entrepreneur as an omniscient business genius. +Moreover, some of those people would shrug and say that luck +is simply out of your hands. Sometimes you have it, sometimes +you don’t. But perhaps there’s more to it than that. +Dr. James Austin, a neurologist and philosopher (!), wrote an +outstanding book called Chase, Chance, and Creativity — originally in 1978, then updated in 2003. It’s the best book I’ve read +on the role of luck, chance, and serendipity in medical research +— or, for that matter, any creative endeavor. And because he’s a +neurologist, he has a grounding in how the brain actually exerts +itself creatively — although there is more recent research on +that topic that is even more illuminating (more on that later). +In the book, Dr. Austin outlines his theory of the four kinds of +luck — or, as he calls it, chance; I will use the terms interchangeably. +First, he deXnes chance as follows: +Chance… something fortuitous that happens unpredictably without +discernable human intention. +Yup, that’s luck. +Chance is unintentional, it is capricious, but we needn’t conclude +that chance is immune from human interventions. However, one +must be careful not to read any unconsciously purposeful intent +into “interventions”… [which] are to be viewed as accidental, +unwilled, inadvertent, and unforseeable. +Indeed, chance plays several distinct roles when humans react creatively with one another and with their environment… +We can observe chance arriving in four major forms and for four +diWerent reasons. The principles involved aWect everyone. +Here’s where it helps to be a neurologist writing on this topic: +The four kinds of chance each have a diWerent kind of motor +exploratory activity and a diWerent kind of sensory receptivity. +The [four] varieties of chance also involve distinctive personality +traits and diWer in the way one particular individual inYuences +them. +OK, so what are they? +In Chance I, the good luck that occurs is completely accidental. It is +pure blind luck that comes with no eWort on our part. +Yup. +In Chance II, something else has been added — motion. +Years ago, when I was rushing around in the laboratory [conducting +Luck and the entrepreneur: The four kinds of luck 163 +medical research], someone admonished me by asking, “Why all +the busyness? One must distinguish between motion and progress”. +Yes, at some point this distinction must be made. But it cannot +always be made Xrst. And it is not always made consciously. +True, waste motion should be avoided. But, if the researcher did +not move until he was certain of progress he would accomplish +very little… +A certain [basic] level of action “stirs up the pot”, brings in random +ideas that will collide and stick together in fresh combinations, lets +chance operate. +Motion yields a network of new experiences which, like a sieve, Xlter best when in constant up-and-down, side-to-side movement… +Unluck runs out if you keep stirring up things so that random elements can combine, by virtue of you and their inherent aZnities. +Sounds like a startup! +Chance II springs from your energetic, generalized motor activities… the freer they are, the better. +[Chance II] involves the kind of luck [Charles] Kettering… had in +mind when he said, “Keep on going and chances are you will stumble on something, perhaps when you are least expecting it. I have +never heard of anyone stumbling on something sitting down.” +OK, now here’s where it gets interesting: +Now, as we move on to Chance III, we see blind luck, but it tiptoes +in soaly, dressed in camouYage. +Chance presents only a faint clue, the potential opportunity exists, +but it will be overlooked except by that one person uniquely +equipped to observe it, visualize it conceptually, and fully grasp its +signiXcance. +Chance III involves involves a special receptivity, discernment, and +intuitive grasp of signiXcance unique to one particular recipient. +Louis Pasteur characterized it for all time when he said, “Chance +favors the prepared mind.” +I thought that was Eric Bogosian in Under Siege 2: Dark Territory, but OK. +…The classic example of [Chance III] occured in 1928, when Sir +164 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Alexander Fleming’s mind instantly fused at least Xve elements +into a conceptually uniXed nexus [when he discovered penicillin — +one of the most important medical breakthroughs ever]. +He was at his work bench in the laboratory, made an observation, +and his mental sequences then went something like this: (a) I see +that a mold has fallen by accident into my culture dish; (2) the +staphylococcal colonies residing near it failed to grow; (3) therefore, the mold must have secreted something that killed the bacteria; (4) this reminds me of a similar experience I had once before; +(5) maybe this new “something” from the mold could be used to kill +staphylococci that cause human infections. +Actually, Fleming’s mind was exceptionally well prepared. Some +nine years earlier, while suWering from a cold [you can’t make +this stuW up], his own nasal drippings had found their way onto a +culture dish. He noted that the bacteria around his mucous were +killed, and astutely followed up the lead. His experiments then +led him to discover… lysozyme… [which] proved inappropriate for +medical use, but think of how receptive Fleming’s mind was to the +penicillin mold when it later happened on the scene! +OK, what about Chance IV? +[Chance IV] favors the individualized action. +This