Should You Really be a Startup Entrepreneur?

by Mark Suster on January 31, 2011

This post originally appeared on TechCrunch.

One of the most common questions that entrepreneurs who meet me for the first time like to ask is, “Do you miss being an entrepreneur?  Aren’t you ever tempted to go back and do it again?”

The obvious answer is yes.  When it’s in your blood, it’s in your blood.  I guess it’s kind of like crack (not that I know from experience).  It’s addicting.  I know this sounds superficial.  If you’ve taken the roller coaster ride that is a startup – you know what I’m talking about.

But I’m very happy now.  I’m enjoying being a VC.  I thought I’d talk a bit about the differences I’ve experienced between being an entrepreneur & a VC – you know, from “both sides of the table.”

On Being an Entrepreneur

I was asked by somebody recently in a private message on Quora about whether the individual should leave his comfortable job to become an entrepreneur.  You would think the obvious thing I would tell somebody is, “yes, of course it’s a great idea.”  You’d be surprised.  I often advise against it.  I really have to know somebody’s personal story and circumstances to know whether it is suitable for that person.

In this particular case I wasn’t convinced it was a good idea from the limited information I had.  The following is a short excerpt of what I said,

“… being an entrepreneur is very unsexy. Long hours. Time away from family. Low salary. High risk. High stress. It only looks sexy when you read TechCrunch. There is no shame in being an exec at a company or whatever.”

And I mean this.  I’m sure everybody has their own definition of the attributes of an entrepreneur.  Some of the ones I would identify are:

  • Not very status oriented
  • Doesn’t follow rules very well and questions authority
  • Can handle high degrees of ambiguity or uncertainty
  • Can handle rejection, being told “no” often and yet still have the confidence in your idea
  • Very decisive.  A bias toward making decisions – even when only right 70% of the time – moving forward & correcting what doesn’t work
  • A high level of confidence in your own ideas and ability to execute
  • Not highly susceptible to stress
  • Have a high risk tolerance
  • Not scared or ashamed of failure
  • Can handle long hours, travel, lack of sleep and the trade-offs of having less time for hobbies & other stuff

The truth is that in my experience very, very few people really enjoy the “pure” startup environment: months with no salary, months with no live product and lots of trial, error & rejection.  Even many successful entrepreneurs tell me that they’d prefer to do a buy-out the next time rather than go back to square one in a startup. NOT easy.

There are a larger number of people who enjoy coming on when an idea has become validated and thus “de-risked” but I still think this is a small number of people.  And also there are a large number of people who would like to do startups in theory, but have high cost bases (family, real estate, school loans, whatever) that makes it very difficult to take the kinds of risks required.

And what gets lost in reading about the glamor of Facebook, Twitter, Zynga, GroupOn and the like is that most startups fail.  And for ones that do get sold often most of the employees don’t really make huge upside gains.  You don’t read about these garden variety outcomes online – only the high profile exits or busts.  Mostly you read about fundings, product releases, big valuations, and M&A.  So readers of tech journals gain a bias of the chances of success.

I’m not trying to be negative.  But I start most conversations with “wantrepreneurs” by saying,

“make sure it’s in your personality type, make sure you have the risk appetite, make sure you can afford to take the risks given your life situations and make sure you know that there is a high possibility your startup won’t be hugely financially rewarding.  If you still want to go for it knowing all this and all that you’ll endure – awesome!  It’s the best experience I’ve had in life.  But not for the faint hearted.”

You’re in for the Ride

There’s nothing quite like shipping V1.0 of your product.  You’ve come full cycle from vision, to hiring some people, raising some cash, arguing about direction, setting a release date, missing a release date, feeling like you’ve effed everything up, regrouping, rethinking, getting back on track and then setting your baby loose into the wild.  And then.  Whew.  Sit back and watch usage.  Get your press coverage.  Either you arc up emotionally or you arc down.  There’s not a lot of flat line.

Snap.  Great story on TechCrunch!  Inbound calls from partners, people who want to join, atta boys from friends.  You knew it all along.  Your vision was right.  VCs are calling wanting meetings.  La vita e bella.  Uh, oh.  Fawk.  Facebook DID NOT just announce that!  Scoble is saying your best days are behind you?  No, I think we can still be huge.  We’re just going to have to change our focus a bit.  Weekends.  Evenings.  Regroup.  Team losing a bit of confidence in you.  VCs pushing out your meetings a few weeks.  WTF?  Just a month ago they were all email you!

