Archive for the ‘Startups’ Category

Why Noone Wants to Work for You

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

Are people giving you only a fraction of what they are capable of?  Do they go home early?  Yawn in meetings?  Seem disheartened?

Here are the top 5 reasons people don’t want to work for you:

1) You are unclear on what you want, so it’s impossible for anyone to be successful. You subconsciously believe that people should be mind readers. The corollary to this is you keep changing your mind or changing direction, or find it difficult to progress projects forward.  This is exhausting for a team, as there is no real progress or accomplishment to point to. (more…)



A Turnaround’s Toll, and Underlying Beliefs About People and Work

Friday, June 24th, 2011

Once upon a time there was a company in trouble.  It was big company in specialty publishing, an industry getting killed by the internet.

So, the board, not knowing what to do, brough in a slash and burn turnaround CEO.  He was formerly an executive at a big home improvement company.  Within weeks of arriving, he fired the leadership team and brought in his former industry, AIG and Lehman Brothers cronies at the top.

His turnaround methods were less than humane.  For instance, they fired a woman who was a division CFO, a 23-year employee of the company, beloved by all, via a phone call from NY, with no notice.  A few days later, one of the new advisors came in for a one day visit, to follow up with the remaining team and check in- “is everyone alright?”  Their response was effectively, “Umm, no we’re not.  And you, Mr. Big Hair – you now have 25% of our effort while we’re all spending the rest of our time looking for another job.”

A friend of mine ran one of this company’s fastest growing divisions, a SaaS business that he had started and sold to the big publisher.  His division had 600 employees when the new CEO came in, and it was profitable by tech industry standards, but had small margins compared to the old publishing/content margins.  As a result, the new leadership mandated massive cuts in this division over the ensuing 18 months.

The division was reduced from 600 to 200 people- but only by outsourcing, offshoring to India for development and to South America for accounting tasks.   Even what would be considered mission critical roles for a software firm were outsourced. (more…)



Does Business Actually Get Done at SXSW?

Sunday, March 20th, 2011

Short answer:  why yes, yes it does.

SXSW, the annual festival/conference for all things interactive, film and music,  is a carnival.  It’s got a pretty loosely organized conference structure- dozens of concurrent panels and plenary sessions- and parties and receptions and launches round the clock.   With all the general noise, it was hard to tell if people were working, creating connection, having shared experience,  or simply enjoying the spectacle.

The community drives a lot of the content, and it has pretty uneven quality.  That it to say, some mainstage sessions are fantastic, some are yawns.  We found one panel stuck in a back hallway with a 100 people in attendance that was absolutely brilliant (Jonathan Zittrain of Harvard’s Center for Internet and the Law,  and the Founders of Crowdflower and Kickstarter talking about crowdsourcing and the new way of working), but many of the content and social media panels were just a snore- a rehashing of very well known factoids, and usually poorly facilitated with a lot of selling from the stage.   So it made for a lot of potential downtime in between planned meetings and parties.

Our advice:

Plan ahead: Have some idea of who you want to talk to in advance, schedule some set meetings if you can (we found breakfast worked best, because after that, its very hard to stay on track). Print out a schedule of the things in your bullseye, attend, tweet/comment, and in general show up. Go to as many things as you can get to. One party alone, which we almost bailed on due to Day 4 fatigue, thrown by Second Market, was only founders and investors- really interesting people working on exciting concepts.

Be present wherever you are:  If a panel or talk is just not doing it, leave.  Even if you’re not naturally an extrovert, this is the place to just be one anyway.  Hang out in the lobby spaces, proactively introduce yourself to everyone, and be genuinely curi0us about what they do, and you will discover amazing intersection points (not to mention tips on hot startups and great parties).

Serendipity and wonder: You will see people you know.  You will be surprised that in this vast sea of people from all over the world, at the bottom of the escalator,or at a picnic table in the front, there’s the exact person you were wanting to talk to.  Nothing is firm, stay on #Hashable or Twitter, Keep your PDA handy, and roll with the day.  You will also see things you never expected to see- take that in.

Wear the walking shoes:  You may be surprised at the distances between things, so don’t sweat it if you can’t get somewhere.  And if you are moving between points, share cabs, cars, a walk.  Skip the pedicabs, they cost a fortune.

