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DEVELOPING  TALENT  •  GROWING  VENTURES    •  OPENING  MARKETS
Visit	
  us	
  at	
  marsdd.com	
  
ENTREPRENEURIAL  
MANAGEMENT
N A T H A N    M O N K ,   
@ C O W B O Y T W E E T S    
I C T    V E N T U R E    S E R V I C E S 
1 4    O C T    2 0 1 5
“ Running  a  startup  is
like  being  punched  
In  the  face  repeatedly,
but  working  for  a  large  
company  is  like  
being  waterboarded.    

 
 
 

Paul  Graham,  Y  Combinator
15	
  October	
  2014	
   Entrepreneurial	
  Management	
  
“ 30-­‐40%  of  all  U.S.  startups  fail  
(liquida[ng  all  assets)  and  95%  
fail  to  deliver  projected  return  on  
investment  or  breakeven  by  a  
defined  [me  period.
Shikhar  Ghosh,  Sr.  Lecturer,  Harvard  Business  School
Entrepreneurial	
  Management	
  
“ The  cost  of  
being  wrong.
is  less
than  the  
cost  of  
doing  nothing.

Seth  Godin,  Author-­‐Entrepreneur-­‐Marketer
Entrepreneurial	
  Management	
  
DEVELOPING  TALENT  •  GROWING  VENTURES    •  OPENING  MARKETS
	
  
Our  Future  Mabers	
   ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT
E N T R E P R E N E U R I A L    M A N A G E M E N T 
DEFINING
ENTREPRENEURIAL
MANAGEMENT
ENTREPRENEURIAL	
  MANAGEMENT	
  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
What	
  does	
  it	
  mean	
  to	
  be	
  an	
  entrepreneur?	
  
ENTREPRENEURIAL	
  MANAGEMENT	
  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
You  do  not  need  to  just  solve  a  ‘pain’  or  
‘problem’  to  be  an  entrepreneur.  

 
 
 


-­‐
ENTREPRENEURIAL	
  MANAGEMENT	
  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
ENTREPRENEURIAL	
  MANAGEMENT	
  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
1.  Your  knowledge  (educa[on,  career,  hobbies).
2.  Your  capabili[es  (proficiency  and  strengths).  
3.  Your  connec[ons  (who  do  you  know/what  industries?).  
4.  Your  capital  (access,  savings  etc.  “Ramon  Noodle  diet”)
5.  Your  brand  (what  are  you  or  your  partners  well-­‐known  for?).
6.  Your  pain  points  (what  inefficiencies  have  you  no[ced?).
7.  Your  passion  (any  markets,  products/services  you  love?).
8.  Your  commitment  (do  you  really  have  the  [me  and  effort?).
Where  do  you  start  ‘digging’?  
ENTREPRENEURIAL	
  MANAGEMENT	
  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
The  one  key  ques[on.

What  can  I  do  well  that  I  would  love  to  do  for  an  
extended  period  of  [me  (and  possibly  fail  AT)?










-­‐
ENTREPRENEURIAL	
  MANAGEMENT	
  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
A  set  of  principles  and  frameworks  that  are  
aligned  with  your  passion  and  help  you  iden[fy  a  
sustainable  and  repeatable  business  model,  while  
managing  the  chaos  of  scaling  through  5  phases  of  
business  growth.  
What	
  is	
  the	
  discipline	
  of	
  entrepreneurship?	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  (Entrepreneurial	
  Management)	
  	
  
ENTREPRENEURIAL	
  MANAGEMENT	
  
Are  you  ready  to  jump?
Really?
Are  you  sure?
Seriously?
ENTREPRENEURIAL	
  MANAGEMENT	
  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
“ "Ever	
  tried.	
  Ever	
  failed.	
  No	
  
maNer.	
  Try	
  Again.	
  Fail	
  again.	
  
Fail	
  beNer.”	
  

