05 July 2008

Focus your attention

I often come across early stage ventures that are pursuing three or four different alternative products or strategies. When I inquire how they plan to win at several of these simultaneously, I get the same answers. We are pursuing multiple paths because we are not sure which one will be the winner. Or, Our investors are happy to have a portfolio of opportunities to reduce their risk. This causes me pause. On one hand, certainly in this early stage they are right, its difficult to pick a winner before their products are complete or the market has had a chance to vote. But, can they really afford to be pursuing multiple strategies?

Making tough decisions is always a difficult proposition. But not making them sets you up for much more certain failure. The word decide is made up of the Latin roots de- "off" + cædere "to cut"as in cut off other alternatives.

What entrepreneurs and investors who allow the pursuit of multiple alternatives do not understand is that without cutting off several of their multiple alternatives they are giving management permission to fail. That's right permission to FAIL!

Human nature is such that if you have a "fall back" position, an alternative if your pursuit fails, then you tend not to take success to its limits. Somewhere in the back of the homo sapiens' mind, we keep the glimmer of a trap door alternative to failure. Contrast that with the very powerful survival instinct that each of us carries. In the face of utter failure, we are able to call upon super-human capabilities to make the impossible occur.

If you study enough start-up ventures that had everything to lose by failing, you find a long list of very successful entrepreneurs who accomplished the impossible. Again, contrast that with many corporate ventures where the person leading the charge had a cushy job to fall back upon if their intrapreneurial venture failed. Is it any surprise that entrepreneurs create many more important ventures than corporations who have many times their resources are able to create from within these large entities with gracious safety nets?

Entrepreneurs who are pursuing multiple paths take note. Cut off your alternatives and your chance of success will increase! And investors who advise their early stage management teams to retain a portfolio of opportunities should instead capture their portfolio safety from multiple investments rather than diluting the focus of any individual management team!

13 June 2008

What's your GHIN?


We've all heard of private or venture capital companies doing due diligence on the companies in which they are interested in investing. And we probably are convinced that these financial firms are careful enough to do due diligence on the principals of the company. But did you ever think they would check out your golf handicap? Guess what? They do!

I recently found a private equity company as part of their diligence looking up the handicap (and finding out how often they play) of the principals of the company. This could be both interesting and damaging. What if you posted scores for the past two weeks, playing 4 or 5 times a week. Are they going to think about your office attendance? And what if your handicap is a 4? Are they going to believe that you are just a casual golfer?

I doubt that anyone makes a make or break decision based upon how good a golfer one of the principals is. However, it is easy for them to look you up on GHIN.com. All they need to know is your name and your state. If you have a posted GHIN account anyone can see it.

Golfers beware! :)

07 June 2008

Dividing the Founders' Pie


It seems that this problem is quite pervasive. Smart, driven, innovative founders, invent something great. Several of them join together to form the entity necessary to bring it to commercial success. Then, thinking nothing stands between them and their fortunes, they ineptly stumble, fall and sometimes even disintegrate.

What occurred in this all too frequent scenario, is that the founders realizing that success and the rewards that come along with that, were unable to agree among themselves how they each had and would contribute to the success of the company - or how to divide up the founders' pie.

I've recently encountered two such situations, where founders asked me to be the "King Solomon" and divide up their "baby". In both situations I refused - no outsider is capable of accomplishing such a tricky maneuver. In my opinion, unless this is handled appropriately, the rest of the entrepreneurial journey is probably not going to be pretty, if it happens at all.

Divisions like this should be done early - before there is even a glimmer of hope of the success yet to follow. It has to be done when everyone is digging in, doing whatever it takes, and following that founder dream. It has to be organic. It has to be unanimous. It has to be final. And, it has to be over.

So when I was asked to participate in these two situations, I answered the only way I could. Divide it up evenly?

Does this make sense? Did everyone contribute at the same level? Wasn't it one person's idea and the others were brought along to "support" the idea. Isn't there one person who early on gave up everything else to pursue this invention? Is this fair?

My experience is that questions like this are only asked when there already are hard feelings among the founders. It means that they put off this important decision, for good (or bad) reasons and now with that glimmer of success peaking out, they decided this was an important concern.

Without reading minds of the founders, I bet they each feel that they contributed in some special way to getting the company where it is. I bet they each believe they had more impact than they had. I also bet they are not going to be happy with anything less than an equal share.

