early-stage Posts

06.07.2010

Using LinkedIn to Close Deals & Increase Market Share

Posted By Cathy Belk

Dave GowelLinkedIn is fabulous for personal networking as you already knew — but you can also use it to grow your business! Learn how you can leverage this popular social media to close deals, increase market share, and enhance your online presence on June 22nd from Dave Gowel, who was coined the ‘LinkedIn Jedi’ by The Boston Globe.

To get a taste of what you can expect - and get caught up on the last couple JumpStart educational events – check out our Event Videos.

Hope to see you on June 22nd!

Cathy Belk is the Chief Marketing Officer of JumpStart. She specializes in branding, marketing communications, and business management. She brings 16+ years of experience in a variety of marketing and business roles, but gets her energy from working daily with entrepreneurs and their growing companies.

06.03.2010

The Best 5 Movies for Entrepreneurs + Some 2nd Bests

Posted By Cathy Belk

Early-stage entrepreneurs need to pull inspiration from all kinds of places; how about the movies? Here’s a list of movies that are perfect for just the right time or right situation you might face with your high growth startup. Movies for Entrepreneurs

Instead of a coffee…: Having trouble getting charged up for that very important first customer meeting, or need to inspire the team when you’ve had a tough week? War movies show the purest form of competition and Gladiator has the best opening of any. “Unleash(ing) hell” on the competition is a good thing! (Honorable Mention:  Jerry Maguire. How often do you think “help me, help you”?)

Feeling down? Whatever unexpected challenges the market has thrown at you this week, you are still in better shape than the guys in Apollo 13. Watch it for the inspiring examples of the principles you face every day:  1) the best laid plans don’t always work, so be ready to adapt quickly, 2) it’s amazing what you can do with just a few resources, and3) there’s a lot to learn, even positive outcomes, from “failure”. (Honorable mention:  Rudy, for the principle that “hard word really matters”.)

Reminder: Execution is everything. The 2000 movie Memento starring Guy Pearce was a mind-blower. The story is interesting, but it’s the delivery (read: execution) that brings the movie to life. Any other execution and the movie still would have been very entertaining, but the way it was told revolutionized the experience, brought a totally new kind of innovation to storytelling, and changed the way I think about movies to this day. (Honorable mentions for similar executional surprises:  Pulp Fiction and Crash.)

Worth more than I paid. We all want to get the pricing that will allow us to generate healthy profits, but to do so you need to deliver value beyond what you’d expect for the money. Avatar (the 3D version) wins. I paid $38 for my entire family to see this and wow, 3 hours of pure entertainment later, I would have paid double. (Honorable mention:  The recent Percy Jackson and the Olympians movie, for being infinitely better than most kids’ movies. Last summer’s The Hangover was worth gold.)

It’s very cool to be an entrepreneur. There are so many movies that can summarize why entrepreneurship is worth the trip, but my absolute favorite is Risky Business. It’s the ending I especially love. The students who are members of Young Enterprises Club present the summaries, and outcomes, of their businesses. Most of the students sell somewhat familiar things (like new paper towel holders) and earn a profit, albeit small. Joel deals in a riskier world, and he grosses a lot more money than his fellow students. Risky business he was in, and he wasn’t sure how it would work out, but he took the gamble and got the big payoff. Products aside (obviously, as our clients’ products are legal), JumpStart clients are in this same world — risky, scary businesses that could lead to big payoff, but only after taking big risk. Brilliantly fun. (Honorable mention:  None - It’s in a category all its own)

What movies would you add to the list?

Cathy Belk is the Chief Marketing Officer of JumpStart. She specializes in branding, marketing communications, and business management. She brings 16+ years of experience in a variety of marketing and business roles, but gets her energy from working daily with entrepreneurs and their growing companies.

05.25.2010

A Lion, a Predator, and a Jerk Walk Into a Bar

Posted By Becca Braun

It’s natural to want to like the people leading the companies in which we invest. But it may not be profitable.

When I read Jim Collins’ Good to Great, ten years ago, I found it compelling. I loved the mystery novel-ish sense of suspense of the McKinsey-style analytical team trying to figure out what truly differentiates great companies from good ones. Ultimately, they found that a CEO who exhibits Level 5 Leadership was a core differentiator. And, basically, Level 5 Leadership described someone whom I thought I might like: unflinching willingness to face the truth, participative style, and vast humility. I loved that description; it spoke to me.