 
 


Samuel  BeckeC,  Novelist  and  Playwright  
15	
  October	
  2014	
   Entrepreneurial	
  Management	
  
ENTREPRENEURIAL	
  MANAGEMENT	
  
In  order  to  succeed,  we  need  to  know  why  
startups  fail.  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
1.  Startups  with  helpful  mentors,  track  performance  metrics  raise  7x  more  capital  /  3.5x  higher  user  
base.
2.  Pivo[ng  startups  raise  2.5x  more  money,  3.6x  user  growth,  52%  less  likely  to  scale  prematurely.  
3.  Everest  helps  prevent  premature  scaling:  team,  customer  acquisi[on  strategies  and  build.  
4.  Solo  founders  take  3.6x  longer  to  reach  scale  stage.
5.  Business-­‐heavy  founding  teams  are  3.3x  more  likely  to  successfully  scale  with  sales-­‐driven  
startups
6.  Tech-­‐heavy  founding  teams  are  3.3x  more  likely  to  scale  with  a  product-­‐centric  startup
7.  Balanced  teams  raise  30%  more  money,  have  2.9x  more  user  growth  and  are  19%  less  likely  to  
scale  prematurely  than  technical  or  business-­‐heavy  founding  teams
8.  Founders  that  don’t  work  full-­‐[me  have  4x  less  user  growth  and  end  up  raising  24x  less  money  
from  investors
9.  Most  successful  founders  are  driven  by  impact  rather  than  experience  or  money.
10.  Startups  need  2-­‐3  [mes  longer  to  validate  their  market  than  most  founders  expect.  The  
underes[ma[on  creates  the  pressure  to  scale  prematurely.  B2B  and  B2C  isn’t  a  meaningful  
segmenta[on  because  of  the  way  the  internet  has  changed  customer  dynamics.
What	
  we	
  now	
  know.	
  	
  
Entrepreneurial	
  Management	
  
The art of ‘high growth’ entrepreneurship is to master the chaos of getting each of
these 5 dimensions to move in time and concert with one another. (SGR)
6-­‐  Stage  Life  Cycle  of  a  Startup
15	
  October	
  2014	
   Entrepreneurial	
  Management	
  	
  
ESTG	
   PMF	
   LSTG	
   BMC	
  
Search 4 repetable & scalable business modelExtreme uncertainty
• Learning	
  
• Valley	
  of	
  
death	
  
DISCOVERY	
  
• PMF	
  
• PSF	
  
VALIDATION	
   EFFICIENCY	
   SCALE	
   SUSTAIN	
  
CONSERVATI
ON	
  
i: $100k / month threshold /
scaling, BMC ops. 60%
Search for problem space & fit
(PSF-PMF)
Valley of Death
PSF	
  
“Scaling	
  successfully	
  is	
  what	
  separates	
  eventual	
  industry	
  leaders	
  from	
  long-­‐forgoNen	
  
startups	
  in	
  the	
  deadpool.”	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  –	
  Michael	
  A.	
  Jackson	
  
“ Success  is  going  from  
failure  to  failure  without  
loss  of  enthusiasm.
Winston  Churchill  
Entrepreneurial	
  Management	
  
DEVELOPING  TALENT  •  GROWING  VENTURES    •  OPENING  MARKETS
	
  
Our  Future  Mabers	
   ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT
E N T R E P R E N E U R I A L    M A N A G E M E N T 
FRAMEWORKS AND
METHODOLOGIES
The	
  Entrepreneurial	
  API	
  
Entrepreneurial	
  Management	
  
Business	
  Model	
  
Stages	
  
Lean	
  Iteraon	
  
Who  do  we  
follow?  
  
