What Makes an Entrepreneur? Four Letters: JFDI

by Mark Suster on November 19, 2009

This is part of my Startup Advice series.

nike_logoI had a picture in the office of my first company with the logo above and the capital letters JFDI.  (In case it’s not obvious it’s a play on the Nike slogan, “Just Do It.”)  I believe that being successful as an entrepreneur requires you to get lots of things done.  You are constantly faced with decisions and there is always incomplete information.  This paralyzes most people.  Not you.

Entrepreneurs make fast decisions and move forward knowing that at best 70% of their decisions are going to be right.  They move the ball forward every day.  They are quick to spot their mistakes and correct.  Good entrepreneurs can admit when their course of action was wrong and learn from it.  Good entrepreneurs are wrong often.  If you’re not then you’re not trying hard enough.  Good entrepreneurs have a penchant for doing vs. over-analyzing.  (obviously don’t read this as zero analysis)

I spent nearly a decade building software for large companies and then advising companies on the same.  I didn’t have to make many serious decisions.  So I was surprised at the sheer volumes of decisions that had to be made when I became a startup CEO.  Most of them are completely mundane such as choosing which:  bank,  office space, 1-year lease vs. 2-year lease, logo, URL, pricing structure or which VC.

The technology team disagrees on direction and wants resolutions.  Your head of sales thinks she should fire somebody.  You need to decide whether or not to launch at TechCrunch50.  Somebody asks whether you plan to set up 401k’s and do contribution matching.  I think this paralyzes many people.

air-jordan-logoI learned quickly that I needed to just do things.  Yet I initially had a team full of people that seemed to either over analyze things or more likely wait for a higher source within the company to make the tough decisions for them.  You’re sales person is getting blocked by the CTO who says she shouldn’t go above him but the CTO isn’t approving the deal.  Should she take a chance and potentially ruffle feathers?

Yes, I know it’s my job as the CEO to be the coach for people and that’s fine.  But if everybody is looking for me to make their decisions we’ll never get anything done.  I felt like I had done the hard bit and chosen people that I truly respected and I would rather empower them to make decisions and accept consequences.

Sometimes you need to break some eggs to get things done so if that’s what it takes I wanted my team to go for it and I wanted to symbolize that it was OK with me.  I would far rather have some messes to clean up than to never have them cross the line trying.

So I took on the motto JFDI to symbolize this.  And I think my team did a great job and rose to the occasion.  Maybe it helps that I love controversy and pushing the boundaries so people felt it was OK for them to do it as well.

Another side of JFDI is finding ways to get stuff done that seem impossible.  Entrepreneurs have a way of doing that. Getting suppliers to accept terms that they said they never normally agree, getting accepted to speak on a panel when the conference organizer initially said “no,” getting people to moonlight for you until you have the cash to bring them on board.

A couple of quick stories / examples:

1. Making Things Happen

There’s a guy in Los Angeles that I met at several tech networking events.  He was a really nice and personable guy who had deep domain knowledge in an industry that he’d worked in for 10 years that is in need of technological advancement.  He wanted to be the guy who did it.  So we discussed his ideas several times.  I usually try to avoid getting stuck reviewing people’s PowerPoint decks (I get this request too often and frankly I’m already behind on my own work!) but there are some people you just take an (extra) liking to and want to help.  This was such a guy.

So over several months I went through a few iterations on his idea.  He was stuck on capital raising.  He wanted to know how to get started and “Could I intro him to a couple of local angels?”  One night after a DealMaker Media event we got 20 minutes together after the event ended.  I was blunt (warning: that sometimes happens with me) and told him not to bother and that I wasn’t prepared to help with angels.

“Why?” he asked.  I told him he wasn’t a real entrepreneur.  He looked stunned.  I said that he had been talking about doing this for too long.  He still had no website and no prototypes.  But “he didn’t have the budget to hire a developer until he had raised money!”

