Apr 26

Jeff Williams, a Serial Entrepreneur in Michigan

Jeff Williams

Jeff Williams

Our final class for ES569 at the Ross School of Business invited entrepreneurial rockstar Jeff Williams to talk to the class about his story.  Jeff has built several life sciences companies & led 1 company through an IPO & sold 2 for hundreds of millions of dollars.  Some of the advice he gave to the students:

  • Stick to your mission statement.  Keep it broad enough so you can tweak things if need be (e.g. product may look different than initially thought)
  • Pick a large & rapidly growing market.  This means there is opportunity for new entrants & VCs invest in companies with multi billion dollar opportunities.  Plus, in growing markets you can capture growth instead of relying on solely stealing share.
  • Identify a significant opportunity in that market.  Have a deep understanding of the market so you know how you’re going to enter.  Form a plan describing how you’re profitably going to exploit the opportunity.  Strategically think about how the product will get you to revenue.
  • Basis for a strong business model = low cost product/service & high margins!
  • Know what the technology is good at & not good at, but don’t become enamored by it.
  • Strategic partnerships are grey area.  Pursue them so you can see if they will meet the needs of the company.  Make sure to know the tradeoffs & what you want to get out of the partnerships (e.g. cash, distribution, credibility)
  • “You can’t have too much money” especially if you’re a first time CEO.  You’re always going to need more money than you think you need.
  • Investors won’t squeeze you to very little ownership because they want you to be motivated by the potential to make a lot of money.
  • “Build best team you can as soon as possible”.  Sometimes building the best team means replacing yourself.
  • Match business strategy with financial pro forma.  Really think through drivers of business. what will increase gross margin?
  • Stuff always goes wrong.  Learn from it.
  • Resource allocation becomes priority when you get to 10-15 people & you can’t do everything yourself.  Get out of the weeds & focus on the bigger picture as the company grows.
  • Implementation is more important than strategy.
  • “VCs don’t owe you anything.”  No entrepreneur pitching deserves money.  Once you raise money all that matters is results.
  • Do your homework.  When raising money, research the VCs.
  • When is the right time to sell?  When you’re a VC funded company, you’re always for sale.
  • Companies fail when you don’t think about the business model, competitive advantages for the long term, & when the technology isn’t reasonable.  Always be on the lookout for what you should be focused on because so many things can go wrong.

Since Jeff has been successful he was brought on to run companies (& make them successful).  He has a reputable track record & in the words of Tom Porter (& according to many) “The way you have the most power is to be successful”  

Venture on,

MEL aka Venture Gal

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Apr 16

You are what you measure. Lessons from Larry Freed, CEO of ForeSee Results

Image representing ForeSee Results as depicted...

Larry's company ForeSee Results (Image via CrunchBase)

“You can’t manage what you don’t measure.  You can’t improve what you don’t measure.  What you measure will determine what you do”

The words of wisdom from Larry Freed, CEO of ForeSee Results.  Larry came & spoke at one of our “Managing the Growth of New Ventures” classes a couple weeks ago.  He shared a lot of great advice & recommendations based on what he has learned.  Including:

  • “To be successful, you need to do two things: 1. Satisfy customers, & 2. Be fiscally responsible.
  • Most KPIs are wrong.  Just because you can measure it doesn’t mean it’s a KPI. For instance, conversion rate, task completion isn’t always a success.
  • “Behavior tells you what happened.  Satisfaction tells you what will happen.”
  • “More data isn’t necessarily better.  Better data is better.”
  • Today there is “The Super Consumer”.  The Super Consumer can reach the company / has a voice…for instance can complain about the company via Twitter.  TSC listens, is smart, & can clone themselves (e.g. multiple browser tables or have Amazon running on phone with price comparisons when walking through BestBuy).  It used to be that companies knew more about the products than consumers did, but now that’s not the case.  Consumers can do research, pull information up on phones, & use social media to complain.
  • “We’re collecting more & more data because we don’t know what to do with data we have”
  • “Customer experience is all relevant to expectations” (for instance, going to Blimpy Burger, which is known for not so great service, versus the Chop House, a fine dining restaurant).  Experience & expectations define satisfaction.  Satisfaction determines what consumers do next & drives financial success.
  • Big 3 Customer Experience Questions(to think about when analyzing data):
    • How are we doing? (key drivers, performance)
    • What should we do? (areas of focus defined by impacts to help figure out where to allocate resources)
    • Why should we do it? (what’s payback of making improvement)
  • “Sometimes it looks like companies are looking to raise money, not make money”
  • “Measure satisfaction of each touch point because that’s actionable”
  • “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.  Diversify your customer base”
  • Set the tone by leading by example.  For instance, he gets on calls with customers & sits in on meetings when analysts deliver reports.
  • One of the biggest challenges for a leader is delegating.  Early on you are used to doing everything & when you grow you have to delegate.  Be careful about adding layer of management
  • Early stage metrics to track: CASH FLOW & burn, revenue growth, customer growth, renewal, sales pipeline.
  • Mid stage metrics: CASH FLOW, revenue growth, profitability growth, gross margin, bookings growth, diversification (customer & industry), renewal (customers & $ amount), pipeline (opportunities in, closed, lost, bookings, meetings, activity).  Success metrics at this stage are: Sales & Marketing efficiency, MRR, CAC, Months to recover CAC, Average revenue per customer, CLV, benchmarking metrics.
  • Great thing if you can get other people to sell your product.
  • “Everybody wants to feel good about what they do, but you need to talk about the bad”