The  Founders  of  lean,  
disrup[on,  crossing  the  
chasm,  business  model  
innova[on,  startup  
marke[ng  and  the  
discipline  of  
entrepreneurship:  
  
Blank,  Aulet,  Christensen,  
Ellis,  Mauyra,  Ries,  Moore  
Osterwalder,  Chen  and  
Wasswerman    
  
1.	
  Business	
  Model	
  Generaon	
  
ALEXANDER	
  OSTERWALDER	
  
Business	
  Model	
  
	
  
4.	
  Customer	
  Segmentaon	
  
16	
  October	
  2015	
   Presentaon	
  Title	
  Goes	
  Here	
  
Big  idea…
We  no  longer  compete  on  a  product  or  
service,  but  rather,  a  compe[[ve,  
repeatable  and  scalable  business  model.  
7  key  ques[ons
Source:	
  Osterwalder	
  Masterclass,	
  2012	
  
Source:	
  Osterwalder	
  Masterclass,	
  2012	
  
Source:	
  Osterwalder	
  Masterclass,	
  2012	
  
Source:	
  Osterwalder	
  Masterclass,	
  2012	
  
Source:	
  Osterwalder	
  Masterclass,	
  2012	
  
Source:	
  Osterwalder	
  Masterclass,	
  2012	
  
Source:	
  Osterwalder	
  Masterclass,	
  2012	
  
2.	
  Customer	
  Development	
  (new	
  IP)	
  
STEVE	
  BLANK	
  
•  Translate business
model hypotheses to
test with customers
•  Develop an MVP of
the solution to test
with customers
•  Continuous testing
of hypothesis.
•  Careful analysis of
customer
interactions
•  Pivot or proceed
•  Product is refined
enough to sell.
•  Build demand
through marketing
& sales.
•  Business
transitions for
startup mode to
departments
operating in
functions
Customer  Development  Cycle
3.	
  Lean	
  
ERIC	
  RIES	
  	
  
‘Lean’  methodology  favours  
experimenta[on  over  elaborate  planning,  
customer  feedback  over  intui[on,  and  
itera[ve  design  over  tradi[onal  up-­‐front  
development.      
3.	
  Lean	
  
Why  is  all  this  important?
4.	
  Customer	
  Segmenta6on	
  
ERIC	
  RIES	
  	
  
A  target  customer  is  a  group  of  poten[al  
customers  who  share  many  characteris[cs  
and  who  would  all  have  similar  reasons  to  buy  
a  par[cular  product.
Milkshake
By  choosing  a  single  market  to  excel  in,  your  
startup  can  more  easily  establish  a  strong  
market  posi[on,  and  hopefully  a  state  of  
posi[ve  cash  flow,  before  it  runs  our  of  
resources.      
5.	
  LEAN	
  ANALYTICS	
  
15	
  October	
  2014	
   Entrepreneurial	
  Management	
  	
  
AlISTAIR	
  CROLL	
  
THINGS  GO  WRONG.  
COMMON  TENDANCY  IS  TO  CAPTURE  DATA,  BUT  WE  DROWN  IN  METRICS.
WE  NEED  A  STANDARD  SET  OF  METRICS  NEED  TO  BE  GUIDE  STARTUPS
‘PIRATE  OR  LEAN  ANALYTICS’  HELP  ALIGN  AND  HOLD  THE  STARTUP  ACCOUNTABLE
BUILD.  TEST.  MEASURE.  LEARN.  
Why  do  we  need  lean  
analy[cs?  
EVEREST	
  SESSION	
  #5:	
  INNOVATION	
  ACCOUNTING	
  
Example:  Analy[cs  Funnel  
6.	
  TEAM	
  
15	
  October	
  2014	
   Entrepreneurial	
  Management	
  	
  
NOAM	
  WASSERMAN	
  
E V E R E S T 	
   S E S S I O N 	
   # 4 : 	
   T E A M 	
  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
Company  Rules

“Decide  –  take  responsibility  –  be  humble  –  never  give  up  –  show  
ini[a[ve  –  laugh  –  don’t  complain  –  find  a  solu[on  –  keep  on  –  take  
pride  in  your  work  –  open  your  mind  –  embrace  change  –  
collaborate  –  listen  –  improve  daily  –  lead  not  follow.”  
TEAM
RELATIONSHIPS,  ROLES  AND  
REWARDS  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
E V E R E S T    S E S S I O N    # 4 :    T E A M 
Source:	
  Founder’s	
  Dilemmas,	
  Noam	
  Wasserman	
  	
  	
  
Ques[ons  to  ask  yourself?  
1.	
  How	
  well	
  do	
  we	
  co-­‐founders	
  and/or	
  team	
  members	
  know	
  each	
  other’s	
  professional	
  abilies	
  and	
  styles?	
  