Well, you still have 6 months runway.  What if we pivot slightly?  Not a total change – just a different way of making money.  What if we dropped the code that would compete with Facebook and instead go after this other area instead?  Relaunch.  Oh, man.  Our user numbers are up.  Awesome!  Loving this new direction.  It’s all good.

But … only 2 month’s cash left.  Let’s just not pay ourselves for a couple of months.  The junior devs need it.  They’re month-to-month.  I think we can be like the Maccabes and stretch this cash.  Do we tell our team? Can they handle knowing we only have 3, maybe 4 month’s cash? Or if we say that will they all be putting out the word to their friends to look for their next gig?

Great new product release. Another good article.  VC meetings going well.  Holy sh*t!!! We just landed the biz dev partner we’ve been working on for 9 months.  They love us!  Awesome!  $2 million in VC.  Life couldn’t be better.  All your buddies want to join.  No.  Google DID NOT just acquire our main biz dev partner.  What?  Google doesn’t know if they’re going to honor our contract?  We now have to re-convince everybody? But we had a term sheet !!!

You can’t believe it.  8 beers that night.  Maybe even tequila.  And the next morning – water off a duck’s back.  We’ll find a way.  Startups weren’t meant to be easy.  Back to work.

Anyone who has worked in a startup will know that this narrative is not exaggerated.  If anything it’s the tame version.  Every one of these events (with names changed) has happened to companies I’ve worked at or closely with.  Most of them in the past 12 months. I’ve personally experienced much worse. Imagine how Flurry felt when Steve Jobs called them out by name.  They seem to have bounced back nicely.

I remember being a few months before my wedding wondering whether I would walk down the aisle unemployed.  It was 2002 – the “dog days” of the Internet and we were running out of cash. I remember an employee asking me whether I’d fill out their paperwork to get a home loan when we only had 3 months of cash in the bank.  What do you tell somebody in that situation?  I remember having a merger called off at the last minute and having a planning meeting at a pub to figure out how to run a bankruptcy process (luckily, we never had to do it).

And I had all the VCs play head games with me.  One investor played chicken with me by threatening not to approve my next-round financing unless I gave him more equity.  He wasn’t willing to put in more money but he had “blocking rights.”  I had 10 days of cash.  He was going on vacation for 2 weeks and told me, “Too bad, I’ll deal with this when I get back.”  I literally told him to Fawk Off and sue me. That is a true story for which I have witnesses. I hung up.  He called back and said, “OK, do the deal.”

Really?  I had to go there? I learned this lesson long ago – many investors wait until you’re staring at a cliff before committing whether to re-invest in you. It is risk minimization + maximum leverage. I swore never to do that as a VC. Many VCs don’t realize just how destructive this is to team spirit and confidence. Penny wise, pound foolish.

But there is nothing that would ever replace the rush of being on the top of the startup emotional curve.  Winning my first million-dollar contract.  Getting on the front cover of the most prominent VC magazine in Europe (was called Tornado Insider).  Acquiring a competitor with complimentary assets whom we long wanted to beat. Walking into an office at the London Underground and seeing every workstation open and using our product.

I was watching Meet the Press this morning and they put a big screen behind the guests with TweetDeck open and showing the constant stream of information about Egypt.  That must have been a proud moment in the Betaworks offices.

And on the bottom of the emotional startup curve there is nothing crappier than having to lay off 60 employees in one day.  Been there. It tests your soul to have to ask close friends to leave the business. Losing a deal that you had worked on for months after being told you won and then have snatched away from you will ruin some nights of sleep. There are moments like being on stage when your demo crashes, reading about your competitors raising a ton of cash or having one of your top team members resign that test your will.

My SVP of Sales & Marketing quit 30 minutes before an important board meeting.  Dick.

And that’s what it’s like – all superlatives.  Your highs are super high.  Crack.  Your lows are unexplainably low and lonely.  It’s the startup roller coaster world.  And I miss it.

What do VC’s Experience?

There’s still a cynical entrepreneur in me regarding VC.  In my experience many in the industry still think about “my CEO’s” or “my companies” as though they are pawns on a chessboard. I’ve heard many a VC comment, “Yeah, I told the company to do A,B,C and they didn’t listen.  The management team wasn’t strong enough.  That’s why we didn’t succeed.”  That’s the rationalization for the failure.

