A VC: What A CEO Does

One of JLM’s blog comments on AVC, a real jewel

“Obviously having been a CEO for over 30 years, I have had ample time to think about what it takes to be a “good” CEO.

I agree with what Fred says — completely — from the perspective from whence he speaks as a Boardmember and an investor. It is a however a bit formulaic and simplistic — not in a “bad” way but in an Executive Summary kind of way.

I have been a CEO of fairly large private and small public companies. In multiple industries. Companies which were stable and ones which were growing and ones which were terminal. I have started companies, bought companies and sold companies. I have tickled companies out of the bassinet and I have drowned a few in the bathtub.

I write to you not as someone who is “observing” but rather as one who is a practitioner. Who has made just about every mistake possible but has made it to the pay window enough times to make it all worthwhile and who has found a few ideas that work and enhance the probability of making it to the pay window again. I have hit a few good licks.

The CEO has to be a leader in the context of leaders being folks who get organizations to places they would never get by themselves. He has to want to be a leader. He has to be comfortable being a leader — or able to deal with the attendant discomfort gracefully. He has to be able to say — “I am responsible for EVERYTHING that happens or fails to happen at this company.” And then make it so and believable and live it.

Let’s not bullshit each other — the most important characteristic of any CEO is to be a moneymaker. It is not particularly dignified to say it that bluntly but you can sugar coat whatever you want and it all comes down to “can you ring the bell.”

The CEO has to set the tone of everything — big and small by the values he projects, by the way he conducts himself and by the he deals with everyone and everything. The CEO has to go to the trouble to formulate these values in a concrete way. I have a little booklet which I have developed over 30 years which quantifies the values I am looking for and I personally give it to every new employee their first day of employment.

The CEO has to set a vision for the company. Commit it to writing. Argue for its attainability — even when it is seemingly nuts. This is the FIRST sale that any company has to make. It has to sell the idea for its own existence.

The CEO has to be a good thinker, a better writer and a powerful communicator. When a CEO gets done communicating — you have to believe you really could bite the ass off a bear. Guess what, you could!

The CEO has to tranform the idealistic vision into bite sized specific objectives which are SMART — specific, measurable, attainable, realistic and temporal. How do you eat an elephant? One bit at a time — the CEO has to hack off the first bites for the rest of the executive staff.

The CEO has to organize the functions of the company to provide a logical way of accomplishing the vision both through the objectives noted above but also by talking folks through their respective duties. By coaching his subordinates to execute at a high level of competence and excellence even — especially — when the fledling efforts are terrible. This is particularly true in new companies.

The CEO has to be a trainer able to train folks — different than coaching which is primarily mental — to discharge their duties. When you hire good experienced folks then all the CEO has to do is document what is going to be done rather than training them as to what to do.

The CEO has to be a disciplinarian and has to invoke accountability within the organization — not a raised voice stinging kind of discipline but rather a “you have to eat your vegetables” kind of discipline that says not only is this a good way to do things, you have to do it this way because we are in a competition to win. Discipline means — in it, to win it.

The CEO has to recruit, inspire and drive talent to levels of personal and team performance that exceed the expectations of the practitioners themselves. He has to remember that there are cycles of energy and that you have to find the right time to make things come together particularly when dealing with a team and team building. You do not produce Rangers in a long weekend and a company offsite is not going to transform your company from good to great. You have to be patient and painstaking. You have to be wiley and canny and sly.

The CEO has to be able to reduce what the company does to logical processes (SOx 404 type process thinking) that can be documented, understood, streamlined, lubricated and improved. But you have to start w/ identifying and documenting the most important processes.

The CEO has to force the company to be “customer centric” and focused completely on from whence the cash flows. You cannot tolerate a single disparaging comment about the customers.

Most importantly — the CEO has to face down risk with a steady gaze which inspires confidence amongst the executive team. “Well, if he isn't scared, then I guess I shouldn't be scared.”

All of these things are subsumed in Fred’s comments, there is no original or opposing thought intended to be expressed but like everything else — the Devil is in the details.”

And from Arnold Waldstein a brilliant tweet sized definition:

“Exec with market vision, inspiration and who can manage to a P & L”

via A VC: What A CEO Does.

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Did Facebook just kill Foursquare and Gowalla?

I’m not a fan of Facebook, always thought it was pretty pointless unless you were under the age of 20.  However now that they have just released Places I think it’s pretty likely they are going to take a huge chunk of the location market, essentially for two reasons:

  1. They have a massive (500m) user base.
  2. Business are already tripping over themselves to work out how they can utilise Facebook to advertise their business.

Crucially according to Techcrunch they are targeting their current advertisers to help them build out the Facebook directory of places.

This is a massive step forward for location based services and although Facebook are issuing an api for the likes of Foursquare and Gowalla to use, they are going to have to be really smart in how they differentiate their product to even begin to survive.