is the fourth element in good luck — an active, but unintentional, subtle individualized prompting of it. +Please explain! +Chance IV is the kind of luck that develops during a probing action +which has a distinctive personal Yavor. +The English Prime Minister, Benjamin Disraeli, summed up the +principle underlying Chance IV when he noted: “We make our fortunes and we call them fate.” +Chance IV comes to you, unsought, because of who you are and +how you behave. +…Chance IV is so personal, it is not easily understood by someone +else the Xrst time around… here we probe into the subterranean +recesses of personal hobbies and behavioral quirks that autobiographers know about, biographers rarely. +[In neurological terms], Chance III [is] concerned with personal sensory receptivity; its counterpart, Chance IV, [is] involved +with personal motor behavior. +Luck and the entrepreneur: The four kinds of luck 165 +Please continue! +[You] have to look carefully to Xnd Chance IV for three reasons. +The Xrst is that when it operates directly, it unfolds in an elliptical, +unorthodox manner. +The second is that it oaen works indirectly. +The third is that some problems it may help solve are uncommonly +diZcult to understand because they have gone through a process of +selection. +We must bear in mind that, by the time Chance IV Xnally occurs, +the easy, more accessible problems will already have been solved +earlier by conventional actions, conventional logic, or by the operations of the other forms of chance. What remains late in the game, +then, is a tough core of complex, resistant problems. Such problems yield to none but an unusual approach… +[Chance IV involves] a kind of discrete behavioral performance +focused in a highly speciXc manner. +Here’s the money quote: +Whereas the lucky connections in Chance II might come to anyone +with disposable energy as the happy by-product of any aimless, +circular stirring of the pot, the links of Chance IV can be drawn +together and fused only by one quixotic rider cantering in on his +own homemade hobby horse to intercept the problem at an odd +angle. +A recap? +Chance I is completely impersonal; you can’t inYuence it. +Chance II favors those who have a persistent curiosity about many +things coupled with an energetic willingness to experiment and +explore. +Chance III favors those who have a suZcient background of sound +knowledge plus special abilities in observing, remembering, recalling, and quickly forming signiXcant new associations. +Chance IV favors those with distinctive, if not eccentric hobbies, +personal lifestyles, and motor behaviors. +This of course leads to a number of challenges for how we live +our lives as entrepreneurs and creators in any Xeld: +166 The Pmarca Blog Archives +• How energetic are we?How inclined towards motion are we? +Those of you who read my Xrst age and the entrepreneur +post will recognize that this is a variation on the “optimize +for the maximum number of swings of the bat” principle. In +a highly uncertain world, a bias to action is key to catalyzing +success, and luck, and is oaen to be preferred to thinking +things through more throughly. +• How curious are we?How determined are we to learn about +our chosen Xeld, other Xelds, and the world around us? In my +post on hiring great people, I talked about the value I place +on curiosity — and speciXcally, curiosity over intelligence. +This is why. Curious people are more likely to already have +in their heads the building blocks for craaing a solution for +any particular problem they come across, versus the more +quote-unquote intelligent, but less curious, person who is +trying to get by on logic and pure intellectual eWort. +• How Iexible and aggressive are we at synthesizing– at +linking together multiple, disparate, apparently unrelated +experiences on the Yy? I think this is a hard skill to +consciously improve, but I think it is good to start most +creative exercises with the idea that the solution may come +from any of our past experiences or knowledge, as opposed +to out of a textbook or the mouth of an expert. (And, if you +are a manager and you have someone who is particularly +good at synthesis, promote her as fast as you possibly can.) +• How uniquely are we developing a personal point of view +— a personal approach– a personal set of “eccentric hobbies, +personal lifestyles, and motor behaviors” that will uniquely +prepare us to create? This, in a nutshell, is why I believe that +most creative people are better oW with more life experience +and journeys aXeld into seemingly unrelated areas, as +opposed to more formal domain-speciXc education — at +least if they want to create. +In short, I think there is a roadmap to getting luck on our side, +and I think this is it. +Luck and the entrepreneur: The four kinds of luck 167 +Serial Entrepreneurs +Several days ago, Gary Rivlin of the New York Times called me +about a story he was writing about the brilliant Max Levchin of +Paypal and Slide, and the general topic of serial entrepreneurs +in Silicon Valley. The story came out yesterday; below are the +notes I prepared for my conversation with Gary. +In a nutshell, Gary’s question to me was: what makes serial +entrepreneurs tick? Why do people like Max keep going and +start new companies when they could just park it on a beach and +suck down mai tais? +First, in my experience, Silicon Valley entrepreneurs are all over +the map when it comes to personality and motivation. Some +are purely mercenary — one hit and they’re out. Others just +love the technology, and the business is a side eWect. Still others +are like Chauncey Gardiner in Being There. And some just love +starting and building companies. +Second, there were serial entrepreneurs in the past, but there +are certainly more now than ever before. There are many factors that lead to this — here are the big ones: +• There are simply more entrepreneurs now — due to the +amazing surge in venture capital and the culture of startups +over the last 10-15 years — so you’d expect more serial +entrepreneurs just based on that. +• A lot of new companies simply develop faster these days than +they did in the past. Microsoa and Oracle, for example, both +put in 10 years of incredibly hard work before going public +(both founded in ’76, IPO in ’86), and they only had a few +hundred employees each when they went public — and those +were the two biggest soaware successes of their era. Versus +these days, when many companies are founded, built, scaled +up, and sold (or, yes, taken public!) in a few years. The +process can happen so fast that people are freed up much +faster; therefore, upon being freed up they are younger and +tend to have more raw energy than people who in the past +would have spent 10 or 20 or 30 years building a single +company — and by the time they freed up, they maybe +didn’t want to put that level of eWort into something again. +• Also because of the faster cycle time, when you start +company #2 you can assume that it won’t necessarily +consume the next 10-20-30 years of your life… This makes it +easier for people to say, OK, hey, it worked once, I’ll try it +again. +• The culture of startups in the Valley is clicking on all +cylinders — everything from fundraising to hiring to +building out a management team to signing up lawyers and +accountants and bankers is simply easier than ever before. +I’m talking in a macro sense — over the last 10 years, versus +prior decades, even considering the early 2000′s bust. So it’s +just easier to start the next company that it was the past — +the “pain in the ass” factor is lower. +• In terms of exit, there are some IPO’s, but the big thing is +that M&A is a widely accepted and viable exit. Big companies +in and related to the Valley have actually become quite good, +in general, at acquiring small companies — not perfect, but +quite good. They do it frequently, in order to build out their +product families or grow market share. This of course +inspires more companies to be started and tends to compress +the time cycles further. +Third, all that said, it is striking how many of the truly revolutionary companies are started, at least in part, by people who +Serial Entrepreneurs 169 +haven’t done it before. Google (Brin and Page), Yahoo (Yang and +Filo), Facebook (Zuckerberg), Apple (Jobs and Wozniak), etc. +When you see one of those really revolutionary companies and +there’s some young kid with the idea, of course, they oaen are +linked up with one or more seasoned, experienced people — +Google (Schmidt, Doerr, Moritz), Yahoo (Moritz, Koogle), Facebook (Thiel, Breyer), Apple (Markkula). So even there you see a +kind of a serial entrepreneur (or VC or executive) eWect which is +another form of what you’re talking about. +Fourth, drilling deeper into the motivations of the great serial +entrepreneurs I know, the dominant themes are: +• Desire to prove oneself — either “I can do it again — it wasn’t +a Yuke the Xrst time”, or “I was the junior partner last time, +now I’ll be the senior partner”, or “I got Xred from my last +company, I’ll show those f****** VCs”, or something like that. +• Desire to continue working and being productive — “I’m 26 +or 30 or 34, I have a lot of energy, I have to keep moving, and +I’m certainly not going to go to work for some boring big +company or be another hack VC… obviously I need to start +another company”. +• In love with the technology or a new idea — there’s more of +this than cynical people think. +• A feeling that we’re in a unique time and place where it’s +possible for us to start, build, and be successful with multiple +companies — it’d be a shame to walk away from the +opportunity to continue to be a part of such a magical time +and place. This is a big motivator for me, by the way. +Growing up, I would have never dreamed that an industry +like this would exist or that I would get to be a part of it. I +pinch myself every day. +• Money, but not just “I can buy a fancier cashmere car cover” +kind of thing (although there is some of that) — just as oaen I +think it’s money as a way to keep score (oaen in the form of +something like, “I can’t believe Mark Cuban is a billionaire +and I’m not; I can do that too”), or money as a way to have an +impact on the world philanthropically — the more you make, +170 The Pmarca Blog Archives +the more you can give away. That last one is certainly +becoming a bigger and bigger motivator for me. +With any given serial entrepreneur, it’s probably a mix of these. +FiLh, a sharply related topic to all of this is that the opportunities are bigger than ever before. It’s not an accident that companies like Google or Facebook or Paypal just get huge, and +apparently overnight. +For the Xrst time in history, you have a global market of 1+ billion people, all connected over an interactive network where +they’re all a click away from you. That’s amazing. +And 100 million new people are being added to that count every +year, and that will continue for the