2.	
  How	
  can	
  we	
  learn	
  more	
  about	
  each	
  other	
  and	
  maintain	
  open	
  communicaon?	
  
3.	
  What	
  are	
  the	
  things	
  we	
  have	
  a	
  hard	
  me	
  talking	
  about?	
  	
  
4.	
  Can	
  we	
  construcvely	
  discuss	
  them	
  now?	
  	
  
5.	
  How	
  will	
  we	
  keep	
  tabs	
  on	
  these	
  issues	
  so	
  that	
  they	
  don’t	
  fester?	
  
6.	
  Are	
  we	
  clear	
  about	
  our	
  roles?	
  	
  
7.	
  Is	
  there	
  any	
  overlap	
  between	
  people?	
  	
  
8.	
  If	
  so,	
  what	
  are	
  we	
  doing	
  to	
  prevent	
  fricon	
  from	
  arising?	
  	
  
9.	
  What	
  are	
  our	
  plans	
  for	
  separang	
  the	
  areas	
  of	
  overlap	
  as	
  we	
  grow?	
  
10.	
  Is	
  it	
  possible	
  to	
  configure	
  the	
  reporng	
  structures	
  so	
  that	
  friends	
  and	
  family	
  are	
  not	
  reporng	
  to	
  one	
  
another?	
  
11.	
  Do	
  we	
  have	
  a	
  “disaster	
  plan”	
  that	
  acknowledges	
  the	
  worst-­‐case	
  scenarios	
  that	
  could	
  result	
  within	
  our	
  
team?	
  	
  
12.	
  Have	
  we	
  designated	
  someone	
  to	
  have	
  the	
  final	
  say	
  in	
  an	
  impasse?	
  	
  
13.	
  Have	
  we	
  had	
  frank	
  conversaons	
  about	
  what	
  might	
  happen	
  if	
  one	
  of	
  us	
  isn’t	
  scaling	
  well	
  or	
  has	
  to	
  drop	
  
out	
  of	
  the	
  venture?	
  
16	
  October	
  2015	
  
DEVELOPING  TALENT  •  GROWING  VENTURES    •  OPENING  MARKETS
	
  
Our  Future  Mabers	
   ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT
E N T R E P R E N E U R I A L    M A N A G E M E N T 
CONCLUSION
Summary
•  ‘Dig  for  your  idea’  and  be  ready  for  Everest.  
•  Understand  why  we  fail  so  you  can  succeed.
•  Hypothesize,  test  &  validate  your  assump[ons.
•  Search,  don’t  execute  for  your  business  model.
•  Talk  to  customers  (get  out  of  the  building).
•  Minimize  waste,  deploy  resources  efficiently.
•  Build  a  diversified  dream  team.
•  Use  lean  analy[cs  to  op[mize  funnel.
•  Have  fun,  it’s  an  amazing  journey.
•  Put  MaRS  to  work.  We  are  here  to  support  you.    
Thank you. "
"
"
Nathan Monk"
nmonk@marsdd.com"
@Cowboytweets"

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Introduction to Entrepreneurial Management - Entrepreneurship 101