After Larry spoke to the class, the lecture shared Qualities of Good Metrics:

  • Clarity (easy to understand & communicate to the company. the simpler the better)
  • Utility (actionable info obtained quickly & easily. what am I going to do if I know this. how will it lead to better use of time & money)
  • Timely & Forward (useful for planning future needs & actions)
  • Adds Insight (helps use learn more about our business model)
  • Overall (give you what you need to update your board, banker, & employees each month. have a language that says you understand your business model & you are constantly looking ahead)

What are you measuring?

Venture on,

MEL aka Venture Gal

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Mar 28

ES569: Jan Garfinkle, Arboretum Ventures Founder & Managing Director

Healthcare investing is great because beyond the possibility of generating significant returns, the companies invested in save lives & really impact people.  Yes, there are huge risks.  Huge risk, huge reward.  At this week’s class, Jan Garfinkle, Founder & Managing Director of Arboretum Ventures spoke to the class.  Jan started her career as an engineer & in 2002 founded Arboretum Ventures.  The firm celebrates its 10th birthday this year & has successfully raised 3 funds.

Jan focused her discussion on financing companies, answering common questions that entrepreneurs ask:

How does an entrepreneur figure out how much money the company needs?

  • Start with a budget.  VCs want to know what is the most important thing the company must do to increase its value (aka a milestone) & how much money will it take to reach that milestone.

How to decide which source of funds to pursue?

Consider

  • Cost. What are the cost of the funds you raise (i.e. cost in terms of ownership)?
  • Flexibility. What level of decision making responsibility do you want?
  • Supply. Where is capital available?
  • Entrepreneur’s goals long term. Do you want to build a lifestyle business that you can work at for the rest of your life?
  • Type of business.  Not all businesses are venture hackable.

What are sources of capital?

  • Yourself
  • Grants (government, foundations, universities)
  • Debt (customers, bank, venture debt)
  • Equity (friends & families & fools, angels, VC, IPO)

What do VCs look for?

A great jockey, riding a great horse, in a huge race.  In other words, a great entrepreneur, commercializing a great product, in a huge market.  Jan, like many VCs I know, prefers an A team & B product, over a B team & A product.

What do VCs do when they due diligence?

Try to learn as much as possible about tit!

  • Management
    • Track record
    • Relevant experience
    • Highly motivated
    • Honest & ethical (how are decisions made? how does the team communicate?)
    • Make sure you can recruit the right people
  • Financials & exit potential
    • capital requirements
    • exit price & timing
    • talk to strategic corporations to understand what they need to see in order to be interested in buying the company (*we at RPM don’t do this well)
  • Product need
  • Market size
  • Time to market
  • Competitive positioning
    • existing technologies
    • emerging technologies
    • IP

Material company provides & how long it takes to get the materials to the VC are indicators of how the entrepreneur will be like to work with.

What is the best way to get VCs’ attention?

Get a warm introduction/referral!

In addition to the insights Jan shared in response to those particular questions, she also shared a few notable quotables:

  • “Your career will not be a straight line. Be flexible”
  • “If it’s a great exit, every body wins. Even the janitor if he got shares”
  • “The more touch points you’ve had as problems the more successful you’re be as a CEO”
Selecting investment opportunities & selecting funders involves building relationships.  Getting to know each other.  Building trust.  Even if you are a great jockey, with a fast horse, in a huge race, if the investor doesn’t trust you, or you don’t trust the investor – that’s not a good way to start an investor/entrepreneur relationship.