next 30 years. +A huge and growing market makes all kinds of magical things +possible, and I think that’s what we’re seeing now. +Serial Entrepreneurs 171 +The Back Pages +Top 10 science Dction novelists of +the '00s ... so far (June 2007) +We are blessed so far this decade with an amazing crop of new +science Xction novelists. +Writing in a variety of styles, this crew is arguably more insightful, more interesting, higher intensity, and bolder than many +(but not all!) of their predecessors — and in my view revitalizing +the genre at a time when more new technologies that will radically reshape all our lives are incubating and percolating than +ever before. +So, taking nothing away from authors like David Brin who have +long been established and continue to produce top-notch work, +here are my nominations for the top 10 new science Xction novelists of — more or less — the decade, plus one bonus. +And, they’re not all British. +Charles Stross +Stross, in my opinion, is Xrst among equals — the single best +emerging talent with several outstanding novels in various styles +under his belt and hopefully many more to come. +“One of us” in the sense that his career includes a stint as — +not kidding — Linux columnist for Computer Shopper magazine, +Stross is equally adept at both near-future and radically-extrap- +olated timeframes, and both hyper-serious and humorous +moods. +Glasshouse is Stross’s latest book and perhaps the best introduction to his work. A paranoid journey into a world of intergalactic teleportation and arbitrary physical body reshaping will have +you thinking twice about who you are, and how you know who +you are. +Singularity Sky and Iron Sunrise are top-notch post-Singularity space opera featuring perhaps the most inventive alien +opponent ever created for science Xction — “the Festival”. You’ll +never look at telephones that drop out of the sky the same way +again. +Accelerando is the best envisioning of the Singularity committed to paper so far. This book is really cool, both in the sense +of how the kids mean it, and also in tone — the plot, which +spans about 100 years, is emotionally cold but amazingly inventive and highly likely to keep you up nights thinking hard about +where we’re all headed in the long run. +The Atrocity Archives and The Jennifer Morgue, in contrast, +are highly entertaining shaggy dog stories about an IT guy +named Bob who gets draaed into mankind’s Xght against forces +of evil from another dimension — James Bond meets Call of +Cthulhu meets The OZce. +Finally, Stross is also an active blogger with, let’s say, strong +points of view. +Richard Morgan +Morgan writes outstanding, page-turning, highly inventive military- and detective-Yavored hard science Xction set in turbulent +worlds where hard men are faced with hard challenges. +Altered Carbon is deXnitely the place to start, Morgan’s Xrst and +perhaps most inventive novel, Robert Heinlein meets Raymond +Chandler — and Xrst of a trio. +174 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Broken Angels is a strong followup that tilts more towards military Xction while still occupying the same universe. +Woken Furies completes the trilogy with more hard-boiled +action featuring a protagonist who has to Xght a younger, and +really mean, version of himself, which he does not enjoy. +Thirteen is undoubtedly Morgan’s best-written novel so far — +this is an author whose skills are growing rapidly, and this book +shows it. Not oZcially released in the US yet (I just read the +British version, Black Man, renamed for US consumption), Thirteen is a near-future story of genetic engineering gone badly +wrong — a future version of all those classic paranoid political +thrillers of the 70’s but with a much harder edge. Highly recommended. Also very helpful re advising on things to think about +before booking your next trip back from Mars. +Alastair Reynolds +Reynolds is the real deal — doctorate in astrophysics and former staW scientist at the European Space Agency — and writes +as if Robert Heinlein knew a thousand times more about science +and completely lost his ability to write for warm characters. +While Reynolds’ work is cold and dark — almost sterile — in +human terms, he operates on a scale and scope seldom seen, +and everything he writes is grounded in real advanced theoretical physics. Highly recommended for anyone who likes largescale space opera and big ideas. +Revelation Space, Redemption Ark, and Absolution Gap — +together, Reynolds’ Yagship trilogy — are three of the darkest, +largest-scale, and most scientiXcally complex hard science Xction novels ever written. Highly recommended to anyone who +thinks that sounds like a good idea (I did!). +Century Rain is Reynolds’ most approachable novel so far — a +trippy far-future expedition to an apparently inexplicable complete clone of Earth and all its inhabitants from our year 1959. +Like Morgan’s work, strong overtones here of Raymond Chandler — in a good way (in a great way). +Top 10 science Dction novelists of the '00s ... so far (June 2007) 175 +Chasm City has more overshades of Richard Morgan — lots of +combat, science, and intrigue. Are you sure you know who you +are? +The Prefect is just out and I haven’t read it yet, but it’s next on +the stack. +Ken MacLeod +MacLeod is incredibly creative — his imagination is second to +none — and he’s a superb writer. Many of his books have political overtones that may or may not interfere with your ability to +enjoy them. Sometimes MacLeod