  • 1. DEVELOPING  TALENT  •  GROWING  VENTURES    •  OPENING  MARKETS Visit  us  at  marsdd.com   ENTREPRENEURIAL   MANAGEMENT N A T H A N   M O N K ,   @ C O W B O Y T W E E T S   I C T   V E N T U R E   S E R V I C E S 1 4   O C T   2 0 1 5
  • 2. “ Running  a  startup  is like  being  punched   In  the  face  repeatedly, but  working  for  a  large   company  is  like   being  waterboarded.     Paul  Graham,  Y  Combinator 15  October  2014   Entrepreneurial  Management  
  • 3. “ 30-­‐40%  of  all  U.S.  startups  fail   (liquida[ng  all  assets)  and  95%   fail  to  deliver  projected  return  on   investment  or  breakeven  by  a   defined  [me  period. Shikhar  Ghosh,  Sr.  Lecturer,  Harvard  Business  School Entrepreneurial  Management  
  • 4. “ The  cost  of   being  wrong. is  less than  the   cost  of   doing  nothing. Seth  Godin,  Author-­‐Entrepreneur-­‐Marketer Entrepreneurial  Management  
  • 5. DEVELOPING  TALENT  •  GROWING  VENTURES    •  OPENING  MARKETS   Our  Future  Mabers   ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT E N T R E P R E N E U R I A L   M A N A G E M E N T DEFINING ENTREPRENEURIAL MANAGEMENT
  • 6. ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT   16  October  2015   What  does  it  mean  to  be  an  entrepreneur?  
  • 7. ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT   16  October  2015   You  do  not  need  to  just  solve  a  ‘pain’  or   ‘problem’  to  be  an  entrepreneur.   -­‐
  • 9. ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT   16  October  2015   1.  Your  knowledge  (educa[on,  career,  hobbies). 2.  Your  capabili[es  (proficiency  and  strengths).   3.  Your  connec[ons  (who  do  you  know/what  industries?).   4.  Your  capital  (access,  savings  etc.  “Ramon  Noodle  diet”) 5.  Your  brand  (what  are  you  or  your  partners  well-­‐known  for?). 6.  Your  pain  points  (what  inefficiencies  have  you  no[ced?). 7.  Your  passion  (any  markets,  products/services  you  love?). 8.  Your  commitment  (do  you  really  have  the  [me  and  effort?). Where  do  you  start  ‘digging’?  
  • 10. ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT   16  October  2015   The  one  key  ques[on. What  can  I  do  well  that  I  would  love  to  do  for  an   extended  period  of  [me  (and  possibly  fail  AT)? -­‐
  • 11. ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT   16  October  2015   A  set  of  principles  and  frameworks  that  are   aligned  with  your  passion  and  help  you  iden[fy  a   sustainable  and  repeatable  business  model,  while   managing  the  chaos  of  scaling  through  5  phases  of   business  growth.   What  is  the  discipline  of  entrepreneurship?                                            (Entrepreneurial  Management)    
  • 12. ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT   Are  you  ready  to  jump? Really? Are  you  sure? Seriously?
  • 13. ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT   16  October  2015  
  • 14. “ "Ever  tried.  Ever  failed.  No   maNer.  Try  Again.  Fail  again.   Fail  beNer.”   Samuel  BeckeC,  Novelist  and  Playwright   15  October  2014   Entrepreneurial  Management  
  • 15. ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT   In  order  to  succeed,  we  need  to  know  why   startups  fail.  