I said that was my point. “A real entrepreneur would have done it anyway.  He would have found somebody technical and inspired that individual to work for equity or deferred payment.  Real entrepreneurs are contagious.  They are filled with ideas and they get those ideas onto paper.  That paper can be in the form of wireframes or in the form of a PowerPoint plan.  Or worst case your ideas can be conveyed verbally.  But they GET THINGS DONE.  You have the skills and knowledge to do that.”

I walked away kind of feeling bad.  I don’t like to intentionally crush people’s hopes.  But I always view my job as being honest so that people don’t waste time, money or both if their ideas aren’t good or the positive execution isn’t likely.  But then something awesome happened.  He took my comments as a challenge.  He went out and found a developer and built a product.  He refined his business plan and he got commitments for $150-200k but needed some lead angels to commit first.  When he re-approached me he had a much better plan and he had a prototype!  I introduced him to some angels and his round was OVER SUBSCRIBED!

That is a true story.  I don’t know whether the entrepreneur feels comfortable with my saying who he is so if he does and he reads this perhaps he’ll put his details in the comments section.  But I  bring up this story for a reason.

2. Analysis Paralysis

RodinI used to sit on the board of a company (for which I DID NOT invest) with a very smart and very likable CEO.  This person was educated at the best US schools and had worked for a top-tier strategy consulting firm – one of the big 3.  The CEO led every board meeting with vigor and the board members (sans me) were always wowed.  The CEO had 60-page Powerpoint presentations analyzing every micro detail of the business.  The company had less than $5 million in revenue yet we had a multi-tab spreadsheet doing activity-based costing on our customer service staff, operations and technology.

We had every chart every invented by man (or McKinsey) showing failure rates of our product, mean-times-to-repair, detailed sales forecast charts, etc.  Charts.  What lovely charts!  I know they would have been very useful in dissected the woes of General Motors.  I was the only unimpressed board member.  I was the one pointing out that we were behind on our sales targets and our “Elephant Deal” that had been promised was 6 months late.

After a few board meetings I finally spoke up.  I was a bull in a china shop.  I said (out loud), “I sure wish that some of the time that went into these PowerPoint slides would have gone into meetings with the COO, CFO or CMO of [Elephant Customer].” The CEO had never met with any of them.

With a CEO that likable, smart, educated and accomplished it made board members squirm that I was willing to call bullshit.

I’m sure you know what happens next.  We missed our sales target by more than 66% for the year but we had great slides explaining why.  The next year we set the sales budget equal to the previous year’s sales budget that we had missed.  We missed the next year by more than 33%.  Nobody seemed shocked.  The company has burned through serious cash.  I complained the whole way.  It was not fun.  No “independent” board members seemed to care (or even comprehend the lunacy of the whole situation).

To this day I’m sure they see the situation differently.  Beautiful slides by top-tier consultants have hoodwinked large companies for years and I can see why.  They are intoxicating, complex, insightful and tell a great story.  But in the end they’re usually just that – a story.  Sometimes a fantasy.

I still really like this CEO and have deep respect for this person outside of the role of being a CEO.  The “Peter Principle” says that “everybody rises to their level of incompetency.”  Read this as some people who are great at analyzing to not make great doers and therefore do not make great entrepreneurs.  I think many VCs have learned this the hard way when they step in to temporarily run companies as I have seen happen.

The problem with the company that I described above was that there was somebody willing to fund ongoing losses and the board continued to believe that good times were just around the corner.  Maybe they’ll be proved right some day.  I certainly hope so.  But in the UK we used to call this “promising jam tomorrow.”  I was tired of jam tomorrow.  I left the board.  The company never JFDI.