My "everyone is equal" suggestion may in fact not be entirely equitable. But it is aimed at a more important conclusion that I know is true... spending time dividing up the pie is precious time (and energy) wasted not pursuing the real goal - your own success. Getting this out of the way is critical to any future opportunities.

I've seen important promising opportunities fail by getting mired in this specific issue. They literally could not get past it and they failed. And, perhaps more importantly, I've seen first hand, companies divide the pie up evenly - with the founding partners clearly NOT contributing equally or being equally capable - in one case for 25 years - and develop extraordinary shareholder wealth. Is this a coincidence? I think not. Focusing intensely on the issues that matter - product success - is what startups are all about.

He who spends his time dividing up an all-too-small pie, will end up eating less than one who focuses only upon increasing the size of the pie.

17 May 2008

Illinois ITA CEO Summit

I had the privilege of presenting last week to the Illinois Information Technology Association's CEO Summit. My presentation focused on Lessons Learned, especially when it comes to picking and focusing your business model. I've included my PowerPoint presentation here. I'd love to hear your comments.

04 May 2008

Why is it so hard to focus?

Early stage businesses are risky. Investors know that. Entrepreneurs are notorious risk takers. Statistically, most new businesses fail. But the ones that succeed often disrupt the status quo, challenging traditional industry leaders, and creating substantial value for their stakeholders. With the benefits of winning so high, American entrepreneurship is alive and well and fueling thousands of aspiring startups each year.

But all too often, we see startups adopting a hedging strategy. They pursue two, three, or more different products, markets, or opportunities at the outset, prior to establishing any beachhead position. When asked, usually the answer is: "its too early to tell which of these might succeed, so therefore we would be negligent to count any of these out."

This portfolio strategy for a newcomer attacking the market is doomed!

A reduced risk strategy for an not-yet-established company will seldom work. While it is possible to just get lucky and win the lottery (and some companies have) the chances of succeeding with a diffused set of investments, lacking a laser focus, has proven to be faulty. The competition is fierce. Well heeled competitors with established distribution, brand recognition, and operating momentum are tough enough to compete with head to head. But, trying to fight multiple battles concurrently is a prescription for disaster.

Startups succeed when their drive, willingness to take on risks, and gorilla strategies all point in the same direction. They win by attacking staid competitors who themselves see that new potentially winning strategy as risky, who lack the desire to do "whatever it takes" to be successful, and who are busy covering their bets so they do not risk the shareholder value they have already created.

This is probably why we often find that entrepreneurs are young and early in their careers. They either are naive to the risks of failure, or they have little to loose. But entrepreneurs who are willing to risk it all, are the ones that big established businesses should be afraid of.

There are many analogies that can help understand why this focus is necessary. Have you ever tried to drive a dull nail into a hard piece of wood? The resistance of the wood, coupled with the larger surface area of the dull-ended nail, makes this a difficult task. Better a very sharp nail with all the force directed on its head to succeed at this task.

War analogies also apply to this situation well. Small armies attacking larger established forces never attack in multiple locations. Instead they pick their targets, focused on the spot of most vulnerability, and use all of their forces in one location. No self respecting general would ever pursue a strategy of trying to go head to head with a much larger enemy in multiple locations at one time and expect to live to fight again. That is until they establish their beachhead and then branch out from there.

And of course there is the old Chinese proverb: "He who chases two rabbits catches neither." Ever tried to chase down even one rabbit at a time - that alone is tough. But with the added distraction of the second, the chances go down exponentially.

Business leaders who are unwilling to focus, to pick one target, and give it all they've got to try to win, are not entrepreneurs at all. They should go back to the comfort of their less risky established company jobs and run a division. As an investor, who better to take advice from than Warren Buffett? Mr. Buffett suggests that if you are looking for a portfolio of investments, then buy the stock of multiple companies, rather than investing in companies with a hedging strategy.

Geoff Moore, Author of the seminal marketing treatise: Crossing the Chasm, suggested that disruptive inventions solve one problem for one market substantially better than the existing solutions (if any exist at all) and focus on taking a single beach head on the other side of the chasm. Doing otherwise increase the risk of failure.

Rather than decrease risk, entrepreneurs that follow multiple simultaneous paths, actually increase their risk of failure.

10 April 2008

Deals Take on a Life of Their Own

Just about every CEO denies it will happen to her. Clinically analytic CEOs and their teams, painstakingly analyze the acquisition (either their own company being acquired or a company they are intending to buy). Great process, due diligence, clear minded accountants, tax & legal counsel, all engaged and focused on the particulars. Investment bankers who sole incentive is the get the deal done. Mix all that together and what do you get? A great acquisition?