But, shortly after I read it, I found that I was not finding that type of leader in entrepreneur world, even in very successful entrepreneurs. I then listened to a compelling seminar hosted by ghSmart, the firm that co-owns Topgrading. Their findings were different. They had studied investor-backed company teams, and they found that something called the “lion” profile is best. A “lion” is someone who, in summary, is very aggressive (often considered over aggressive), pushes boundaries, and goes for winning as a top goal. Conversely, their “lamb” CEO — someone who is patient, participative, makes people feel that they are the best that they can be, etc. — did not, statistically speaking, generate higher returns.

That jived with what I had seen work more consistently in entrepreneur world. So, at a seminar JumpStart put on a couple years ago to discuss this dichotomy, an audience member raised his hand and said, “But patience has to be a virtue. It simply must be.” A seasoned, nationally known executive recruiter on the panel, one who had no connection to Good to Great or Topgrading, responded firmly and without hesitation.  “Our best recruiters,” she said, “always say ‘Patience is not a virtue’.” Why? Because they had found, over time, that the best leadership candidates were not those who were patient and deliberate but rather those who ‘pressed’ …for excellence, for results, and for the highest quality in all they do and in what they expect of their teams.

Yet again, recently, this concept that you don’t need to be likeable or patient or any of those things to be a great entrepreneurial CEO arose. At the Angel Capital Association annual meeting earlier this month, Adeo Ressi, of the Founder Institute, sat on a panel. An audience member asked him about entrepreneur profiles. He responded that the Founder Institute has consulted with a number of sociologists and others to try to drill down into what characteristics are truly most correlated with successful entrepreneurship. After discussing a couple of other characteristics, his conclusion was this: “It turns out that you really can be a real [jerk]* and still be a great startup CEO.”

The author, Malcolm Gladwell, semi-reinforced this idea in a recent New Yorker article, “The Sure Thing”. He wrote that great entrepreneurs are predators. He wrote about how they are cold-blooded bargainers and that they time and time again “swooped down, like perfect predators…” on opportunities. So, take your pick: Lion, Jerk, Predator. Each is slightly different, but none is what I would call the humble, participatory-style Level 5 Leader. They’re Larry Ellison, who wants to win at all costs. They’re Bill Gates, who has perhaps grown into a benevolent-ish philanthropist, but he built Microsoft by being an aggressive jerk; you might quarrel with the use of that word, but from what I can tell, he was solidly at some lion/predator/jerk intersection. They’re Ted Turner, who turned raw combativeness, into marketplace competitiveness, into a cable empire.

This all gels with what we have increasingly come to believe at JumpStart, which is that Level 5 leaders don’t quite describe the type of entrepreneurial leader we should invest in, nor do we even need to like the CEO of a company we invest in. Don’t get me wrong. We prefer to actually like the CEO of the company in which we invest. We don’t actively seek to invest in CEOs who are lions/jerks/predators. But, whether we like them or not, whether we want to hang out at an airport bar with them for five hours (a classic test of whether to hire someone), is not much of a criterion. First and foremost, we look for Adaptive Excellence which is, basically, someone who rises to the top of whatever they do.

If they do lack humility and nice-ness and various other people skills that are increasingly required as a company grows and employs hundreds and thousands, then we will still invest. We may, however, look to supplement their non-people skills as they grow. See, it’s one thing to be an investor in a company led by a lion/jerk/predator. But, being a manager every single day at a company with a lion/jerk/predator for a CEO can be demoralizing, and company growth stalls when employees or managers are departing in droves. The predator, it often turns out, needs help building a great and enduring culture, the type of culture that say, Netflix has; a place where employees love coming to work.**

Here’s the point: the CEO of an early-stage company can be a jerk. Take Larry Ellison, Bill Gates, Ted Turner (the list goes on and on). They bent rules, they agitated. Really, they might not have endeared you, at all, if you met them in a presentation in your offices. Investors should look first for individuals who are impatient, non-conformist, smart, and strive to win. Look for predators. Seek the lions and lionesses. Don’t let the jerk turn you off to the possibility of the greatness of their aggressive, non-conformist insight. I have done so a couple of times and I regret it. Because what I believe is that whether I actually want to roam the metaphorical plains with the lion(ess) telling jokes, drinking from the oasis, and being participative and humble together may well be a moot point, when it comes to returns and IRR.

