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BIZ CONFESSIONS – Do you have one…?

[image source: candychang.com/confessions/]

Everyone has something to confess! But we’ll stick to BUSINESS CONFESSIONS. Why? Because it’s important to share a deep dark (or not so dark!) business secret that may have changed your course of life.  That may have turned your venture around. Something that taught you a life-long lesson.  A real-life incident that could help others learn from your mistake. Or simply set a great example!

We are initiating Biz Confessions with one of Alok’s articles here. To start with, please feel free to share one of your biz confessions as a comment on this thread. If the response is great, we shall start a separate section all together for Rodinhooders to come forth and “confess”…!

It could be something like, ”How you made your first million, what did you do with it”,  “How did you struggle to make it big?” or “What was the biggest mistake you made as an entrepreneur?” or “In hindsight, what would you have done differently….?” The list is pretty much endless. There are absolutely no restrictions here!

Also, if you are not comfortable confessing in public, but have a story you would still like to share – you could send it to me to post on your behalf as An Anonymous Confession. Trust me, I’m gonna take many a secret to my grave (but before I go there, you can find me at asha@rodinhood.com)…!!

Credit of this idea goes to Rodinhooder Ameen Noorul who merely sent a Fb message to Alok suggesting we start Business Confessions on trhs which would be an interesting and relevant new category! Thank you Ameen (p.s: look out for a shout in april’s winners)!

It’s confession time people. Here is Alok’s confession. Do comment. Do share. Do confess!

 

“I refused a General Electric term sheet in 2000 for a few points of valuation wrangling. I regret that now ‘coz it set us back in terms of an entry into the USA markets by at least 5 years.  Not to mention wearing the badge of being a GE funded company. As a rule, always stay engaged with VCs – updating them on milestones, new ideas, advice requests etc even if you have nothing to do with them. Just be on their radar at all times.”

I was born and brought up in a Marwari family where breakfast, lunch and dinner conversations (granny included) were about deals struck and money made. I guess that’s where I inherited my ‘entrepreneurial dna’.

It’s only after working in my father’s socks factory for almost 10 years and then taking the ultimate roller coaster plunge into the world of dot coms and mobile tech that I really learnt some heavy-duty entrepreneur lessons.

Post 4 companies, 7 Venture raises across my various companies and 2 successful exits (mobile2win china was acquired by the Walt Disney Co), let me share some insightful confessions with you:

Solve a BIG problem for a FEW folks or a SMALL problem for LOTS of folks – but nothing ‘in-between’.

In early 2000 in China, we cracked the elusive dual operator ‘sms connectivity’ [To explain – There were only 2 operators in China and both were govt. owned and hated each other.  At that time they would refuse to give a single COMMON sms ‘short-code’ to any private company. So, if China Mobile allotted you 7007 as your short-code, China Unicom would purposely give you 8008. Now, if you needed to communicate that short-code on say, a TV Ad (to get people to respond to you), you would have to mention 2 short-codes, who to send what to etc which was painful]. We cracked a short-code ‘8558’ that worked on both operators by presenting the potential of brand sms promotions and sms revenue to the 2 operators and they agreed! Only Nokia China had succeeded before us. So, when Disney started sniffing at China and figuring out how to buy a simple communication platform, we were the acquisition of choice. To come to the core point – we had solved a small problem but the one that applied to 400 million mobile users (the mobile population of in China)!

Don’t try and grow a Rose Garden in 1 month – it will take years.

Most new age entrepreneurs I meet (and some of the VCs who fund them) believe that growth and market share is a function of stepping on some magic accelerator of hiring people and throwing marketing and business development money around. Forget it. Look at the companies you admire – they grew slowly and steadily. During the phase they went berserk, they went broke. Tell yourself and your VC that creating real value is a 7-10 year grind – if you can live with each other for that long, set sail on that long world trip. You may be god’s gift to mankind, but mankind takes its own sweet time in unwrapping gifts. In 1998 when I started the concept of contesting online, people thought I was mad. Folks at TV companies used to make me sit in the sofa (with the courier folks) for hours and then refuse to meet.  In 2003, we created history with Indian Idol voting and contesting via mobile and landlines.

Hire folks who love what you do – not the bribe you offer them.

When I meet senior candidates for job interviews, I test them by asking if they are willing to take a haircut (small reduction) on their existing salaries – in return for the experience, small equity and a brand new learning I would give them. Their body language and reaction tell me what they came to me for – if it were that 10-30% salary jump they came to me for, I will not be the lucky person to ‘bribe’ them to join. All our key hires and my co-founders live with lower than market salaries for the kick of the job and the equity upside they may earn.

VC money comes when you need it the least and never when you want it the most – so say YES when it appears!

I refused a General Electric term sheet in 2000 for a few points of valuation wrangling. I regret that now coz it set us back in terms of an entry into the USA markets by at least 5 years.  Not to mention wearing the badge of being a GE funded company. As a rule, always stay engaged with VCs – updating them on milestones, new ideas, advice requests etc even if you have nothing to do with them. Just be on their radar at all times.

Don’t fight wars about dilution and valuation – it’s a wealth destroyer!

So many entrepreneurs I meet ask about how much they should dilute and if they will lose control of their company. I always remember Naresh Goyal of Jet Airways in these cases – he owns more that 100 airplanes but doesn’t fly any! The VCs is investing in YOU – not in some hijack plan to oust you and run your business. New age businesses are about people and their intellect combining with venture capital to create massive wealth. Those VCs want to slog you to make the 100x return for them – not do it themselves!

The world is your market – not the market you began in.

Our big success stories have come when we created business models that reached just about break even in India but really exploded outside of the country. As an entrepreneur – be ready to be in a market that needs you – not in a market that you may need.