Sometimes! But quite often most deals, whether they are good or bad, end up completed. Once offers are made and dollars are discussed, deals take on a life of their own.

What does that mean? It means that even intelligent, experienced, and dedicated professionals all get caught up in very human behavior. That behavior, psychologists tell us, relates to the "investment" of time, energy and resources that have gone into getting the deal to where it is. These costs, this effort, this intense focus, leads to momentum. Like physical inertia, all of this "weight" of pointed activity aimed at getting this deal to where it is may very likely cause the deal to occur, no matter what the outcome of the final details. That is deals may occur simply because they are heading down the tracks at such a great speed (and mass of effort) that even the best laid plans may go awry and make way for a not so optimal deal.

How do you counter this?

It's not easy. Those involved in the deal, and especially those whose compensation is based upon getting the transaction completed (like investment bankers for instance!) will exert great pressure to get the deal (virtually any deal) completed. Acknowledging what smart business people call "sunk costs" and ignoring these as the final deal comes into place, under circumstances like these, is extremely difficult.

The best way we have seen to avoid succumbing to these kinds of pressures is to engage a dispassionate third party - who has the ear of the CEO - to keep a sort of pressure gauge on the transaction. Ensuring that this objective third party stays objective is the first trick. Even outsiders start to get excited about potent deals. Keeping them compensated despite the eventuality (or not) of a transaction and doing whatever you can to encourage them to point out the blemishes is your best medicine.

When deals get done, kudos are passed around, deal plaques are created, bankers get huge fees, and the good feelings abound (at least until the first quarters' combined results are tabulated). Perhaps companies should get in the habit of securing plaques for deals that don't get done, because someone realized it might not be the optimal deal?

13 March 2008

Founder Rebounds

It seems to happen often. Expensive, heavily recruited, extremely qualified (on paper), high profile "professional" CEO brought in to take a founder-led company to the next level. Usually these situations start off with great expectation. Sometimes even a quick jolt of good performance. And then .... much more quietly, the Board reinstalls the founder to take over for a now floundering organization.

What does this mean? A bad hire. An organization that can't exist without the founder's magic. Just another phase of a company's growth.

Many companies have experienced it recently - Nike, Dell, Yahoo, and hoards of others whose names do not register as quickly.

Here are my thoughts on what might actually be happening behind the scenes:

1) It is hard to replace an icon, no matter who you are. Being the second act behind a nationally recognized figure is an awesome task. The expectations may be more than most can live into.

2) It's hard to be your own person with an icon looking over your shoulder. With the specter of the person who performed the magic that got the company to where it is hanging out in the wings, its hard to enact change. No matter what words are used, or how much support the newly hired CEO gets from the founder or the board, its a false belief that real change can occur with your predecessor standing nearby.

3) Some hires are just the wrong choices. Hiring is an art, not a science. Sometimes well intentioned boards and founders hire a person who is not capable of doing what is necessary. If it looks like a duck, smells like a duck, walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, sometimes it really is a duck!

4) Circumstances change. Sometimes the replacement hire is the right person and can adequately handle the job at the time they are hired. But subsequently the company grows, changes and the new challenges require different leadership. Leaders don't always grow at the same pace as their organization.

No matter what the reasons for the ultimate mismatch, is bringing back the founder the right answer? It's a question that remains unanswered. But perhaps its the best answer the Board can come up with at the moment.

10 February 2008

The Power of Focus

Most early stage company failures are not caused by starving from a lack of good ideas. More often than not, instead they are choked by trying to digest too many at the same time.

Competition is fierce. Even companies with unique offerings run up against companies with orders of magnitude more of resources, experience, existing customer relationships and brand awareness. They can often favorably compete with the new entrant, even with a not-as-good solution. As the business world continues to expand, this competition will accelerate and they will set even higher hurdles for these entrants.

There is but one proven way to compete against these business Goliaths. That is to focus intensely and put all of your resources and momentum into driving that single finely honed direction. The sharper your focus the less "force" needed (or the more powerful it will become). Anything short of complete focus diffuses your efforts. Incumbents find it much easier to defend their turf when a new entrant gets distracted by things that blur the new entrant's vision.