seems to think that socialism +is going to work a lot better in the future than it did in the past. +But if you can get through that, his novels certainly qualify as +dizzyingly inventive and frequently rewarding. +The Star Fraction, The Stone Canal, The Cassini Division, +and The Sky Road form the Fall Revolution sequence, +MacLeod’s Xrst major body of work. Cyberpunk, political revolution, high-tech combat, love-slave androids, cloning, wormholes, artiXcial intelligence, and nuclear deterrence for hire — +oh my! Join the Felix Dzerzhinsky Workers’ Defense Collective +today. +The Execution Channel, MacLeod’s latest, takes a lea turn into +a paranoid post-9/11 near future featuring war with Iran, Yu +pandemics, nuclear terrorist attacks, government conspiracies, +and the Execution Channel, broadcasting actual footage of murders and executions around the clock. Haven’t read it yet, but +sounds like fun. +Peter Hamilton +Hamilton is the clear heir to Heinlein in my view. Large-scale +space opera told through a shiaing and interlinked cast of people from various walks of life, and amazing storytelling — or, +as (accurately) blurbed by Richard Morgan, “Yat-out huge +widescreen all-engines-at-full I-dare-you-not-to-believe-it +space opera”. +It’s taken Hamilton a little while to Xnd his talent, but he’s +176 The Pmarca Blog Archives +deXnitely found it. His two latest novels are superb: Pandora’s +Star and its sequel Judas Unchained. Plain on staying up late, +you’ll roll straight from the Xrst into the second — and they are +not short (in the best way!). +John Scalzi +Another post-cyberpunk Heinlein heir, Scalzi writes strong, +highly characterized, inventive novels that have been racking +up tremendous review aaer tremendous review for the past few +years. +Start with Old Man’s War (don’t worry, they put the old dude +in a young body, so you don’t need to Xnd out what it’s like +to Xght aliens aaer hip replacement surgery). Progress directly +to sequel The Ghost Brigades (Sci Fi Essential Books) and +triquel The Last Colony. +Scalzi is also an active blogger, turns out! +Neal Asher +This way lie dragons… literally, and not like you’ve ever met +before. Asher is an incredidly strong author of science Xction +with a distinctive horror overlay. Not for the squeamish, but +highly inventive. +Asher’s primary work is the Polity series — Gridlinked, The +Line of Polity, Brass Man, and Polity Agent. The extended +story of an enigmatic agent for the all-powerful artiXcial intelligences who rule the whole of human space, the Polity, these +novels blend Ian Fleming with large-scale military combat, +advanced theoretical xenobiology, nanotechnology gone badly +wrong, and war drones with bad attitudes. Most deXnitely entertaining. +Follow those up with The Skinner and The Voyage of the Sable +Keech, and then the delectable standalone novella Prador +Moon. One of the most distinctively imagined “bad bug” alien +races, one of the most creative and lethal new worlds, and a historical scandal of horriXc proportions combine in a whirlwind +of violence and battle. +Top 10 science Dction novelists of the '00s ... so far (June 2007) 177 +Asher is blogging as well! +Chris Moriarty +Gibson meets Heinlein (can you tell I was a Heinlein fan growing up?) in a melange of science Xction themes, most particularly artiXcial intelligence, Xltered through a distinctly female +point of view. A rapidly developing talent worth reading, and +watching for future advances. +Read Spin State and then read Spin Control. +Peter Watts +Watts’ Xah novel, Blindsight, has put him on the map — a new +tale of alien contact, as conducted by a team of entitites from a +future Earth that will send a chill down your spine without even +getting to the alien part. +David Marusek +My last and Xnal entry of the top 10 is the one I am least certain +about. Marusek is oW the charts in terms of creativity and inventiveness — in his debut novel, Counting Heads, he extrapolates +with incredible verve and detail an Earth circa 2134 that is a +near-utopia. I frankly need to read it again. I think it may be a +failure as a novel, but if so, it’s an amazing failure. Well worth +keeping an eye on at the very least — has to win the award for +highest potential. +Bonus: Vernor Vinge +Vinge, a retired San Diego State Univeristy professor of mathematics and computer science, is one of the most important science Xction authors ever — and with Arthur C. Clarke one of the +best forecasters in the world. +First, if you haven’t had the pleasure, be sure to read True +Names, Vinge’s 1981 novella that forecast the modern Internet +with shocking clarity. (Ignore the essays, just read the story.) +Fans of Gibson and Stephenson will be amazed to see how much +more accurately Vinge called it, and before Neuromancer‘s Xrst +178 The Pmarca Blog Archives +page cleared Gibson’s manual typewriter. Quoting a reviewer on +Amazon: +When I was starting out as a PhD student in ArtiXcial Intelligence +at Carnegie Mellon, it was made known to us Xrst-year students +that an unoZcial but necessary part of our education was to locate +and read a copy of an obscure science-Xction novella called True +Names. Since you couldn’t Xnd it in bookstores, older grad students +and professors would directly mail order sets of ten and set up +informal lending libraries — you would go, for example, to Hans +Moravec’s oZce, and sign one out from a little cardboard box over +in the corner of his oZce. This was 1983 — the Internet was