Image courtesy of Nike
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  • Great post!. It is a must read for everyone who aspires to be an entrepreneur and is an entrepreneur. Everyday in the life of a startup, Just Doing Things, even if they are small, is a progress in the right direction. Also, if the entrepreneur can think and act like an investor, which he/she is, it will automatically push them to do things.
  • Ummmmm - I'm not sure thinking like an investor will inspire daily action. I'd think like a scrappy entrepreneur. Investors tend to over think things. But directionally I agree with you. Thanks for the comments.
  • By "Investor" i mean someone who is investing all his time, mind, ignoring the opportunity cost (till the startup does not take off), trying to balance between work-family, and finally money for the startup.
  • mingchang
    Please put quotation marks when you use "investor" next time.
  • RyanHaugarth
    Couldn't agree more... after working as a consultant and then doing an MBA... I was so desperate to feel what it was like to actually do something!
    This is the best part of being an entrepreneur, actually making decisions and having the flexibility to simply adjust course based on the results. Moving forward and creating something of real value rather than endlessly debating the possibilities. Nice post!
  • And there is something nice about owning your actions - whether they turn out to be right or wrong. The old consulting adage was ... if the project was successful it was my great ideas and if it went poorly it was the clients fault. When you're the CEO of a startup - there's no hiding!
  • Ryan, great to see your comment here! Another recent MBA grad entrepreneur. If you're in SF, stop by and say hi. We'll share war stories.
  • You hit the nail right on the head! An entrepreneur makes things happen, period. They will find people to work with them because of their passion and will scour the entire globe if need be to find their customers.
  • For sure. Thanks.
  • Doug Perlson
    Nice post. I live by a similar motto - anything worth doing is worth doing sh*tty. Not that we want to have a crappy business or product - but as a startup entrepreneur, it's often more important to get things done than get things done perfectly. At least that is how I see it...
  • I accept the sentiment. Often people from consulting or ibanking overdue things because we were used to producing things that were too detailed. But I prefer pretty good rather than sh*tty!
  • Mark -
    1. JFDI is great. Almost our exact subconscious mantra. We operate by "ask for forgiveness, rather than permission" which means "Do" first. If a team member wants to make something happen, they do it.

    2. JFDI looks an awful lot like JEDI (and I'm not even a Star Wars geek).

    3. I got a great compliment about this exact topic today: http://reecepacheco.com/post/249602925/brown-la...

    4. I love your posts, but they're so long sometimes! Luckily your West Coast schedule means I can read them over lunch.

    Enough reading, time to JFDI.
  • Rokhayakebe
    "A real entrepreneur.....But they GET THINGS DONE. "

    Beautiful.
  • telanon
    Outstanding post. I also love the fact that your (admittedly borrowed from Nike) logo resembles a hockeystick. Maybe that was intentional, at least on your part. After all, isn't that how the key metrics for successful high-growth companies look?
  • up and to the right ... just dumb luck! didn't even realize - thanks for pointing out!
  • Thanks for this story. I am creating my first iPhone app and the JFDI principle came at a good time.
  • well good luck
  • This is awesome. I tell our staff there are only two things that are important. Getting new customers and making sure we keep them. We can worry about everything else when we are profitable. Selling is our business plan. Great post.
  • so good!
  • marklanday
    Mark,
    Nice post. I like JFDI! though results is what counts and that is "Scoreboard!"
  • you're right - the scoreboard matters. just that when you don't JFDI I can already predict the final score!
  • Rob K
    Exactly. "You miss 100% of the shots you don't take."
  • Mark - absolutely bloody brilliant post. Am Twittering, FB-ing and emailing to all and sundry. Could not agree more. Which is why, by the way, my own start-up venture is all about turning good intentions into action: http://ifwerantheworld.com
  • Mark, another great article, truly enjoy it.

    In my own experience, I have learned that there are two kinds of decisions in startups. Any CEO who is capable of trusting his/her own instinct tends to make the right life-and-death decision, which is like avoiding a car accident that never happens.

    Decisions that are not life-and-death are much more difficult to make and are in fact more important to the success of startups. What I have learned is that the key is not to make the “right” decision but to make any decision right.

    As technologists, we prefer to make the “perfect” decision, which means that we would have to have “perfect” data. Typically, in a startup, there are two ways to compensate for the lack of perfect data. One is to wait for more data and one is to seek consensus.