Then why do so many early stage companies chase multiple opportunities rather than just one winning strategy? Our research tells us its risk aversion. Despite their entrepreneurial risk- taking swagger, CEOs (and sometimes their investors) like to hedge their bets, invest in several potential projects, hoping one will bear fruit. (Maybe some of this is because CEOs have short attention spans.) But this lack of complete focus is actually riskier than pursuing the one effort that really might have a shot at winning.

Confucius has been quoted as saying - he who chases two rabbits catches neither.

16 January 2008

Barney Relationships

How many times have you been told by a bubbling senior executive of a high potential company about a relationship they have just signed with Bigco. She tells you how that relationship itself validates the value proposition of her company. And you probably believe it. After all, Bigco is a household name with legions of very smart executives who have their pick of the litter of companies with whom they could affiliate. In fact it’s not just one relationship with one Bigco that the company has rung up. In fact they have four or five with several different Bigco-like companies. Sounds impressive.

A good friend of mine, Gordon Rapkin who is currently CEO of an really cool data security firm in Stamford, CT – Protegrity, puts these kind of relationships into perspective. He calls these Barney relationships.

Depending upon your age, you either grew up with kids who were familiar with Barney the purple dinosaur, or perhaps you were a Barney fan yourself. Barney is this loveable character who caters to youngsters. You may recall Barney’s theme song. It included the words that Gordon was referring to:

I love you, you love me ….

I’m sure you can probably hum the tune.

In any case while these relationships may in fact be interesting or may even be predecessors to a more serious relationship, they are not equivalent to real market traction, unless that love also amounts to money changing hands. So while we all can all celebrate these successes, we should be very careful to realize that Barney relationships are not a proxy for a real sales or for tangible market penetration.

05 January 2008

Don't get Bored of your Board


I had a Director who once told me his job was easy. "I just have to show up once a quarter and whine!" Thankfully, this particular director was kidding.

I have witnessed Boards who do little more. However, with the right people and some advance planning, your board can be an important corporate asset. But this requires you as the CEO to provide some leadership.

Here are a five helpful hints that will enable you to get more value from your board:

1) Prepare - If you want your board to provide you with valuable insight at your meetings, get information to them well in advance of your meeting. While you live with the information every day, the board's view of what is going on inside of your company is limited to what you provide. If they get their board books a couple of days before a meeting, they are liable to only glance at the materials in advance. If it arrives a week before, they will find the time to read it through. You may even want to circulate your agenda in advance of the meeting and ask the board's input on topics they wish to discuss.

2) Communicate - Board books are invaluable tools for your Board. However, limiting their information flow to a book once a quarter is a meager helping of corporate information. Get in the habit of communicating more often, sometimes informally. Regular calls between meetings, timely information that comes up that relates to topics you've discussed or plan to discuss, or even face to face meetings outside of regularly scheduled board meetings can help an interested board member stay abreast of what is going on and hence provide richer input. Some industrious CEOs that I have known have given their board members jobs. I don't mean they make them employees or even consultants. Rather they designate special concentrations related to issues the company is encountering and have the board member become the "lead" in this area - typically an area in which they may have some special expertise.

3) Time manage - If you allow it to happen, most of the time at your meeting will end up being a review of your last quarter's performance. These kinds of meetings tend to look a lot like a quarterly report card for the CEO. Anything you can do to avoid this should be done. The vast majority of your meeting should be spent looking forward. The board's biggest value should be as an advisor and sounding board. I usually allocate no more than 1/4 of a meeting to reviewing the past. Your agenda is the start of this trend and then effective time management during the meeting can ensure the rest.

4) Be proactive - Engage your board in the issues that matter. There is a fine line between asking for feedback and asking for direction. I would always prefer the former. In my role as a board member, I'd expect the CEO to come up with a plan and then expose the board to his plan, the underlying assumptions and rationale. But if you instead ask for direction, you may get just that. And it may be a direction that doesn't suit your desires. Don't let the board fall into the habit of making tactical decisions for you. Be proactive, do your homework, make your decisions, and then provide the transparency required to enable your board to understand why.

5) Avoid surprises - If you are going to take on just one of these five recommendations, make this the one! Boards hate surprises. The Board's role is to look out for the interests of the shareholders. Surprises make the board uncomfortable in that role. Surprises connote a betrayal of trust and result in a Board that questions everything and pulls tight on the slack they have given to the CEO. Delivering bad (or even good) news surprises in close to real time, is a much better prescription for the CEO who wants to continue to ensure a healthy board relationship.