Being a founder doesn’t always mean being a CEO or COO.

As start-ups, the founder/s take complete charge of the business and fire it up with the one priceless fuel called passion. However, as the business matures and processes and best practices are required, you must be able to give way to let the ‘been there, done that’ folks come in and take over. As the founder, take pride in the creation not the operations. My biggest achievement so far have been getting folks more capable than myself into my companies and giving them ownership roles to execute!

Earn like an American – Spend like a Marwari.

Get tuned to charging customers handsome fees for what you give them. Think American. Charge confidently and early on so that your business becomes something that the market gets used to paying for. At the same time, spend like a Marwari – tight and conservative. And if your VC asks you to go on a spending spree – ask them to give me a call.

Earn like an American – Spend like a Marwari!

Sell when the going is good – not when the time is right.

There is a big distinction in the point above. Lots of folks wait for the ‘right time’. That’s a big mirage. As an entrepreneur, you will know when the curve of value creation is flattening – hey it may not be a curve at all (which means it’s a dud) . So SELL and give the baton to the next runner to take over and run the next lap of your business. In 2006 we made a conscious decision to exit the VAS space in India and got 3x on our return (not the 10x we wanted) – that business would sell at 0.03x if we wanted to exit it now.

 

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Confessions of a Digital Entrepreneur was originally posted here.

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16 Comments

  1. I have too many things to confess, so here comes my first confession.

    I was very much interested in business but I had no guts to stand for it, business is a taboo for middle-class family.

    So after HSC, I went for engineering, as I wanted to be an engineer but my Idea of engineering and what Engineering college actually is, was a total mismatch. There used to be 8 am – 4 pm boring continuous lectures, some carpentry jobs in name of practicals, it was a complete shit and rotten syllabus. I wanted to start a business but there was hardly any time.

    So I finally planned to leave engineering and opt for some part-time course, so that I’d hv time to do something of my own but I knew no one would permit me to do so.

    So I stopped studying, all the time I used to be running, trying to start something of my own and miserably failed in 1st semester.

    Now I had a reason to leave but still my family didn’t budge, so during 2nd semester I secretly applied for Bachelor of Managment Studies course and purposely skipped all the exams of 2nd semester. I got admission in BMS and according to plan failed again in 2nd semester of engineering. Finally, my family had no choice but to allow me to change the course.

    BMS was a simple course and one of the most updated course in Mumbai University, I didn;t have to mug up, just had to write according to my experience.

    I used to get lot of free time, almost 12-14 hrs a day, so I teamed up with few like minded people and went on to start various ventures. Few ventures were moderately successful and few failed miserably but I gained lot of experience and at the end of the day, I hv earned the tag of ‘Entrepreneur’ which more significant than any other degree or certificate.

  2. wow aman.

    i’m a bit speechless…!

    thanks for sharing your straight-from-the-heart confession. your ‘entrepreneur’ tag is definitely more worthy than any other certificate….

    may the force be with you, always…

  3. Thank you very much. I am honored to receive compliments from you.

  4. Hello friends,

    As far as I know Entrepreneurs don’t hv inhibitions. Go ahead and post some confession. Confession need not be always negative, it can also be about how you bargained, how u cracked the deal, etc.

    Waiting eagerly for confessions and a dedicated section for confessions.

    Regards,

    Aman Jha

  5. Well I too have something to confess, After engineering I thought for a job and as it was my first job in a new city I had to work hard and I struggled a lot for it.

    I was a fresher so they were paying me less and even managing some how I lived there for 3 months, On the next valentines day one of my colleague told me to give an interview in a good company of this city, frankly speaking without any preparation I went there with only my resume.

    I cleared 4 rounds and finally the HR. called me and given me the offer later, to join this new company I had to leave the old one and for that I lied a lot to those people, they now know that I was lying them and they made it a big issue and I was in trouble at that time.

    But now everything is fine and working good here.   

  6. Confession!

    I am a trader. A system Trader who deals in Futures.

    Now Futures requires huge sum of money to even make decent returns!
    I had around 2 lakhs saved from my Software engineer job after working for 13 months.

    My mom and dad told me to keep the money in Fixed Deposit(they are like any normal Maharahstrian couple, cute but stock-averse! :D)

    But I transferred all that money into my margin account and started Trading against my family wishes(Something I never did before)

    I hate lying to my mom! But Trading is my passion and I had to do it!

    P.S- I have still not told my mom, but now that I have resigned from the job, first thing that I will do when I return to Mumbai is go and tell my mom about this..

    P.S-2 – Thanks Asha for starting this. I am feeling much better!

  7. So did you earn some return, if yes then you can convince ur parents of your skills!

  8. I have done trading with dummy money for the past two years!
    And system trading is the only way to earn constant money from the market!

    So returns would start only after some months!
    But its more about passion and less about money! I am sure you would relate to it…

  9. Of course man! Chotisi zindagi hai, dhyan rahe koi kwahish adhuri na reh jaye!

  10. Well said Aman! 🙂

  11. wow surabhi… thanks for sharing this. am so glad things have worked out well for you….

  12. tejas… am sure your mom will forgive you. she’ll know your intent was in the right place…!

  13. Yes Asha..Thank you

  14. Yeah time changes everything and make every issue light as time passes.

  15. Can totally empathize, I completed my diploma in engineering and didn’t pursue B.E or B.Tech and went ahead with BMS. Started working at a very small firm and did whatever came up there and learnt a lot practically.

  16. Great! Anyway, you choose whatever course in mumbai university the application of the learning is zero. You can apply, what you learnt through experiences that cam along during that period.

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