    CEO who procrastinates hoping to get incremental data is as deadly as a CEO who jumps to the wrong conclusion before enough data is in. Similarly, a CEO who is afraid to make tough and unpopular decision and hides behind the shield of consensus will almost always lead a startup to the proverbial cliff.

    Thanks again.

    http://www.startupforless.org
  • Enjoyed reading this. Thanks!

    After an unexpected layoff, I have found myself attempting to "realize the dream" of starting my own business as well. It's something I've had in my head for about 5 years now, but it took something drastic to force action. Prior to this I could have been categorized as an over-analyzer (I'm an analyst by profession). Now I JFDI to things off the ground. There's no time for "deep" analysis.

    To learn to fly, some people jump. And some people are pushed. Either way, you'll have no choice but to spread your wings and JFDI when that happens. If your life suddenly depends on your startup, you will JFDI. Trust me.
  • Ha. Great story. Thank you.
  • Great post and one of those posts where everywhere you read you either "know someone like that" or "I used to do that". Glad to say I have now taken the leap into running my own businesses and I'm already revelling in the need to JFDI. I didn't realise just how fed up I was of (not at my choice) waiting for those above me to make decisions as they failed to empower those below to. Thanks for the great reflections and forward thinking attitude straightener.
  • Love the bluntness!

    Here's a question for you though, and it's something I struggle with. I've always been very impatient...and while that's a good trait for an entrepreneur, I find it gets me in trouble in many other areas of my life! Isn't patience a virtue sometimes?
  • don't know. I get in trouble in my personal life for it all the time, too, as my wife will attest if she reads this. I guess you have to optimize for something ;-)
  • kurtdaradics
  • kurtdaradics
    Great post Mark! We're doing our best to live up to the hype.

    We're committed to making you a believer. In fact you're kind of our litmus test (WWMD? --> What Would Mark Do?)

    Cheers~

    kurt daradics
  • Thanks, Kurt. I'm looking out for great things from you guys.
  • x l int
  • Great post! You've been a source of great insights--learn or earn, mixergy interview, VC articles and now this!
  • The newest member of the leadership team at my startup likes to jokingly remind us of the first time she sat the other three of us down to analyze a detailed set of product road map options. It was a two hour meeting. We'd never had a two hour meeting. At the end we said to her, "Look we don't have either the cash or time to do all this. Even more important, we all look after our own areas. We trust you to handle yours. Just tell us what you want to do and if you need our help. Otherwise, just go do it." And she did. And it was good.
  • awesome. one comment: when you empower others you also need to 1) set expectations, 2) measure performance and 3) give feedback (not that you were implying that you didn't. my point for anyone reading comments is that it isn't sufficient to tell your staff to just do things)
  • Way back when, the first developer I hired insisted certain features I wanted for our search engine (bevyfind.com) couldn't be done. So I taught myself programming and showed him it could :-)
  • JFDI. Love it. It's something simple and clear for me to keep in mind as I start my venture. Another thought: I think JFDI applies not just to business, but to life in general.

    Do you think it's possible to cultivate and learn the ability to get things done?
  • Some people are more natural doers and some are more natural reflectors. But in either case I think if you make a conscious effort you can improve.
  • I am currently developing an app store for mobile devices that I hope in the not too far future will far exceed what is currently being provided by Apple, Google, Microsoft and the rest of the giants. I feel like David going against Goliath but I had to set the bar at some level and simply "Do it" with all my passion. For me though, the team is key to success and not so much the product. You mentioned that although you had to wear all the hats and simply make decisions on the fly, you still needed to allow your employees to also make critical decisions. Perhaps you could devote a blog on this subject alone. Being the entrepreneur and architect of my product, I believe that it is vital that I still control the overall vision of the product, at least during the initial startup stage. But it would still interest me to what degree successful entrepreneurs allow their employees to make critical decisions on their own and what, if any, criteria CEOs use in determing where they need to simply trust their employees with such decision making.
  • sounds like an ambitious goal. Good luck.
  • Sensational post, as I come from a construction background JFDI really resonates with me.
    I always got supervision jobs on big projects because I had a reputation for getting things happening
    Get beanie in he will get S%#@ happening is what they would say.
    This post was a timely reminder that I need to transfer that mindset (JFDI) across to my own business
    Action will always beat inaction, there is no such thing as standing still.
    You are either moving forward or you are going backwards.
    Cheers Adam Bean
  • thanks, Adam. From construction I learned an adage, which is "measure twice, cut once." Can be a tiny bit contradictory, but I think the statements can coexist.
  • They can defiantly co exist, measure twice cut once is applicable with the run of the mill things you do.
    But when you come to a situation where you aren't sure of the way forward, I find the best approach is JFDI and work out how to fix it if it doesn't quite come off as planned.
    You may have guessed I have never been one to suffer from analysis parylsis ROFL
  • ToddJemar
    Thank you! This one really struck some nerves mark. At 17 I believed this wholeheartedly. I am 23 now and for the last 5 years, I have created and started about 3 companies. One being an IT Consulting company. At 19, within 3 months of the creation of the name and idea, I garnered a $100,000+ service contract with a corporate real estate firm with 18 locations.