Check your bags:  even if you booked late and are therefore staying in the hinterlands, around 5 pm each day, check your bag with any near-the-conference-center bellman.  They are waiting, and you’re not lugging things from place to place.  After 5, its a handsfree event.

Exercise anyway: Do your yoga (there are some great studios), swim, take your vitamins.  I know it may seem ridiculous to say, but you really need your energy high and clear and clean to do this thing- don’t blow it by drinking and bingeing- the culture (spoken and unspoken) is drive hard (we went to a panel where a presenter awarded prizes to those who were out latest, and to the most hungover.  That really doesn’t have to be you.

Followup: We met fantastic people, and the stack of cards and contacts was 100+ thick for each of us.  Plan ahead for followup- a cushion of a day or two when you get back and its fresh in your mind.

For us, SXSW was a visual and sensory treat, we recruited new alpha users, tempted digital agencies, met analysts and press- and we’ll definitely be going back.  Prepared and ready to do business.



Please Don’t Call Me an Asset

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011

If you call “your people” assets or human resources, you may want to rethink your approach.

True leaders see people, not replaceable widgets.  Leaders understand the full range of capabilities, values, desires and concerns of the people on their team.  Conversely, the commodification of people as Assets, Resources, or Employees dehumanizes them, creates assembly line mentalities, and dissuades people from giving their all to the work they are doing.

If you want enthusiastic, committed support, cooperation, collaboration and an ownership mentality, you have to see and treat individuals, not widgets.

Here are some ways that can show up:

  • Stop the cookie cutter job design. You meet the needs of the individual, taking their needs and the organizations goals to heart.  Often, it’s caring about how the job fits into the person’s life, and adjusting the framework of the job to support the overall life that creates long term loyalty and minimizes undesired attrition.
  • You attempt to create jobs that use the whole person. Vary and combine jobs to tax and utilize the brain’s cross training skills and eliminate boredom.  Overspecialization minimizes creativity and effectiveness.
  • You celebrate the individual. See each person’s gifts, contributions and unique qualities in a way that makes them feel seen for who they are, not as a widget.  Play to their strengths, and everyone wins.
  • You invite the person to express their authentic self. Whether by default or intention, see where you are trying to have people fit a mold that makes the dominant group (the group in charge) feel more comfortable, and where you are valuing their individuality, their true selves.
  • You love. When we see all people as their highest and best selves, as their full potential realized, they live up to the expectation. We move from a perspective of judgement and criticism, to one of wholeness, contribution and possibility.  We highly recommend Ben Zander’s book The Art of Possibility, especially his chapter on “Giving an A“.

Cube living can already feel rather closed- like a person is not living fully.   As a leader and a manager, sending the message- you matter, I see you, you exist- can make all the difference in creating a better life for everyone you have the privilege to lead and guide.



Cultivating Presence (from Before Speaking a Word)

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

This piece is excerpted from Before Speaking A Word, which is from Unit 2 of our Resonant Presentations workshop.

Click here for upcoming public dates and to register. We are running this for FREE for Founder’s Den members on Sunday, December 12, 2010 in San Francisco.

What is this thing called “Presence”?

The quality of your presence speaks before you even say a word. Presence is a catch-all term for all of the unspoken parts of communication: the combination of thoughts, attitudes, postures, gestures and expressions that send messages before a word is spoken.

People rapidly “read” what someone is saying through unspoken and unconscious signals, before they even begin to speak. In Blink, author Malcolm Gladwell describes this as “thin slicing”, a phenomenon in which observations and interpretations are happening so quickly in the brain as to be subconscious. (more…)



Online Schedule for TEDx San Francisco IV: The Edge of What We Know

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

On November 16th,  the San Francisco TED community will explore the Edge of What We Know in many dimensions- the physical and the conceptual, the artistic and the unconscious.    Our hope is that people leave inspired and curious, asking the questions: What do I know?  How do I know this?  What don’t I know?  And maybe even leave more comfortable in saying I don’t know…. with all the humility that brings, and inquiry it invites.

From deepest space to the forest floor, from governance to money, from our internal “edges” to communal outreach, join these phenomenal speakers for an inspiring afternoon and evening.