(Note: ghSMART will be delivering a seminar at JumpStart this Thursday - Hiring Smart: How to Hire & Retain A+ Players. Learn more and register now - It’s a can’t-miss event.)

NOTES

* What Ressi actually said was a word for the male anatomy. Problem is — I cannot use this word on a non-profit venture development web site. On a related note, Ressi pondered, along with other panelists, why there weren’t more women in entrepreneurship. Several audience members dared suggest that perhaps using male body parts to describe entrepreneurs wasn’t particularly helpful to the cause. Indeed, our entrepreneurship language is almost entirely oriented towards males, and that is a problem, if you ask me. I understand the arguments for it. Trust me, as a person whose first love was linguistics and who spent her senior year of college not hanging out watching Seinfeld and chugging pints but instead writing a 100 page thesis about the pronoun “I” — I am deeply passionate about language and versed in the arguments about how language simply describes culture. I also am versed in the arguments against this, which is that indeed language does help shape culture. So, one of my dreams for this world is that some nonconformist investors will switch the discourse to using slightly more female words. It’s a risk, because IRR is all that matters, not language, right? But, think about a world where we use much more female language in describing entrepreneurs. “Gals” instead of “guys”. “Lioness” instead of “Lion”. “Queen” instead of “King” (in the Rich vs. King paradigm). Jerkette instead of Jerk. I’ll stop short of suggesting an alternative for Ressi’s actual term (which was not “jerk”), but review the Kinsey Report and you’ll get some good ideas. I haven’t done statistically significant field work, run the Monte Carlo simulation, completed the double blind study, crunched the numbers, or any other such thing, but this I believe: this more female-oriented discourse would be powerful to our daughters, our future generation of entrepreneurs. 

** Our Entrepreneurial Talent guy, Robert Hatta worked there. By the way, the use of Netflix culture as a positive is not intended to imply that their CEO is or is not a jerk. I haven’t got the slightest clue about Reed Hastings, though he certainly appears to have Adaptive Excellence.

Becca Braun is President of JumpStart Ventures. She founded and led a number of early-stage companies and organizations, as well as worked as a private equity investor and management consultant. She received her MBA from Harvard Business School and her BA in Linguistics from Harvard University. She is keenly interested in the intersection of wealth creation and broad-based regional economic growth.

05.06.2010

Inspiration Coming From Success in Pittsburgh

Posted By Cathy Belk

When JumpStart was started, the leaders looked across the country for models to emulate, and Innovation Works in Pittsburgh was one of them. Innovation Works (IW) is five years older than JumpStart but served as the model for many of our operational choices. While we have some important differences (including funding sources and the specifics of our local geographies), we also have many of the same elements: business community, deal flow from multiple partners including universities and service providers, inspired and supported entrepreneurs, and a model which ties various amounts of funding with business assistance.

IW had its annual meeting last Thursday and John Dearborn and I were in attendance. WOW. If you ever needed proof that the model we are both pursuing can work to create incredible economic transformation, a thriving entrepreneurial economy, positive internal brand image, and jobs, take a look at Pittsburgh and the work of IW. As just one example alone, the annual meeting Innovation Works 10 Year Impactwas at McKesson Automation. The company that was the predecessor to McKesson was brought to IW by its three founding entrepreneurs. With the initial funding and business assistance from IW, the company grew from three to 800 employees in the Pittsburgh area. It was sold to McKesson and continues to employ over 500 hundred people in the Pittsburgh area and thousands of people across the U.S., while those three entrepreneurs have gone on to start other companies that have created hundreds of jobs (or lead IW, in the case of Rich Lunak). And that’s just one example.

To learn more about the results that IW has achieved in Pittsburgh, and to be inspired by what can happen in our region too, take a look at their 10 year anniversary annual report.

Cathy Belk is the Chief Marketing Officer of JumpStart. She specializes in branding, marketing communications, and business management. She brings 16+ years of experience in a variety of marketing and business roles, but gets her energy from working daily with entrepreneurs and their growing companies.