a toy +reserved for American academics, “virtual reality” was not a popular topic, and the term “cyberpunk” had not been coined. One by +one, we all tracked down copies, and all had the tops of our heads +blown oW by Vinge’s incredible book. +True Names remains to this day one of the four or Xve most seminal science-Xction novels ever written, just in terms of the ideas it +presents, and the world it paints. It laid out the ideas that have been +subsequently worked over so successfully by William Gibson and +Neal Stephenson. And it’s well written. And it’s fun. +So what? Well, he’s done it again. Vinge’s new novel, Rainbows +End (yes, the apostrophe is deliberately absent), is the clearest +and most plausible extrapolation of modern technology trends +forward to the year 2025 that you can imagine. +Stop reading this blog right now. Go get it. Read it, and then +come back. +I’ll wait. +It’s that good. +We’ll see how things turn out, but I would not be the least bit +surprised if we look back from 2025 and say, “I’ll be damned, +Vinge called it”, just like we look back today on 1981’s True +Names and say the same thing. +He better write a sequel. +Top 10 science Dction novelists of the '00s ... so far (June 2007) 179 +Bubbles on the brain (October +2009) +It has become commonplace in Silicon Valley and in the blogosphere to take the position that we are in another bubble — +a Web 2.0 bubble, or a dot com bubble redux. +I don’t think this is true. +Let’s examine the theory of a new bubble from a few diWerent +angles. +First, recall that economist Paul Samuelson once quipped, +“Economists have successfully predicted nine of the last Xve +recessions.” +One might paraphrase this for our purposes as “Technology +industry experts have successfully predicted nine of the last Xve +bubbles”… or perhaps more like Xve of the last one bubbles. +The human psyche seems to have a powerful underlying need +to predict doom and gloom. +I suspect this need was evolved into us way back when. +If there is a nonzero chance that a giant man-eating saber-tooth +tiger is going to come over the nearest hill and chomp you, +then it’s in your evolutionary best interest to predict doom and +gloom more frequently than it actually happens. +The cost of hiding from a nonexistent giant man-eating sabertooth tiger is low, but the cost of not hiding from a real giant +man-eating saber-tooth tiger is quite high. +So hiding more oaen than there are tigers makes a lot of sense, +if you’re a caveman. +But as with other habits ingrained into us by evolution, the habit +of predicting doom and gloom when it isn’t in fact right around +the corner might no longer make sense. +On Wall Street, investors who have this habit are known as +“perma-bears” and generally are predicting the imminent collapse of the stock market. This habit keeps them from being +fully invested. Sure, they’re well protected during the occasional +crash of 1929 or 2000, but by and large they massively underperform their peers who take advantage of the fact that most +years, the economy grows, and the market goes up. They have +disappointing careers and die unhappy and bitter. +In reality it seems very diZcult to predict either a bubble or a +crash. +Lots of people predicted a stock market crash… in 1995, 1996, +1997, 1998, and 1999. They were correct in 2000. But as soon as +the stock market recovered in 2003 and 2004, they were back at +it, and there have been similar predictions from noted pundits +ever since — incorrectly. +Similarly, in the technology industry, there were people calling +a bubble starting in 1995 and continuing through to 2000, with +a short break for about two years, and then more bubble-calling +ever since. +If you’re going to listen to people who predict bubbles or +crashes, you have to be ready to stay completely out of the market — the stock market, and the technology industry — almost +every year of your life. +Second, historically, bubbles are very, very rare. +It’s signiXcant that in books and papers that talk about bubbles, +Bubbles on the brain (October 2009) 181 +there are simply not that many examples over the past 500 +years of capitalism. +You’ve got the South Sea bubble, the Dutch tulip bulb bubble, +the bubble in Japanese stocks in the 1980’s, the dot com bubble, +and a few others. +They just don’t happen that oaen, at least in relatively developed economies. +And they don’t tend to happen more than once in a generation. +(Perhaps because many of the people who go through one are so +traumatized that all they can do is sit around and worry about +another one.) +Interestingly, modern economic research is in the process of +debunking a number of historical bubbles. +It looks increasingly plausible that had US monetary policy +been better run in the early 1930’s, our view of what happened +in the 1920’s would be far more benign. +It also turns out that the Dutch tulip bubble is largely a myth. +So generally speaking, if one is going to seriously call a bubble, +one has to be aware that one is calling something that is +extremely rare. +Third, in the technology industry, lots of startups being funded +with some succeeding and many failing does not equal a bubble. +It equals status quo. +The whole structure of how the technology industry gets +funded — by venture capitalists, angel investors, and Wall Street +— is predicated on the baseball model. +Out of ten swings at the bat, you get maybe seven strikeouts, two +base hits, and if you are lucky, one home run. +The