Join us online at www.TEDxSF.org, starting at 4 pm Pacific Time, for the free web simulcast:

(more…)

Jason Johnson/Welcome 4:00
Christine McCaull/The Edge of What We Know 4:02
Juan Enriquez/Strange Tales of Chiapas 4:05
Dr. Alex Filippenko/Dark Energy and the Runaway Universe 4:23


When the World is your Friend: Global Sourcing Tips for Startups

Saturday, April 10th, 2010

Written for Portfolio.com

Running a team can be a challenge. Running a virtual team? A bigger challenge. Now imagine running a virtual team with people all around the world, with all of the language and cultural barriers that can arise. Done right, it can be great; done wrong, it can be downright unworkable.

For the last several years, we’ve been working with development teams and outsourced service providers from all over the world—from our own backyard to India and the Philippines. It’s a global economy, even if your company (or maybe especially if your company) is only a handful of people.

Why do we outsource?
We do it for cost reasons, we do it to be able to access “spot buys” of specific capabilities to build our business that we couldn’t otherwise afford, and we do it to create global peace (but that’s for another article). Also, we find a lot of rapport with our partners (and freelancers in general) in the inherent hustle and entrepreneurial attitude in their approach to work. They want it, they are hungry, and there is no sense of entitlement—just like the founders of startup companies anywhere on the planet.

Here are our suggestions for building a great working relationship with an offshore team. You may notice that many of these suggestions apply equally to building a local, in-person team.

Know what to outsource and what to think twice about.

There’s something that we internally call “the specification tax,” or the “requirements tax.” There are some things that can be very easily outsourced because there are well-documented international standards in place, or a task with an easily defined process.

Where there are no such standards, be very careful not to get seduced by low rates—the overhead and opportunity cost for managing revisions and changes will more than make up for the savings. More importantly, you may not ever be able to get it right. Please note that this is not about the skill of the offshore team, but about the ability to communicate.

What’s easy to outsource?

Technical, development, or process tasks that are easy to document. From a development standpoint, database creation and maintenance, open-source installation and configuration. For example, “install Magento e-commerce on our server”—that’s something that requires skill, but there is not a lot of variability in execution. Other repeat tasks, where a defined process can be put in place, such as link building or structured data management and data entry.

Conversely, it’s hard to specify some tasks at a level that will get it done right.

Here are some development tasks that are culture heavy: language/copywriting, brand, usability, and visual standards—even user interface. To get this to work, we really have to slow down and say, down to the button level, what we need. As Malcolm Gladwell pointed out in his book Blink, there are countless “thin sliced” observations and decisions included in any one judgment or thought, especially when the person has a lot of experience in a particular realm. That’s pretty hard to tease apart enough to communicate to someone without that lifetime perspective. The corollary to this: Always be more detailed and specific rather than less any time you’re working with outsourced providers. And use pictures!

Know what you’re getting into—global outsourcing isn’t for everyone.

Physical rapport, nonverbal communication, time-zone issues, and language all pose significant adjustments to the standard way of working. For example, the hardest thing for my business partner was firing up the computer for an 8 p.m. call with India, where they were just kicking off the workday. As he put it, “that’s critical family time, really valuable time with my wife, and the hardest part for me about outsourcing.”

There’s also the immediacy question. If you need a quick answer during the workday, there’s a good chance that your offshore partner may be in deep REM sleep. Many providers have worked around this issue, extending or adjusting their core hours for better client service. It’s a good question to dialogue with your provider about at the beginning.

Get to know the provider’s real skills.

In some cultures, there is a tendency to say “Yes, I have done that many times,” and then to try to figure it out. After a few uncomfortable experiences, we started to approach work with new partners not only by seeking referrals first, but also by putting small projects out as tests, and then putting out bigger and bigger projects until we hit the providers’ capacity limits. These kinds of baby steps build trust on both sides and let you get a sense of how your partner, and individual members on their team, work and think.

Perhaps most importantly, invest the time to understand your partners’ culture.

This could be really simple stuff, like formality of communications. The seemingly casual nature of American communication can sometimes be really off-putting, especially to people who haven’t worked with Americans before. Just by taking the time for salutations and cordial sign-offs, and to inquire how the team is doing, makes all the difference, instead of rapid-fire task notification. When in doubt, be more formal and polite rather than less.