  • 16. 16  October  2015   1.  Startups  with  helpful  mentors,  track  performance  metrics  raise  7x  more  capital  /  3.5x  higher  user   base. 2.  Pivo[ng  startups  raise  2.5x  more  money,  3.6x  user  growth,  52%  less  likely  to  scale  prematurely.   3.  Everest  helps  prevent  premature  scaling:  team,  customer  acquisi[on  strategies  and  build.   4.  Solo  founders  take  3.6x  longer  to  reach  scale  stage. 5.  Business-­‐heavy  founding  teams  are  3.3x  more  likely  to  successfully  scale  with  sales-­‐driven   startups 6.  Tech-­‐heavy  founding  teams  are  3.3x  more  likely  to  scale  with  a  product-­‐centric  startup 7.  Balanced  teams  raise  30%  more  money,  have  2.9x  more  user  growth  and  are  19%  less  likely  to   scale  prematurely  than  technical  or  business-­‐heavy  founding  teams 8.  Founders  that  don’t  work  full-­‐[me  have  4x  less  user  growth  and  end  up  raising  24x  less  money   from  investors 9.  Most  successful  founders  are  driven  by  impact  rather  than  experience  or  money. 10.  Startups  need  2-­‐3  [mes  longer  to  validate  their  market  than  most  founders  expect.  The   underes[ma[on  creates  the  pressure  to  scale  prematurely.  B2B  and  B2C  isn’t  a  meaningful   segmenta[on  because  of  the  way  the  internet  has  changed  customer  dynamics. What  we  now  know.    
  • 17. Entrepreneurial  Management   The art of ‘high growth’ entrepreneurship is to master the chaos of getting each of these 5 dimensions to move in time and concert with one another. (SGR)
  • 18. 6-­‐  Stage  Life  Cycle  of  a  Startup 15  October  2014   Entrepreneurial  Management     ESTG   PMF   LSTG   BMC   Search 4 repetable & scalable business modelExtreme uncertainty • Learning   • Valley  of   death   DISCOVERY   • PMF   • PSF   VALIDATION   EFFICIENCY   SCALE   SUSTAIN   CONSERVATI ON   i: $100k / month threshold / scaling, BMC ops. 60% Search for problem space & fit (PSF-PMF) Valley of Death PSF   “Scaling  successfully  is  what  separates  eventual  industry  leaders  from  long-­‐forgoNen   startups  in  the  deadpool.”                                –  Michael  A.  Jackson  
  • 19. “ Success  is  going  from   failure  to  failure  without   loss  of  enthusiasm. Winston  Churchill   Entrepreneurial  Management  
  • 20. DEVELOPING  TALENT  •  GROWING  VENTURES    •  OPENING  MARKETS   Our  Future  Mabers   ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT E N T R E P R E N E U R I A L   M A N A G E M E N T FRAMEWORKS AND METHODOLOGIES
  • 21. The  Entrepreneurial  API   Entrepreneurial  Management   Business  Model   Stages   Lean  Iteraon  
  • 22. Who  do  we   follow?     The  Founders  of  lean,   disrup[on,  crossing  the   chasm,  business  model   innova[on,  startup   marke[ng  and  the   discipline  of   entrepreneurship:     Blank,  Aulet,  Christensen,   Ellis,  Mauyra,  Ries,  Moore   Osterwalder,  Chen  and   Wasswerman      
  • 23. 1.  Business  Model  Generaon   ALEXANDER  OSTERWALDER  
  • 25. 4.  Customer  Segmentaon   16  October  2015   Presentaon  Title  Goes  Here  
  • 26. Big  idea… We  no  longer  compete  on  a  product  or   service,  but  rather,  a  compe[[ve,   repeatable  and  scalable  business  model.  
  • 35. 2.  Customer  Development  (new  IP)   STEVE  BLANK  
  • 36.
  • 37. •  Translate business model hypotheses to test with customers •  Develop an MVP of the solution to test with customers •  Continuous testing of hypothesis. •  Careful analysis of customer interactions •  Pivot or proceed •  Product is refined enough to sell. •  Build demand through marketing & sales. •  Business transitions for startup mode to departments operating in functions Customer  Development  Cycle
  • 38. 3.  Lean   ERIC  RIES    
  • 39. ‘Lean’  methodology  favours   experimenta[on  over  elaborate  planning,   customer  feedback  over  intui[on,  and   itera[ve  design  over  tradi[onal  up-­‐front   development.      