    I had no degrees and only about 2-3 years experience. But I did not sit and wait until my company resume was built up and I was "old enough" to go after the big contracts. My company website was simply my resume. ;-) I changed my name to my companies name. That was no lie. The company was only me at the time. Responded to craigslist posts and struck gold. Did my research for the first consultation and remembered one thing, "cut their infrastructure development and operation costs in half, be scrappy and innovative."...... Knowing "speed of implementation" and how to create reality from vision and limited to no resources has set me a part from many "entrepreneurs" I know.

    I was feeling a little down today, sometimes us entrepreneurs just need a little reminder about JFDI!!!

    Thanks Mark! :-)
  • what a great story. thank you and continue great things.
  • pk
    Great post. I like people who put efforts in getting real things done than wasting time in unnecessary things. You just need to believe your gut and give it a shot. Be prepared to adapt the original idea as things evolve. This the best way to success.
  • I now have a post-it on my screen - it stands alone, a yellow sun shining with 4 red letters:

    J
    F
    D
    I

    Thanks for reminding me to get on with it.

    Sundeep.//
  • awesome. mine was on a print with a picture of me smoking a cigar. my team made it for me. always a reminder.
  • mikeatyahoo
    Why are people afraid to type shitty? Or shit? I think that's fucking stupid.
  • Either way doesn't much bother me. I sometimes write it but I wanted to be careful not to get my post caught in people's email spam filter. But by the time of the comments I guess it doesn't fucking matter anymore.
  • Great Post.

    Action always trumps analysis. Decisions made quickly based on data, even if only 70% - 80% of the needed info is knowable or available, will always have a higher NPV than waiting around until all the data and analysis is ready.

    Fail Fast Forward.

    Confidence and a bias for action are also very contagious to your teams, which can be highly beneficial.
  • Agreed.
  • I am an entrepreneur dealing with the organizational challenge of JFDI right now. As a smaller company (from a couple of guys around a table until product launch) JFDI was possible. Now that we are generating revenues and more activities are conducted in silos it's getting very tough to JFDI. There are often many gates, many people that need to be convinced, many plans that need to be written before we move forward on initiatives. I would love some advice on how to keep the JFDI spirit intact in a growing company.
  • I struggled with that, too, as we got bigger. I think the best big company managers know that you need to keep team sizes small and accountability at the smallest atomic level possible. I struggled with this.
  • LikeSoup
    Successful entrepreneurs make decisions quickly and are reluctant to stray from them. Others make decisions slowly and are too quick to change. Successful entrepreneurs just do things that other people don't like to do.
    http://www.LikeSoup.com
  • Mark,

    Dead Solid Perfect..... I don't remember a blog post any better... Agree completely.
  • Thank you, Mike. I appreciate the feedback.
  • Mark, good post.

    I think "Analysis Paralysis" is the tip to failure for many. Data to justify directions can become stiffling and the key to inactivity. Get your top folks in a room, close the door, gather what you have and move forward. If you are inventing something new, there are never complete analogs to guide your actions.