base hits and the home runs pay for all the strikeouts. +If you’re going to call a bubble on the basis of lots of bad startups +182 The Pmarca Blog Archives +getting funded and failing, then you have to conclude that the +industry is in a perpetual bubble, and has been for 40 years. +Which may be fun, but isn’t very useful. +Lots of people running around starting questionable companies, launching marginal products, pitching third-tier VC’s, +throwing launch parties, shmoozing at conferences, blogging +enthusiastically, and otherwise acting bubbly does not a bubble +make. +That’s just life in this business. +Note also what you don’t see in the theoretical Web 2.0 bubble +of 2007. +IPO’s. +Lots and lots and lots of IPO’s. +For a theoretical bubble, that is just plain odd. +Fourth, getting more speciXc about Internet businesses — things +have changed a lot since the late 90’s. +It is far cheaper to start an Internet business today than it was in +the late 90’s. +The market for Internet businesses today is much larger than it +was in the late 90’s. +And business models for Internet businesses today are much +more solid than they were in the late 90’s. +This is a logical consequence of time passing, technology getting more broadly adopted, and the Internet going mainstream +as a consumer phenomenon. +People smarter than me have written about these factors at +length elsewhere, so I won’t dwell on them, unless there is speciXc interest. +But my back of the envelope calculation is that it is about 10x +cheaper to start an Internet business today than it was in the +Bubbles on the brain (October 2009) 183 +late 90’s — due to commodity hardware, open source soaware, +modern programming technologies, cheap bandwidth, the rise +of third-party ad networks, and other infrastructure factors. +And the market size for a new Internet business today is about +10x bigger than it was in the late 90’s — there are about 10x +more people online (really!), and they are far more used to +doing things on the Internet today than they were in 1999. +(Want evidence of that last point? Clothing purchases are now +bigger than computer hardware and soaware sales online. I can +guarantee you that nobody who was involved in ecommerce in +the mid-90’s ever would have predicted that.) +The Internet is a fully mainstream medium now, people love it, +people are willing to do all kinds of things on it, and it’s getting +really cheap to oWer new services to those people. +Fiah, and Xnally, there’s the simple fact that the Internet businesses that are succeeding in 2007 are for the most part incredibly valuable, compelling services that lots of people like and that +are in general either making a lot of money or will be making a +lot of money quite quickly. +People laughed when Fox bought MySpace for $580 million, but +that’s a business that will generate nearly $300 million in revenue in 2007, and more in 2008. +As an independent asset today, MySpace would probably be valued at between $3 billion and $5 billion today — perhaps higher. +Call that the deal of the decade. +Similarly, Facebook is bringing in a lot more revenue than people think. +And then there’s Google. +These companies aren’t pulling in all that revenue via some +kind of Ponzi scheme. +This is money coming from real advertisers and real users for +real services with real value. +184 The Pmarca Blog Archives +Which makes total sense, amid the enormous mass migration +of consumer time and attention away from traditional media +towards online media. +These same factors apply all the way down the foodchain. +A high-growth online startup that gets bought for $100 million +or $200 million by a large Internet or media company isn’t +getting that kind of acquisition price just for the hell of it, but +rather because the acquirer can plug that startup’s service into +its broader portfolio of services and make real money with it. +These are big numbers, but remember, there are more than a +billion people online now. That is a very large market — a lot +of people, spending a lot of time, buying a lot of things, in +totally new ways at the same time as they are abandoning older +services like newspapers, magazines, television, movie theaters, +and print catalogs. +So, my view is that to call a bubble, you have to Xnd evidence of +it outside of the mainstream of the kinds of Internet businesses +that are being built, sold, and run in 2007. +In closing, I’d be the last person to say that I never roll my eyes +at the next startup that’s doing online wiki-based popularityranked video-podcast mobile social dating widgets for the dog +and cat owner market. +But a bubble? +I doubt it. +Bubbles on the brain (October 2009) 185 +OK, you're right, it IS a bubble +(October 2009) +[IMPORTANT WARNING: What follows is satire. I’m NOT being +serious. Except for one paragraph at the very end. See if you can spot +that one.] +When I Xrst started this blog four months ago, one of the Xrst +substantive posts I wrote was called “Bubbles on the brain”. +In it, I attempted to use “logic” to explain the reasons we are +most likely not in another dot com bubble. +Since that time, talk of a new dot com bubble or Web 2.0 bubble +or Internet bubble has only escalated in volume and intensity. +OK. +You’re right. +It’s a bubble. +A huge, massive, inYating bubble. +We’re all doomed. +Doomed, I say! +DOOMED! +It can’t last. +It won’t last. +It can’t won’t not last. +Here we sit, with over $7 billion in venture funding this year +chasing exactly