It’s also another lesson in that if you have a really good idea that Facebook can implement at a relative flick of a switch, you’d better have a really good defensive strategy ready.

Should Foursquare have sold out to Yahoo?  you betcha ass

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Seth’s Blog: Competition

Competition

The number one reason people give me for giving up on something great is, “someone else is already doing that.”

Or, parsed another way, “my idea is not brand new.” Or even, “Oh no, now we’ll have competition.”

Two big pieces of news for you:

1. Competition validates you. It creates a category. It permits the sale to be this or that, not yes or no. And this or that is a much easier sale to make. It also makes decisions about pricing easier, because you have someone to compare against and lean on.

2. There are six billion people in the world. Even if your market is hand-made spoke shaves for left-handed woodworkers, there are more people in your market than you can ever hope to track down.

There are lots of good reasons to abandon a project. Having a little competition is not one of them. Even if it’s Google you’re up against.

via Seth’s Blog: Competition.

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AngelList – Where are the Europeans ?

Fred Wilson brought AngelList to my attention.  Which in their own words is:

A list of the top angels and seed investors in the world. And how to contact them

This is a great idea but the problem is that if you look by location there are only 8 European angels that have put themselves on the list.  There needs to be more.

The VC world is changing, it requires less capital to get a start up off the ground.  In the US, VC’s are increasingly starting to  do more seed rounds.  It doesn’t seem to me that the VC’s in Europe are stepping up to the plate in the same way.  Robin and Saul Klein are leading the way at The Accelerator Group but we need more European VC’s to do the same.  C’mon guys!!

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Who do your Disqus comments belong to?

I discovered today at Fred Wilson’s site that it’s possible for a third party to cross post not only the post from another site but the related Disqus comments as well.

So when I commented on Fred’s post on currency risk and that post was cross posted by Business Insider my comment was also on the Business Insider website and looked as if I had contributed to the post on the Business Insider website.

I really dislike this.  When I make a comment on a post I’m doing it specifically at that site. That’s my choice.  I do not expect that comment to show up on another site if the post I originally commented on is cross posted by another website. If it is then there should at least be something to show where I made that original comment.

The biggest issue I have is that if my comment shows up at another site then it gives the impression that I visited that site and made a comment there when in fact I didn’t.  I have no control over who is cross posting what and therefore on what type of websites my comments are showing up on.

I always thought that my comments via Disqus were my content and therefore should be controlled by me.  It looks like that is not the case.

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A conflict of interests – Venture Hacks

the best entrepreneurs display a lot of chutzpah. They aren’t fazed by the competition, nor do they see shadows in every corner. They are their own biggest competition.

via A conflict of interests – Venture Hacks.

Interesting read by the Venture Hacks team

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Saving time in preparing for board meetings – Fred Destin

Great post by Fred Destin on board meeting prep.

Saving time in preparing for board meetings – Fred Destin.

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Something Old, Something New

“In general, experience has taught me that the best chances for success are when you combine two things that already exist rather than creating something completely new”

via What will it take to make mobile payments mainstream in the US? | VentureBeat.

I was reading the article above on Venturebeat by Steve Klebe (which is worth reading if you are interested in mobile payments) and the sentence above really resonated with me because in essence that is what we are in the process of doing at Alertsplash.

In general I think Steve is right, creating something new is really difficult.  Twitter is not new, Facebook is not new they both took existing concepts and added their own secret sauce.

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The Elevator Pitch

The elevator pitch forms everyone’s first impression of your venture. It needn’t be a single sentence, but the delivery ought to be measured in seconds not minutes – like any good TV or radio commercial.

I know it sounds a little crazy, but I’ve come to believe that a clear, compelling elevator pitch is essential to growing a business. And I’ve paid dearly for the evidence.

— David Cowan – Bessemer

via Nic Brisbourne- The elevator pitch forms everyone’s first….

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Flying Under the Radar

The general consensus from the VC community is that there is no point in a start up being in stealth mode.  The argument runs along the lines that it’s all about the execution so who cares if everyone knows what you are doing.  I don’t buy this at all.  By stealth mode I don’t necessarily mean just posting up a holding page and being tight lipped about what you do I mean just not actively trying to create noise before you are ready.

In fact I’d argue that you are far better getting on with your business, developing your product, acquiring and servicing customers.  Don’t worry about the Techcrunch pr or hauling your ass around, talking to every VC that will listen (because unless you have a product and some customers the VC is only doing market research and getting ideas for their portfolio companies anyway)  Caterina Fake from Flickr points it out nicely here.

Finally whilst an idea is just an idea until it’s developed into something, given how little it costs and how quickly something can be launched there seems little sense in giving access to the crown jewels before you’ve had a chance to build the safe to keep them in.

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