Even simple things, like knowing when your partners’ big holidays are, show consideration. Our Indian partners always wish us a Happy Fourth of July and a Happy Thanksgiving—and we wish them a Happy Diwali or a fantastic Holi , and (probably more importantly!) we don’t expect them to be working on those days.

More seriously, there are real work style issues that can come up between cultures, and those should be addressed from the beginning.

Specifically, some cultures have a more regimented approach to responding to customer requests: Do what the customer says, even if the customer is wrong. Americans tend to like “pushback” and thinking for oneself—and really appreciate it when a developer who sees an edge case or a maintainability issue in any given proposed approach argues back. Make your preferred approach clear from the beginning, and choose partners who are willing to do that.

Finally, make use of the host of Web-based tools available to you.

Things like DimDim, Skype, and online project management or collaboration tools such as Basecamp or Intervals are a global worker’s best friend.

Our conclusion

If you have a well-defined task and can communicate the requirements well, then you’ve got people all around the world who are available to get the thing done on a moment’s notice. It economically speeds the velocity of venture creation and creates interesting new global relationships.



The distraction of competitive noise: Knowing when to watch the competition and when to ignore it.

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

Originally published on Portfolio.com , 12/19/2010

When you start a business in an emerging market segment, chances are you’re trying to solve a problem that a lot of other people are trying to solve at the same time.

As we’ve hit various milestones in our development process at ClickMarkets, and the closer we get to market with our WideAngle metrics product (an online software designed to manage the vast world of social media for businesses and organizations) there seem to be new competitors popping up every day with brand-new solutions.

You can write it off as healthy entrepreneurial paranoia- but this anxiety about whether our cake is good enough to win the bake-off, or whether we’ve been toiling away on something mundane–has actually prompted me to codify when we will take a deep dive evaluating a competitor, and when we will ignore them.

We’ve been working on our software in stealth mode since early last year. It’s been a thoughtful process: First, we worked with real customers to document needs and best practices, then developed manual processes and reports to test out the value proposition. We tried to mitigate risk by selling the manual reporting service to measure market demand and price sensitivity before we wrote a line of code. Then, in the fall, we took the plunge and began designing databases and user interfaces, and hired the right developer. In the last month, we’ve began to use the product internally for our social media customers, and are now finally going into quality and security checks for a broader release, doing demos.

Every time I’ve been in this prelaunch position, the same nagging thoughts arise: What if someone else’s product has more pizzazz? More usability? More value? More of that certain hip “je-ne-sais-quoi” that takes it viral? That certain something that just makes it smell like a winner? Sometimes I even let my mind wander a little further: Even if the competition isn’t better now, how much cash, how many connections, how many smart people do they have, that may allow them to close the gap faster? If I’m trying to build a leader in a segment, I should worry about that stuff, right?

Generally, my philosophy is to serve the customers you have extremely well; satisfy them; listen deeply; respond; work hard- and don’t worry too much about the competition.

There are two major categorical exclusions, where we really do pay attention:

The obvious one is Sales (companies we will run into directly in the sales process).

Another less obvious reason we look at competitors is so we’re not blindsided by something that could stop us from Winning Big. So often, the winner in an emerging market is a matter intangibles (who knows who, who architected for a sale, who had better PR). If I have a better-funded competitor, they may not only beat us on deals, but they could get my VC money, hire better people, or simply create market/buyer uncertainty even if the product is worse.

With that in mind, for the startup phase, here is the approach we’re applying to “competition watching.”

We monitor the competition by running programmed searches of social media, news feeds and blogs from our industry, as well as venture blogs and the web at large. The terms we search include company names and keywords and phrases. Because we have a small staff, we review these every couple of weeks to see if there’s anything new we need to know about.