zero good ideas. +Paid keyword ads? All BS. Once users Xgure out those things +on the side of the page aren’t natural search results, that’s it, no +more click-throughs. Pop goes the sou[e. +Ad targeting? Snort. The creme de la creme for Internet advertising, so to speak, is those acne cream banner ads you see all +over Facebook. That’s it. That’s the best Internet advertising will +ever be. Get used to the bottom of the barrel, suckers. +Subscription fees? Premium services? Ecommerce? Sponsorships? Mobile advertising? Mobile fee-based services? New hosting models? Video advertising? Music subscription services? Ingame advertising? Massively multiplayer games? Digital gias? +AZliate bounties? HA! Don’t make me laugh. Oh, wait — YOU +JUST DID. +So people everywhere are Yocking to these newfangled trendoid +web sites by the tens of millions and spend hundreds of millions +or billions of hours on them every month. So what. It’s all a big +fad. Think hula hoops. Pet rocks. The macarena. The clock is +ticking, and the 15 minutes is almost up. +Move along, move along, nothing to see here. +These are not the droids you’re looking for. +Venture capitalists? All stupid, and unnecessary to boot. Everyone knows that you shouldn’t need to raise more than $5.37 in +loose change to start a new web business. I mean, c’mon. +Entrepreneurs? Smoking dope. What are they thinking? Why +aren’t they all working for Apple, helping to build a fatter Nano? +What’s wrong with them? Potsmoking, mussed-hair, rooaop +party-going, trendy glasses-wearing, sandal-clad, Red Bullsnorting, laid-getting wankers, the lot of ‘em. The sooner they +OK, you're right, it IS a bubble (October 2009) 187 +realize the world never changes and there are no new opportunities to pursue, the better. +Facebook apps? Good God. So they spread virally to millions of +users in a matter of weeks. Not worth anything. Everyone knows +that. Can’t possibly build a business. I mean, don’t you realize +what else can spread to millions of people in a matter of weeks? +Do you want to catch any of those? I don’t think so! +Call oW the dogs. +It’s all over. +Stick a fork in it. +It has ceased to be. +The metabolically-diWerenced lady has sung. +Right now this industry is just like Wile E. Coyote in the old +Road Runner cartoons, ran out over the edge of the cliW, hanging in midair, gravity just about to kick in. +Think Acme servers. +Where’s it all going from here? +Now that I’ve raised a monster Series C round for my own company, all other funding of all other startups will immediately +cease. No new competitors to my company need be started. +There’s certainly no major opportunity in what we’re doing; +why go aaer your fair share of a $0 dollar market? +Further, now that my company is in a rapid viral growth +loop, will all the users please stop using anything new that +comes along. And while you’re at it, stop using most everything +else also, please. Cut it out with the fads already. Posthaste. Chop +chop. +Venture capitalists, I don’t think I need to tell you what to +do. OK, I do. Hand back the money you’ve raised from LPs. +Quickly. Quietly. OK, now step away. Don’t make any sudden +moves. Back out of the oZce park, slowly, slowly. Hey, look at +188 The Pmarca Blog Archives +the bright side — carried interest Xnally getting taxed properly +won’t aWect you anymore! And now you will have time to play +250 rounds of golf a year instead of just 225, and you can focus +on getting your Porsche 911’s retroXtted to run on ethanol. +All you other startups funded in the last three years? Punt. +Now. Liquidate the company — get whatever cash you can for +the Aeron chairs and the foosball tables and the lava lamps and +the RAID arrays and shut down now, hand the cash back to +the investors, preferably on Xre, and leave town, head down, +in shame. All those young programmers and product managers +can go get jobs in retail footwear where they belong. +You big companies — you eBays, you Yahoos, you Googles, you +Amazons? Yes, and you, Microsoa? Think the new new B2B — +back to boring. What’s with all these new products? The world is +confusing enough. Shut ‘em down and let’s go back to the good +old days: Windows ME, Mac OS 9, dialup modems, and 640 +megabytes ought to be enough for everyone. You’re just screwing us all over with all this new fancy broadband video-enabled +phone-call-making wiX web-based lightweight touch-interface +gorgeous long-battery-life YimYam — just look at how you keep +dropping the damn prices. I knew I’d be better oW not buying +any of it, ever. The class action lawsuits are in the mail. And for +God’s sake, raise your dividends — what, you think there’s any +growth lea in this industry? Fools. When the great shareholder +revolt comes, you’ll be Xrst up against the wall. +You wanton scribblers of what will now once again be referred +to as the “press”, as everyone suddenly goes back to reading the +news on smudgy-inked paper — start cranking up the I told you +so stories. You know you’ve been wanting to tell ‘em — here’s +your big chance! Pulitzer is waiting. +The sooner we all get back to 2003, when the few surviving +companies had huge giant markets all to themselves, with no +competition anywhere in sight, because everyone knew the +world had come to an end, the better. +I will accept your applause and gratitude in the form of immediate compliance. +OK, you're right, it IS a bubble (October 2009) 189 +Thank you. +190 The Pmarca Blog Archives \ No newline at end of file