    This leads to the reason why startups within corporations often fail. Decision making processes are just completely different. You simply can't build something new by inforcing the rigors and methodologies of a larger, older, public regime on them. I speak from experience here.

    Thanks.
  • re: corporate innovation - totally agree. and you end up with the phenomenon from one of my favorite books - "the Innovators Dilemma"
  • I'll put the book on my list, thanks Mark.
  • Chaat
    Agree 100%. I am on my third startup, and like making coffee, you realize what's essential the more you do it. When I show my beta, I look beyond the "looks shitty" comments to "here's how I'd use it" perspectives. I judge investors & partners based on their ability to see beyond the crud and understand the potential without me having to make it shiny. I know I could spend time/$$ making mockups, prototypes or investor snazzy and so should they. That doesn't take guts - that takes a craigslist posting, and $200. Going outside, on the street with paper prototypes, testing with customers who owe you nothing, refusing to stop even when your competitors do what your investors want but you have customer data that shows they are wrong and you are right... that takes guts.
  • Brandon
    Hey Mark, why are you so massively awesome?
  • Be careful or I'll have to write a blog post on what happens when one's head gets too big ;-)
  • What a fantastic post! Invigorating and most definitely refreshing. Your candor is a breath of fresh air.
  • Cool stuff! Really helpful for people like me who wants to start his own company.
  • Spot on - entrepreneurship in four letters

    Jim

    CEO
    tutor2u
  • I have always said. I am not that talented, I just go do things when most people talk about them. Good or bad. It is my nature. I am not happy any other way.

    Love the tagline JFDI. Will definitely be stealing that one. Thanks for the reminder to keep getting shit done. Great post.
  • Thanks. People often confuse book smart with good leadership. Leaders are often neither the smartest nor the most talented at individual tasks. But they are the best at motivating, setting direction and ensuring that things get done. People often attribute success to luck. I always loved the saying, "the harder I work, the luckier I get!" ;-)
  • If luck was a train, you should be living and working on the tracks, not just driving by them everyday.

    Of course it also takes a lot more build up than most people have the patience for. Takes a lot of work to get rolling, build momentum, meet enough of the right people to meet one that get's you to the right crossroads. Gary Vee's new book touches on it when he hears people talk about the fact that he got on Conan 18 months after launching WineLibrary.tv. But, as he points out, it took years of throwing himself out there, testing the web, testing video, learning by doing.
  • This post is insightful. It's also very true. I also like the concept of the bootstrapper, who JFDI against all odds, which is what I'm doing currently (The bootstrappers' bible by SethGodin is a great resource).
    And there's something psychological and spiritual about the JFDI words, it sort of injects energy into you and makes you feel like you can achieve anything and face anyone.
    Thanks again..
  • Success consists of going from failure to failure without loss of enthusiasm. -- Sir Winston Churchill
  • GREAT quote. Thanks. I think I'll use it.
  • good post. it's funny how utterly incomprehensible the concept of JFDI is to middle management in big bureaucratic companies.

    BTW in our startup JFDI + Chicken & Egg problems = Bend one the flaps -> http://www.scrollinondubs.com/2007/08/31/bend-o...

    sean
  • Thank you for the post, it's a wonderful read.

    And it doesn't just apply to entrepreneurs; people in corporations should also JFDI!
  • Agreed!
  • jsperli
    Great post. I have been reading your blog now for the last six months, and I am continually inspired and motivated by your entries. Do you think that entrepreneurs with military backgrounds seem to understand the concept of JFDI a bit more than the average start-up CEO?
  • Yes, I think people with military backgrounds are more prone to JFDI and often have far better leadership skills.
  • Just gave me some inspiration..otherwise i'm thinking like every person who is aiming to become an entreprenaur but had not taken steps to take your idea to the next stage!!

    Thank you very much,i will take my ideas to the next level definitely!!

    Thanks
  • Awesome! Good luck.
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