If there is something new, we do a quick scan of their web presence and put them in three buckets:

  • Barking-at-the-Gate (same target market, same problem, same go-to-market approach)
  • Neighborhood Dog (differs on one or more of the above criteria)
  • Cat (not a competitor, may be a partner, knows something about our segment)

We do a deep dive on the Barkers, from a sales and product development perspective. Here are the questions we want to answer:

  • Will we overlap in the marketplace in the short term? As a startup, I want to know if we’re going to run into them in our early sales calls, so I can have my answers ready. One of the first screening questions in deciding to invest in digging into a potential competitor is: Does this company appear to be going after the same type of customer? If we’re selling to small and medium sized businesses and agencies and this company is reaching out direct to big enterprises, they are not going to get my attention right now. If they are selling to a different market, I may take a moment to think about why they pitched that segment and its value, and whether there’s any reason to put that in line for later evaluation.
  • Are they trying to solve the same kind of problem? If not, we may take a cursory glance at the way they are positioning, to understand what aspects of the problem they might have seen that we haven’t seen. Sometimes, someone will approach the same problem with a totally different lens. What can we learn from them? Have they been able to solve a more difficult problem than we have?
  • If the company is still looking like we need to take notice, we’ll go a step further, and ask: Are they credible? Who’s behind them? How user-friendly and design-savvy is their self presentation? We may look for evidence of credibility from the market, too. What’s the trend and tone of their mentions in social media?

If we are still going and the prospective competitor hasn’t been dropped into another category by this stage, then someone is going to have to do some work, and that someone will be sales support. The question they are looking to answer is:

  • What will a prospect see, and how will we respond if this competitor comes up in a call?
  • What are the strengths and weaknesses of the product /service offering a prospect might see neck-in-neck with our offer? What’s good about them, what’s weak? What about pricing? Is there anything in the marketing language that we need to be aware of? If possible, this is the stage where we do a free trial (of the competitor?) and evaluate the offer. Are there any features that could be dealmakers that we’re missing?

Mostly, I just want to know my own customers, know what they need, focus on what they need, and solve their problem in the most elegant way. But never to the point of refusing to learn by what other creative problem solvers are putting out there. We’re in the final days of core development now, stay tuned.



Bootstrapping keeps getting easier: The 5 fundamental technology shifts that are restructuring the start-up world.

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Originally published 12/09/09 on Portfolio.com.

When we started our most recent business, ClickMarkets (in shared office space with a decent broadband connection and high powered laptops), we did all the same things we did at our last big endeavor. It was the usual drill: develop a value proposition, craft a brand and market entry strategy, put together a financial model, pull together a team, set up an infrastructure and eventually actually sell services to our first customers. But this time there was a big difference: it took a lot less of money and time to get to that first dollar in sales revenue, thanks to technologies that have vastly reduced selling, marketing and administrative costs in setting up a new venture. This has freed us up to invest our money and time in the development of what is core to our business, and run very lean, and bootstrap our company through sales revenue, not grow using Other People’s Money.
I’ll even put numbers on it: what cost a minimum of $500K, took 9 months and lots of engineering talent in 2004 can be done today, thanks to technology changes, by smart people with some web awareness or the willingness to learn for less than $20K in three months. It’s not that we’re doing this business on duct tape and baling wire, either. We’re working with very clean, professional services that can scale, and which just a few years ago cost a hundred times as much to put in place.
As a former venture backed CEO and 18 year industry vet, I’ve been an insider on creating some of these technology shifts- but it’s only now, as we’re applying them in our own new startup, that we really understand their real impact from an operating perspective.

The following 5 major tech enabled trends have saved us money AND improved our business in the process.
• Trend 1: The Open Source Movement
• Trend 2: Technology Enabled Distributed Workforce
• Trend 3: Social Media
• Trend 4: Software as a Service
• Trend 5: Online Productivity and Communications Tools
We see that these trends don’t just impact new businesses, but are also applicable to established businesses of all sizes.
Trend 1: Open Source Everything
The Open Source Movement makes it easy to launch a functional, commercial and robust web presence at a fraction of the cost. Usable Open Source Software and business applications cut down the cost of building really robust, functional websites.
Example: We used the free open source Joomla (www.joomla.org) content management system to build our web presence, including user registration, email and social media management and ecommerce – and to avoid using developers to interpret our content and place it on the web.
• Cost savings: $25,000.
• Extra Benefit? Day to day control of our own site content without developer intervention.
Stable open source infrastructure coupled with “virtualization” means startup costs and support costs go down.
Example: Instead of a Windows NT product hosted on our servers at Rackspace, we started with a Virtual Private Server on an open source LAMP stack at a professional hoster.
• Cost savings: $25,000
• Extra benefit? Not having to worry about servers and databases.
The availability of images and graphics under Creative Commons and easy to procure stock licenses, through sites like FlickrPro (www.flickr.com), iStock (www.istockphoto.com) and Getty Images (www.gettyimages.com) means we can turn our marketing into highly professional work in a matter of minutes. Professional quality tools embedded into the Mac means we can create multimedia this way, too.
Example: Instead of paying a photographer to create custom marcom images, we started with stock work, cropped and colored it in an interesting way and were good to go.