And all too often I hear upon success, “Yeah, I was actively involved on that one.  Our advice is what helped them target the right market, hire the right team, build the right products.”  And there are some delusional people who really believe it.  I remember this attitude really well from working in consulting where people took too much credit for “creating new strategies” and deny any responsibilities for failed initiatives.

The reality is that the majority of successes & failures are created by & experienced by the entrepreneurs.  The VC sense of accomplishment or failure is blunted by being slightly removed and by the portfolio effect.  I think it looks something like the graph below.

But there are many great VCs also who see the entrepreneur as their customer as they should do and are realistic about how much of an impact we advisors and financiers really have.

We enjoy our jobs.  We love working with entrepreneurs.  We’d have to be big babies to complain about what we do.  We’re paid well to spend time with smart people who want to change the world.  We control our hours, our travel and our investment areas.  We get to ride your ride, too.  But as above, the highs just aren’t quite as high and we don’t have to sweat the lows as much.

Why Many VCs Secretly Envy Entrepreneurs

When I first considered leaving Salesforce.com to become a VC I obviously called all of my VC friends and asked their opinions. It’s a very tough decision to walk away from a senior role at what I consider one of the most successful tech companies of Internet era. Almost universally they said, “Are you crazy? If you’re going to leave, go do another startup? Don’t go into VC.”

Huh? Here they were in what I thought was one of the most sought after jobs and they almost all told me not to do it.  I was baffled.  It was 2007.  It was well past the Internet boom, well into Web 2.0, before the really profitable years of social networking and when many in the industry were despondent.  Really.

What I garnered was that many VCs secretly wanted to be entrepreneurs.  They were envious.  Let me explain.  Let’s say you became a partner in a VC fund in 1995 and started investing heavily in 1997-99.  You felt invincible.  As John Doerr, the revered partner at Kleiner Perkins said it was, “The largest legal creation of wealth in history.”

You were minted.  Golden.  Making bank.  King makers.  Internet pioneers.  I remember the New York Times wrote an interesting article about it.  They talked about how the dream job for Harvard MBAs used to be investment banking where you wore your Rolex watch, drank $200 bottles of wine at fancy New York restaurants and vacationed in the Hamptons.

Suddenly the VCs & Internet pioneers were buying Patek Phillipe watches, ordering $1,000 bottles of wine, getting all of the best restaurant reservations and flying private jets.  At the time all investment bankers secretly wanted to be VCs and many did just that.

But the “gilded age” ended quickly.  The days of quick flips, quick IPOs and astronomic returns had come to a close.  If you became a principal or a new partner in 2000/01 you had a good salary but as it turns out you were very unlikely to see a large upside “carry” return for quite some time. Nobody really talks about this.

So here’s the deal.  There are many VCs who have been made partner since 2000 and haven’t previously had an exit of their own.  They’ve probably watched smart teams, younger than them, walk in with a paper napkin, get funding, build a modest company and sell it for $20-30 million in 3-4 years pocketing $8 million for each founder.  It looks so easy.  It looks so alluring.  That’s where the envy comes from.

But they don’t have a great idea. And they have the status of being a VC. And a comfortable salary. And the chance at diversified returns. So it’s hard to put your neck on the line and try. But those returns won’t come for 7-10 years for many of them.  Some, not ever.

That’s why when I met Mark Peter Davis and heard he was giving up his VC career to run a startup I was seriously impressed. It takes cojones – hats off to him.

So while you’re struggling to get access to VCs and those that meet you seem unwilling to commit – at least take comfort in knowing that many of them secretly long to sit in your chair, as much as you might find that hard to believe.  I promise you.  They envy your courage, freedom and upside possibilities.  Not all VCs want to be entrepreneurs, of course.  But I’ve heard it from many, many a VC that they feel the calling to try.  Most won’t.

Me?  I’m committed to where I am.  I have 3 partners with whom I work really well and whom I respect.  We have a broader team that have become our close colleagues & friends.  I’m enjoying the diversity of working with 6-7 portfolio teams on a regular basis on strategic issues.  I’m enjoying watching them grow from nothing to meaningful businesses.  Would I take another hit off the pipe? No time soon. But I’d never say “never.”  It’s such a rush.