  • 41. Why  is  all  this  important?
  • 42.
  • 43.
  • 44. 4.  Customer  Segmenta6on   ERIC  RIES    
  • 45.
  • 46. A  target  customer  is  a  group  of  poten[al   customers  who  share  many  characteris[cs   and  who  would  all  have  similar  reasons  to  buy   a  par[cular  product.
  • 48. By  choosing  a  single  market  to  excel  in,  your   startup  can  more  easily  establish  a  strong   market  posi[on,  and  hopefully  a  state  of   posi[ve  cash  flow,  before  it  runs  our  of   resources.      
  • 49. 5.  LEAN  ANALYTICS   15  October  2014   Entrepreneurial  Management     AlISTAIR  CROLL  
  • 50. THINGS  GO  WRONG.   COMMON  TENDANCY  IS  TO  CAPTURE  DATA,  BUT  WE  DROWN  IN  METRICS. WE  NEED  A  STANDARD  SET  OF  METRICS  NEED  TO  BE  GUIDE  STARTUPS ‘PIRATE  OR  LEAN  ANALYTICS’  HELP  ALIGN  AND  HOLD  THE  STARTUP  ACCOUNTABLE BUILD.  TEST.  MEASURE.  LEARN.   Why  do  we  need  lean   analy[cs?   EVEREST  SESSION  #5:  INNOVATION  ACCOUNTING  
  • 52. 6.  TEAM   15  October  2014   Entrepreneurial  Management     NOAM  WASSERMAN  
  • 53. E V E R E S T   S E S S I O N   # 4 :   T E A M   16  October  2015   Company  Rules “Decide  –  take  responsibility  –  be  humble  –  never  give  up  –  show   ini[a[ve  –  laugh  –  don’t  complain  –  find  a  solu[on  –  keep  on  –  take   pride  in  your  work  –  open  your  mind  –  embrace  change  –   collaborate  –  listen  –  improve  daily  –  lead  not  follow.”   TEAM
  • 54. RELATIONSHIPS,  ROLES  AND   REWARDS   16  October  2015   E V E R E S T   S E S S I O N   # 4 :   T E A M Source:  Founder’s  Dilemmas,  Noam  Wasserman      
  • 55. Ques[ons  to  ask  yourself?   1.  How  well  do  we  co-­‐founders  and/or  team  members  know  each  other’s  professional  abilies  and  styles?   2.  How  can  we  learn  more  about  each  other  and  maintain  open  communicaon?   3.  What  are  the  things  we  have  a  hard  me  talking  about?     4.  Can  we  construcvely  discuss  them  now?     5.  How  will  we  keep  tabs  on  these  issues  so  that  they  don’t  fester?   6.  Are  we  clear  about  our  roles?     7.  Is  there  any  overlap  between  people?     8.  If  so,  what  are  we  doing  to  prevent  fricon  from  arising?     9.  What  are  our  plans  for  separang  the  areas  of  overlap  as  we  grow?   10.  Is  it  possible  to  configure  the  reporng  structures  so  that  friends  and  family  are  not  reporng  to  one   another?   11.  Do  we  have  a  “disaster  plan”  that  acknowledges  the  worst-­‐case  scenarios  that  could  result  within  our   team?     12.  Have  we  designated  someone  to  have  the  final  say  in  an  impasse?     13.  Have  we  had  frank  conversaons  about  what  might  happen  if  one  of  us  isn’t  scaling  well  or  has  to  drop   out  of  the  venture?   16  October  2015  
  • 56. DEVELOPING  TALENT  •  GROWING  VENTURES    •  OPENING  MARKETS   Our  Future  Mabers   ENTREPRENEURIAL  MANAGEMENT E N T R E P R E N E U R I A L   M A N A G E M E N T CONCLUSION
  • 57. Summary •  ‘Dig  for  your  idea’  and  be  ready  for  Everest.   •  Understand  why  we  fail  so  you  can  succeed. •  Hypothesize,  test  &  validate  your  assump[ons. •  Search,  don’t  execute  for  your  business  model. •  Talk  to  customers  (get  out  of  the  building). •  Minimize  waste,  deploy  resources  efficiently. •  Build  a  diversified  dream  team. •  Use  lean  analy[cs  to  op[mize  funnel. •  Have  fun,  it’s  an  amazing  journey. •  Put  MaRS  to  work.  We  are  here  to  support  you.    
  • 58. Thank you. " " " Nathan Monk" nmonk@marsdd.com" @Cowboytweets"