• Cost savings: $10,000 • Extra Benefit: Faster Time to market

Trend 2: Access to a Global, Distributed, Specialized Workforce
We get a lot of things done faster, on a global time clock, with good quality and at a low cost- direct access to by the hour specialists in any field.
Through global talent marketplaces (sites like Odesk (www.odesk.com) and Mechanical Turk (www.mturk.com), we get instant access to contract and project talent, with ratings and safety protections, in moments.
Example: We hired specialists to work on Search Engine Optimization, or building contact lists, or identifying competitors, in small chunks of time (5 to 20 hours), with very little administrative overhead.
• Cost savings: $45,000
• Extra Benefit: Broader Breadth of skills.
Online collaboration tools such as drop.io (www.drop.io), Google docs (www.google.com) or project management applications like Intervals (www.intervals.com) make it easy to do work with distributed teams, and mobile devices keep people connected anywhere.
Cost Savings (in office rent and infrastructure): $24,000.
Extra benefit: These technologies allow us to leverage and support people who are only able to be partially in the traditional workforce, even though they have great talents to share, and to structure our own lives more flexibly.
Trend 3: Social Networks
Through Social Media, we can reach our natural audience in minutes, at a cost must lower than traditional advertising, email marketing or keyword buys.
While word of mouth has always been present, social media has created a Technology-Enhanced Network Effect. The emergence of Facebook (www.facebook.com), LinkedIn (www.linkedin.com), Twitter (www.twitter.com) and Ning (www.ning.com) based specialty sites as consolidated dominant networks, & their adoption by adults, has changed the world. This time around, we have instant access to a global pool of self nominating, highly connected interest groups- at no cost other than the labor.
• Cost Savings: $60,000 in keyword marketing.
• Extra benefit: We’re having a conversation with our audience, not talking at them and trying to persuade them.
Trend 4: Software as a Service
SaaS means that little guys like us, just getting started, have access to to big company level professional functionality and analytics for tiny price points. We get easier process, and data to make decisions, without huge implementation burdens.
Example: In our startup, we’re using Intervals for online task and project management, CVSDude (www.cvsdude.com) as a subscription version control software, Google Docs and Lovely Charts (www.lovelycharts.com) and a variety of other online applications that make it easy to run our business. Plus, we know that the bigger SaaS players (Salesforce.com (www.Salesforce.com) for CRM and SpringCM (www.springcm.com) for docs) will be there when we’re ready.

• Cost savings: Irrelevant- we would not have been able to implement these apps- enterprise versions of this and the projects to get them going are in the 10s if not 100s of thousands of dollars.


Trend 5: An Explosion of Cheap & Good Productivity and Communication Tools

Whether it’s the actual cash offset of being able to use free VoiP instead of a telephone system and landline, or the time savings inherent in reducing all the annoyances of being small and young are reduced through the proliferation of Online Productivity & Communication Tools, we’re loving the way digital tools have changed our business.
Examples: We’re completely paperless. We don’t have a Landline, we have Skype (www.skype.com) -in and eFax and mobile phones. We use online schedulers like Doodle (www.doodle.com), and leverage every media tool in the iLife suite. This has reduced overhead and administrative costs.
• Cost Savings: $8,000 in telephony costs and $24,000 for an intern/assistant.
With all of these dropping barriers to entry, where do we invest/what hasn’t changed?
The extreme capital efficiency enabled by these tools shortens the time and money needed to get to revenue, but we’re still investing, only not in infrastructure. We invest in original creative work and good design- to support both the products and the brand. We invest in market research. We invest in differentiating custom code. We invest in training people and partnering and learning. We invest in responsive service.
It’s not all easy- you still need to work hard and pay attention, have clear intentions and vision, and build a business that offers something better, faster, cheaper or more unique. But these trends sure have reduced the required capital to get things going, in a very short amount of time.