Just please make sure to enjoy the ride (up and down) while you’re there.  When you finally get off it’s a long line and you have to be really committed to want to get back on.

Roller Coaster image via Rich Evenhouse on Flickr

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  • http://www.victorywebs.org/entrepreneur-blog.html Entrepreneur Blog

    Interesting post. I think that as long as you have the guts, you should try to be an entrepreneur.

  • philsugar

    Damn great post. I think the emotion scale must be logarithmic because I think the highs and lows are infinitely higher and lower when I worked for BigCo.

    I also think you only need to be right 30% of the time especially when you are making “holes above the waterline”. Holes below the waterline you damn well better be right.

    I have always said the biggest strength of small companies over big is that we can make the wrong decision three times and learn before the big company guys can even make a decision once. So we get it right before the BigCo even makes the decision and at that point the question has changed.

  • http://www.lexim.com.au Michael Shimmins

    Reminds me of Paul Graham talking about running upstairs:

    “At Viaweb one of our rules of thumb was run upstairs. Suppose you are a little, nimble guy being chased by a big, fat, bully. You open a door and find yourself in a staircase. Do you go up or down? I say up. The bully can probably run downstairs as fast as you can. Going upstairs his bulk will be more of a disadvantage. Running upstairs is hard for you but even harder for him.”

    http://www.paulgraham.com/weal

  • http://www.kyjen.com Kyle Hansen

    Your content and blog posts are excellent, I'm a 2x entrepreneur and not even in the tech biz and I love reading your posts, applicable to more than just the tech biz! Great inspiration and education for both new, wannabe and seasoned entrepreneurs! Keep em' coming!

  • http://twitter.com/drewfromgrewple Drew

    Mark,
    I'm curious of what percentage (relatively speaking) of the VC's that you know were originally from startups, and what percentage were execs from established corporations.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Matthew-R-Coffin/743672827 Matthew R Coffin

    go marc. i like it. generally right on. its a tough world out here. your right, it is like a drug. highs are huge, lot of lows, but highs are remembered. techcrunch does make it all feel like a fun game, buts thats also part of it. ultimately i think it comes down to do u enjoy the process and can handle the ups and downs, and just like doing shit while being the guy or girl who makes decisions and can live with the outcomes, although the best is absolutely fearing failure and so u work insanely in the face of reality and hopefully prevail, inspite of 5 companies having raised more money and numerous people with capital; wondering if u have lost your mind

  • http://bothsidesofthetable.com msuster

    Thanks, Kyle. Appreciate it.

  • http://bothsidesofthetable.com msuster

    Originally from startups? Probably 15%
    From established corporation? Probably 10%
    From tech companies – non startup? Probably 25%
    From financial services? Probably 50%

    Just a guess.

  • http://bothsidesofthetable.com msuster

    For sure. And I know your stories from the early days so I'm sure that resonates. In fact, I think I still have some of them on video ;-) I'll have to break out the archives. We're thinking of doing a “best of” video series from Launchpad. LMK when you're next in LA. Been a while since we've caught up.

  • http://www.prudentcloud.com Subraya Mallya

    Hi Mark
    Yet again you seem to keep finding the right topics that somehow have a perfect timing as it relates to my journey. Thanks for the insights. This and another video I saw today has done an amazing pick-me-up for me. THANKS!

  • petegrif

    “Not very status oriented
    Doesn’t follow rules very well and questions authority
    Can handle high degrees of ambiguity or uncertainty
    Can handle rejection, being told “no” often and yet still have the confidence in your idea
    Very decisive. A bias toward making decisions – even when only right 70% of the time – moving forward & correcting what doesn’t work
    A high level of confidence in your own ideas and ability to execute
    Not highly susceptible to stress
    Have a high risk tolerance
    Not scared or ashamed of failure
    Can handle long hours, travel, lack of sleep and the trade-offs of having less time for hobbies & other stuff”

    This is a really incisive piece of psychographic profiling. :)

  • http://www.digitaltrends.com Ian Bell

    “You’re in for the Ride” My favorite part. Almost fell out of my chair laughing, it's so true. I remember in the beginning buying a high-end laptop on our first big sale, and then selling it two months later when the advertiser didn't renew. Sitting on lawn chairs in the living room because we couldn't afford real furniture, putting every dime into the business and hitting the road for weeks drumming up customers. Keeping your paycheck in a drawer to make sure your employees got paid first and taking whatever was leftover.