Way to go Jan!  Keep up the great work & Venture On,

MEL aka Venture Gal

Mar 22

ES569: People and Culture featuring Serial Entrepreneur Josh Pokempner

Tuesday night’s class focused on People & Culture, the most important part of any organization (in my opinion).  Our guest speaker was Josh Pokempner, serial entrepreneur & founder of several successful companies.  Below are some of my raw notes for that night’s discussion with Josh:

  • Business is trying to control circumstances so intended results happen.  my response:  life is trying to control circumstances to intended results happen.
  • we can’t control how well a product does, but we can control our corporate culture.
  • how to create that great culture?
    • servant leadership
      • rich person = someone so in love with what they do, so much they can’t wait to get out of bed to do it. can’t wait for alarm to go off so you can get out of bed. my response: what is it that i can’t wait for? what is it that makes me wish my alarm will go off?!
    • create & practice a shared mission, vision & values
    • “5 ways of being”
  • book recommendation: “Man’s Search for Meaning” – achieve happiness by dedicating yourself to someone or something.
  • “there’s a soul to a company” – JP
  • “In this business you have to be comfortable with bumpy flights” – JP on the life of an entrepreneur

After Josh shared his stories & wisdom, students asked some thought provoking questions.  Some that were especially thought provoking for me include:

  • How do you balance sharing information with your company & sharing information that scares people? (for instance, the company is low on cash, & you don’t want to scare people into thinking they’ll be cut)
    • Josh recommended “Just tell them”
    • In my own experiences an open book culture is a powerful way to get the team to take ownership & better know how they can impact the success of the business.  People cannot act in the best interests of the company when they don’t know what those interests are.  Being honest & open beats little to no transparency.  Be authentic. Don’t unpleasantly surprise your team & they won’t unpleasantly surprise you
  • For companies early on, low on resources, how do you build a fun team environment?
    • My thoughts: So you don’t have cash to take your entire team to Cedar Point, how do you still incorporate fun team activities (if that’s part of your culture)…do it within your means.  You don’t have to spend a ton of money (or any at all) to build culture through activities.  Going to a park & playing frisbee will cost you the price of the frisbee.  At Iorio’s we do team bonding activities when times are flush & when times are less cash rich.  It doesn’t matter.  Be creative & find a way to make it work.
  • How did you find the people you hired?
    • Josh brought in people he had worked with before.
    • If you don’t have that luxury & you’re starting for the first time, or you need to hire more people than you have previous colleagues, remember this – building your culture starts with your job posting & application.  What do I mean by this?  The language of your job posting & application sets a tone.  If you are a fun & creative company, make your job description & application fun & creative.  This is the best way to attract talent aligned with your culture & give you a great pool of candidates to hire from.

After Josh finished speaking, the discussion about culture & people continued.  A few nuggets of wisdom to share:

  • “Culture is based on 99% of what the CEO does & 1% on what he says” – Fry
  • “Culture is the single most important factor in recruiting & retaining key employees” – Fry
  • “Employee behavior consistent with the culture should be recognized” – Fry
  • CEO plans culture, lives it, reinforces it, manages it, tracks & measures it, modifies as needed
  • “Personnel selection is decisive. People are our most valuable capital” – Joseph Stalin
  • “as leadership changes, the effectiveness of people may also change”

And some questions that were asked:

  • Should vision statement be about 1 product (if company only has 1 product) or something bigger?
    • Tony thinks it should be bigger
    • I think a vision is big.  Your core vision for your company is that north star…what are you reaching for.  For instance, Disney’s vision is to “make people happy”.  At Iorio’s our vision is to “deliver sweetness”.  These visions are big & broad.  I have found it helpful to also write “vision statements” that may reflect more tangible, shorter & longer term visions for specific aspects of the company.  A vision statement that is written out could be short term focused & looking out at 1 year from now & that may only include 1 product.  I recommend writing vision statements when launching a new product, taking on a new initiative, starting a new company etc…answer questions like “what does this product/company look like?” “how do our customers respond?” “what are the challenges we are overcoming?”  paint a picture of the future.  Put yourself in the future.  A vision statement should be written as if you are in the future.  For more visioning tips I recommend reading some of Ari Weinzweig’s tips on visioning. I, and many others, have learned from him.
  • What do you think comes first, the culture or the people?
    • Tom mentioned that half the people he meets that start companies don’t think about the culture, even if, as an investor, he hints at its importance.
    • I think culture is an iterative process, especially early on.  Like product iteration.  Create culture consciously. Bring on people that align with that culture, learn from them & team dynamics, iterate culture consciously, bring on more people. Rinse & repeat.