    Then we had the highs: Signing a deal to syndicate news to Yahoo News, Sam's Club and others, having the CEO of a major CE company show off our Editor's Choice Logo at CES in a major press conference, and getting our first upfront RFP's from 4 major brands all at once.

    What a crazy journey. Entrepreneurs are like modern day gladiators, fighting to stay alive and earn that coveted trophy. Love it!

  • Blake Southwood

    What it's like being an entrepreneur.

    This is the reality: http://startupessays.blogspot…./

    Blake Southwood
    Lightning Storm Software

  • http://tonepedia.com/blog Danny Strelitz

    Loved it. Ian bit me to the “You're in for the ride”…
    In my eyes another very important attribute of an entrepreneur is
    “The ability and the wish to learn on the fly.”
    As a startup founder, I found my self learning new technologies, new methods, learning about the market and how to reach that market all the time, learn and relearn, change focus, learn the new directions. Its a process where you enrich your soul every day.
    In addition, just learning the startup ecosystem, and how to swim in it is another process of its own.

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    Mark, you're spot-on. It has to be in your blood. I have worked for 5 start-ups in 11 years, and finally launched my “own” company and became a newbie entrepreneur. It's hell. I like hot places – so good fit.

    It takes more than guts.

    * Not very status oriented > bingo, can;t be “title needy” or “F500 needy”
    * Doesn’t follow rules very well and questions authority – absolutely….
    * Can handle high degrees of ambiguity or uncertainty – yup
    * Can handle rejection, being told “no” often and yet still have the confidence in your idea – a no is never a dead end. And if you don't have confidence in your idea – go back to Google, or wherever…
    * Very decisive. A bias toward making decisions – even when only right 70% of the time – moving forward & correcting what doesn’t work – when you are faced with a decision, the worst thing you can do is engage in inaction. Pull the trigger –
    * A high level of confidence in your own ideas and ability to execute
    * Not highly susceptible to stress – I disagree. Stress in inherent in launching a start-up. You have to channel that stress into motivation – not a heart attack.
    * Have a high risk tolerance of course
    * Not scared or ashamed of failure – failure must be an anticipated outcome.
    * Can handle long hours, travel, lack of sleep and the trade-offs of having less time for hobbies & other stuff – hobbies? no. Running your own fledgling company is 24/7….and you should love every minute of it.

    I'd add –
    - motivated by high-risk/high-reward

    This is what I send out to potential start-up employers:

    Start-ups have been my specialty – I love the high risk-high reward option, and am quite comfortable with ambiguity and the dynamic nature of our space. My involvement in early-stage start-ups and my own has allowed me to engage in a number of facets of a growing company's organization: significant, top-notch sales strategy, business development, team building and management, cross-functional team bridging, public speaking and company representation at industry events, coordination of marketing efforts, PR, and marketing strategy. I've had the responsibility of recruiting, hiring, training, mentoring, and managing multiple sales, business development, and media buying teams.

    Launching your own start-up is a great learning experience – mostly about yourself.

    From experience, I'd advise having worked at early-stage and all manner of start-ups before floating your own boat. It's good practice….

  • http://twitter.com/dariusvasefi Dvasefi

    Great post Mark, and for many people it's taking their entire families on the ride that becomes a huge problem. If your significant other is not 100% with you on this add another major issue you'll have to manage regularly.

    On the VC side it is refreshing to see you remember youre times as a founder and treat people with respect and dignity. This is the biggest negative on VC's that have never started companies (initial founding team) because this is not a ride you can read about and think you understand it.

  • http://bothsidesofthetable.com msuster

    LOL. I just thought about my personal idiosyncrasies and neuroses and wrote them ;-)

  • http://bothsidesofthetable.com msuster

    Awesome to hear the similarities in experience.

  • http://bothsidesofthetable.com msuster

    Ah, you're stealing a future metaphor of mine! Entrepreneurs love take-off, most people love cruising altitude. That's a future post in my queue!

  • http://bothsidesofthetable.com msuster

    re: working at early-stage before floating your own boat – tend to agree. As long as you don't leave it too late in life.

  • http://bothsidesofthetable.com msuster

    Yes, it's hard with partners & families. I was dating a woman when I started my first company. Then she became my wife. Luckily she was on the ride from the beginning so she didn't feel there was a bait-and-switch! ;-)

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    Hah! Totally. I married someone I met at my first start-up, it was in his blood, so he knew exactly what he was getting into….

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    As 9 our of 10 start-ups don't “make it”, and if you're truly an entrepreneur-type, you won't stay at a company that you joined early-stage when it becomes full of corporate bloat and bureaucracy….if you do, you're not a born entrepreneur.

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    Take-offs and landings – the most perilous part of any flight…high-risk high-reward…bingo.

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    Your reality, nicely documented! But I must say, there is no “one” reality for a start-up…

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    I suppose then we are peas in a pod. Those are my attributes as well, can rattle them off backwards in Swahili…

  • Dvasefi

    I bet it was really helpful to actually be able to share some of the pressures of work with someone that was supportive. The next level is actually having your wife/partner as co-founder which can make things “a lot” more intersting :-) [good Quora question]

  • http://tonepedia.com/blog Danny Strelitz

    hard enough to fire a friend…

  • http://analytikainc.com/blog/ John R. Sedivy

    You seem to really hit the important subjects that are not discussed elsewhere. Emotions are a huge part of starting a business, for better or worse. All the more reason for the entrepreneur to build a team to help progress through the lower parts of the cycle.

  • Faruq Ahmad

    Excellent!! A genuinely enjoyable and authentic voice. Having been an entrepreneur (VC backed after considerable sweat, decent exit), a VC, and an LP in VC funds (institutional and personal), I agree with almost all his observations.

    One thing I would add is this: stage of life matters. Starting early is important. The chronological passage of time matters, and the best VCs have been there personally.

  • http://www.KevinKruse.com Kevin Kruse

    When in doubt, go for it! Everyone should try to be an entrepreneur at least once. If it works out, great. I f it doesn't you will have gained MASSIVE knowledge, experience and contacts. Failing as an entrepreneur actually doesn't look bad on a resume…people will respect the attempt. And most importantly, you'll never go to your crave wondering, “What if…”

    Cheers, Kevin

  • http://twitter.com/andyhunn Andy Hunn

    It's an interesting irony that you both realize what you're physically and mentally putting yourself through in startupland, yet when you get to the closing of that m&a exit, and they ask if you want to stay, the answer is always and immediate – hell no.

  • Madagainmedia

    I wish I would have known earlier that my lack of subordination would make me an ideal entrepreneur. I'd add “desire to prove others wrong” as a motivator too. And noticeably and accurately absent from the list: 'money motivated.' Money really never plays into it.

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    Insubordination is a must! Lack of respect for authority too! I don't know about a desire to prove others wrong; for me, it is more about desire to prove that I am RIGHT!! defacto others are wrong…and if you go in with money in mind, you'll be sorely disappointed. I liken entrepreneurship to discovery and exploration….

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    oh totally..at that point the thrill is gone, and you'll be giving up equity to VC, meaning an introduction of “authority” and a diminished amount of control….hells no.

  • BHT

    No doubt. I'm sitting here in Louisville, KY at a start-up firm (non-tech) and it's the same exact thing. My wife thinks I becoming bipolar…seriously. I just tell her 1/10th of my day and try to shelter her and the kids from the ups and downs that wear on you. You meet with friends you used to work with and they are buying nice stuff while you try to figure out how much money you have left before you have to pack it in. Still, it's the greatest thing in the world and I can now feel even better knowing the VCs are secretly jealous.

  • Harry van der Veen

    Great how you describe the roller-coaster Mark. As always, thanks for sharing.

  • Carlos

    As with Ben Horowitz, Mark's empathy for and realism about both VCs and entrepreneurs is remarkable! This will serve him well as a VC serving his customers, entrepreneurs … in many cases, side-by-side with other VCs who do not have his understanding (and who he will have to educate/handle on behalf of entrepreneurs). Great hire, GRP!

  • http://www.twitter.com/stevenkane Steven Kane

    Wow, thank you. Maybe the best piece I've ever read on entrepreneurship and VC.

  • http://twitter.com/michaelyap Michael Yap

    Damn Mark have I ever told you that your stuff makes me feel better about myself ? Some days the graph curves so quickly I feel like I should start scouting for bipolar medication….