Bottom line: Create culture consciously & continually.  All this talk about culture in class has me enthused about learning more & sharing more about what I’ve learned about culture.  What questions do you have?  What would you like to learn about culture & people?

Venture on,

MEL aka Venture Gal

Mar 15

Growing Companies – Culture & Leadership Featuring Serial Entrepreneur Jennifer Baird

This week our class hosted our first guest speaker for the semester.  Jen Baird, serial entrepreneur, currently CEO of Accio Energy & former founder & CEO of Accuri Cytometers.

Jen got her interest in being an entrepreneur when interning for a VC firm.  After graduating from the University of Michigan with a psychology degree & from Kellogg School of Management with her MBA, she worked in consulting for over half a dozen years.  After consulting she took the leap into carving her own path, a route that was quite challenging for her.  When she co-founded Accuri Cytometers she was at the start of a 5 year journey creating, launching & scaling a product & team.  She grew the company from 2 to 80 employees, raised close to $30M in capital, launched a European subsidiary, & approached profitability.  Jen claims to really excel at is the people part of the organization (which I would argue is the most important part!).  She claims “companies are built of people.  They are the building blocks”.  This makes sense given her psychology degree & operational experience building & leading teams.  She clearly has learned a lot from her experiences.

What really stood out to me about Jen is that she knows herself well, exudes passion, is very personable, & is quite confident.  In particular, this is what I learned from listening to Jen & reflecting on her discussion:

“Power of focus is what you choose NOT to do”

On any given day my to do list could be pages long, but really do I need to be doing all those things?  Where is my time best spent?  I have been attuned to this lately & the way Jen described “choosing NOT to do something” caught my attention as a different way of thinking about prioritization.  Another piece of advice she had was to check in every 6 months to see what else can be delegated or eliminated.  Otherwise I become a restraint (similar to how I felt at Iorio’s – stifling our growth).

There are aspects of us that are similar.

Jen’s open style of management mirrors my open book philosophy & values based management style.  A few things we both advocate: all hands meetings, open door policy, building trust & communication.  She also mentioned that she likes to share details & has learned that sometimes it’s better to not share too much.  Something I’m working on also.

I still have questions I’d like to ask Jen, & I will ask her:

  • How do you decide which business opportunities to pursue?  Why Accuri?
  • Challenges you faced as female? How did you overcome them?
  • Where do you learn? (books, people, etc)

Following Jen’s talk Tom discussed management styles.  The key thing I took away after this lecture is that knowing who you are you are is a continual process/discovery that never ends.  In particular he asked: Who are you?  What is your impact on people?  What are your values?  What does success look like for you?  We need to figure out who we are.  It is hard enough to be ourselves, let alone someone else.  If we don’t know who we are it’s difficult to hire people around us to make us better.  Tom recommended developing a vision for yourself.  Know what you’re good at & what you’re not good at.  How best to do this?  I’m still figuring that out.  I do know that spending time with myself, in silence, thinking & reflecting has helped me.

He also emphasized the importance of trust.  To earn the trust of others (e.g. board of directors, customers, employees) you must first trust yourself.  If you don’t trust yourself, it will show, & others won’t trust you.  A great book I read that goes into detail about trust is “The Speed of Trust” by Stephen M.R. Covey.

We also questioned “what is the role of the CEO?”  50-75% of the time she/he is working with people. From time to time GreatLakesVC shares his Weisdom with me & he once told me that the job of a CEO is to make everyone else better at what they do.  To achieve the most in a resource constrained organization, the CEO should be controlling about the company vision & values because every employee should know the story of the company & exactly what the company is trying to accomplish.  The danger of being controlling is slowing down progress & not empowering people to the fullest.  The more someone wants control, the more things need to go through that person, & it slows things down (exhibit ME/Iorio’s).  It is really important to get the message right for the first people you hire & make the culture & values clear.  This way, when you stop hiring people, the people who are hiring people get the message right & hire based on the culture & values of the company.  Recently at Iorio’s we saw a great example of congruency without our organization.  One of our team members created a series of “Iorio’s Ten Commandments” to be a way to share the ground rules & operations of the business.  The result – a set of guidelines that scream Iorio’s culture as we created it.  The fact that we didn’t write them…& that they are so spot on to our culture & values is a huge testament to our ability to create congruency in our business.

Eccellente!

Venture on,

MEL aka Venture Gal