  • http://twitter.com/rkillgo Russell Killgo

    Mark, I was meeting with my co-founder for my new startup this morning and showed her this blog post. We were discussing the attributes of an entrepreneur that you listed above. I was actually surprised when she said how many of them she is not. I, on the other hand, hit most of them on the nail. She and I work very well together and I think we have sort of a yin-yang affect. You have posted before that it's smart to hire people that are good in the areas you are lacking. I think we compliment each other very well. Do you think it's better to have the yin-yang type co-founders or co-founders that are very much the same in nature and skills?

    While reading the post, I couldn't help but think of how my experience as a world-class professional pool player was very similar to that of an entrepreneur. I worked tirelessly to hone my skills to the point that I knew I was better than 99.9% of all pool players in the world. This culminated with me being ranked at one time 43rd in the world. I always said I was the world's best “racker.” I had to rack the balls for my opponents when I lost the previous game many many times before I got good. I hate losing and when someone tells me I can't, I push back harder and say I can. The desire deep inside me to be the best is what kept me practicing all those hours on end. And I believe it's this desire and drive that will ultimately make me a successful entrepreneur and CEO. As always, I welcome your thoughts. — Russell

  • Vidhubhushanp

    Great observation. I personally think only a few have the vision while starting a business. Others who seem excited are only after easy money. This post should be an eye-opener to them. However, one thing is missing. The most important thing for a start-up to overcome all the unsexiness is passion. And passion comes with having a clear goal that is beyond money and fame.

  • http://www.thecynicalinvestor.net The Cynical Investor

    Very good post Mark. You should write a book and put some comments from the post as well, as some of there were very high quality.

  • http://tonepedia.com/blog Danny Strelitz

    thank you.
    #vanityMoment

  • http://launchgrowipo.com/ Trevor Owens

    I heard this blog post was good, but didn't bother to read it because I could never imagine in a million years answering no.

  • http://www.thecynicalinvestor.net Cynical Investor

    According to these, not really and as I a matter of fact I am not (if I do not count the sites that I did more as a hobby)

    * Not very status-oriented
    If it means what I think it does I am not, but you know what they say ‘one swallow doesn't make a summer’
    * Doesn’t follow rules very well and questions authority
    I try to follow rules and not to question authority, after all they are smarter than me otherwise I will be part of authority
    * Can handle high degrees of ambiguity or uncertainty
    Not at all, these 2 factors bring me into a state of paralysis
    * Can handle rejection, being told “no” often and yet still have the confidence in your idea
    If it is ‘no’ from too many people it means the idea is not good, simple as that, not that you can see something that they don’t
    * Very decisive. A bias toward making decisions – even when only right 70% of the time – moving forward & correcting what doesn’t work
    I prefer others taking decisions
    * A high level of confidence in your own ideas and ability to execute
    See above and very low ability to execute
    * Not highly susceptible to stress
    Not me
    * Have a high risk tolerance
    Not me again
    * Not scared or ashamed of failure
    I am indeed
    * Can handle long hours, travel, lack of sleep and the trade-offs of having less time for hobbies & other stuff
    Cannot handle at all this cocktail ‘long hours, travel, lack of sleep’ and even only one of the elements is too much for me, and about trade-offs they do not apply as usually I have no time for hobbies & other stuff (forget about less)

  • http://collaborable.com Eric Ingram

    I appreciate your insight Mark, and thanks for being a good sport :)

  • http://www.snoopf.com Snoopf

    Asking the question,”should I be an entrepreneur?”, seems silly to me. If you have to ask, I don't know if you are cut out for it. I guess I'm trying to point out thats it's either a part of your being or not and most entrepreneurs I know (including myself) are just that way by nature.

    I'm not saying you couldn't become one if you want to try, but the best entrepreneurs are curious by nature and want to build and start things without ever having to analyze or ask questions like those presented in the article…which is why it seems silly to me.

  • http://bothsidesofthetable.com msuster

    Hey, Russell. Quick thoughts:

    1. you're 100% right on finding the yin / yang relationships. I tried to plug my weaknesses by people who complemented me. my closest associates – the COO and the CFO (Stuart Lander & David Lapter) were exactly that. and to this day we're still close personal friends.

    2. re: becoming great at pool -it's something we look at. people who excel at whatever they choose to do show a capacity for competition, focus & discipline that go well beyond ordinary people. congratulations on your achievements.

    and good luck with your startup.

  • http://www.goby.com Mark W (ceo at goby.com)

    Thanks for writing this. You nailed it.

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