Ann Miura-Ko — The Path from Shyness to World-Class Debater and Investor (#331)
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“The main difference was that I was willing to outwork and outdo every competitor who walked in through that door.” — Ann Miura-Ko
Ann Miura-Ko (@annimaniac) has been called “the most powerful woman in startups” by Forbes and is a lecturer in entrepreneurship at Stanford. The child of a rocket scientist at NASA, Ann is a Palo Alto native and has been steeped in technology startups from when she was a teenager. Prior to co-founding Floodgate, she worked at Charles River Ventures and McKinsey and Company. Some of Ann’s investments include Lyft, Ayasdi, Xamarin, Refinery29, JoyRun, TaskRabbit, and Modcloth.
Given the success of her investments she was on the 2017 Midas List of top 100 venture capitalists. Ann is known for her debate skills (she placed first in the National Tournament of Champions and second in the State of California in high school) and was part of a five-person team at Yale that competed in the Robocup Competition in Paris, France. She has a BSEE from Yale and a PhD from Stanford in math modeling of computer security. She lives with her husband, three kids, and one spoiled dog. Her interests are piano, robots, and gastronomy.
Enjoy!
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#331: “Is That a World-Class Effort?”: The Story of Investor Ann Miura-Ko
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Want to hear my interview with Ann’s business partner? — Check out my interview with Mike Maples, Jr. from venture capital firm Floodgate, the man who taught me how to invest. Stream below or right-click here to download.
#286: The Man Who Taught Me How to Investhttps://rss.art19.com/episodes/a37b219c-ddc8-412e-a344-3aae64dee746.mp3Download
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QUESTION(S) OF THE DAY: What was your favorite quote or lesson from this episode? Please let me know in the comments.
Scroll below for links and show notes…
SELECTED LINKS FROM THE EPISODE
Connect with Ann Miura-Ko:
Floodgate | Twitter | Instagram
Foothill College
Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In by Roger Fisher and William L. Ury
Palo Alto High School
Stanford University
Official Cobra Kai Trailer — The Karate Kid Saga Continues
The Crash-Course Guide to Lincoln-Douglas Debate, Debate Central
The Socratic Method, University of Chicago Law School
A Theory of Justice by John Rawls
UK Parliament Debates Trump State Visit, CNN
Harvard Negotiation Project
Getting Past No: Negotiating in Difficult Situations by William Ury
What is BATNA? How to Find Your Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement by Guhan Subramanian, Harvard Law School Daily Blog
Japan in the 1950s by Alan Taylor, The Atlantic
Yale University
Hewlett-Packard
.NET
Things To Do In Kanazawa, Inside Kyoto
Pilot Juice Up 04 Retractable Gel Ink Pen
Nuuna Notebooks
Dungeons & Dragons
Lyft Is Finally Ditching the Furry Pink Mustache by Kyle Vanhemert, Wired
Stanford Technology Ventures Program
Investing in Thunder Lizards by Ann Miura-Ko of Floodgate, Stanford eCorner
MS&E 275: Intelligent Growth in Startups with R. Ann Miura-Ko
Qualtrics
Zimride
Founders Fund
Andreessen Horowitz
Floodgate: On the Hunt for Thunder Lizards — Case by Rory McDonald, Alix Burke, Emma Franking, and Nicole Tempest
Qualtrics: Rapid International Expansion — Case by Esther Tippmann and Sinead Monaghan
Y Combinator
Justin.tv
Socialcam
Xamarin
MongoDB — Case by Julie Makinen and Mike Speiser
Hewlett-Packard Imaging Systems Division: Sonos 100 C/F Introduction — Case by Frank V. Cespedes and Marie Bell
The Sunk Cost Fallacy by David McRaney, You Are Not So Smart
McKinsey and Company
Charles River Ventures
9/11: The Day of the Attacks by Alan Taylor, The Atlantic
Making Oprah
The Value of Aggression — Ode to Dan Gable
Google Cloud
VMWare
Deal Flow, Investopedia
Kleiner Perkins
Excel Venture Management
Sequoia
Ayasdi
TaskRabbit
Refinery29
Oracle
The End of Theory: The Data Deluge Makes the Scientific Method Obsolete by Chris Anderson, Wired
The Trolley Problem, BBC Radio 4
What School Could Be: Insights and Inspiration from Teachers across America by Ted Dintersmith
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
Quik Shade MAX Shade Chair
SHOW NOTES
Ann was so shy as a child that her brother would have to introduce her at piano recitals. [05:35]
What Japanese phrase would Ann mutter at English speakers as a hostile kid growing up in Michigan? [08:21]
How did Ann manage to get a handle on her introversion and start opening up to people? [10:16]
When did Ann first speak on stage without an introduction from her brother? [13:20]
Why did Ann persist with speech and debate even after a rocky couple of years? [14:39]
Ann has always loved competition. [16:06]
To what dark lengths has Ann been willing to go for a slice of pizza? [16:41]
What catalyst turned Ann from a lousy debater into someone who won tournaments? [19:46]
What is the format of debate competition? [24:12]
What resources does Ann recommend for people who want to get better at debating and structuring arguments? [28:24]
Observations on what passes for modern debate — in politics and my family. [31:47]
Life is not a debate, and it’s not always about being right. So what does Ann feel is the most important lesson she learned during her debating years? [34:06]
A look at the differences between debate and negotiation in spite of their similar toolkits. [37:19]
Ann shares her rocket scientist father’s story of coming to America from Japan and one of his favorite phrases: “Is that a world-class effort?” [39:30]
How Ann made a world-class effort at a job making copies and filing, and what keeping her father’s words in mind taught her about ownership of circumstances no matter how seemingly insignificant. [43:54]
How giving a stranger a tour at Yale resulted in the opportunity for Ann to shadow a major company’s CEO. [46:36]
Ann’s first job that primed her for world-class photocopying and labeling. [53:15]
As an office supply connoisseur with many years of experience, what are Ann’s favorite notebooks and pens? [54:58]
What personal artifacts does Ann hold dear? [56:18]
Ann talks about teaching Mayfield Fellows at Stanford and what she loves about the program. [58:12]
What is the reading list for the intelligent growth in startups class Ann is teaching at Stanford now, and what’s in store for her students this quarter? [1:00:11]
How a potential investor might spot artificial inflation of value among startups. [1:06:03]
Why did Ann deviate from her initial plan to become a doctor? [1:07:20]
What thoughts surrounded Ann’s abandonment of the doctor track in spite of the preparation it had taken to get there, and what did she know about herself that her parents and test scores didn’t? [1:10:59]
How did venture capital and investing in startups enter the picture for Ann? [1:15:40]
“What is Steve Jobs doing in this house?” [1:16:20]
A job offer accepted over shared interests and an examination of the unique interview that led to it. [1:17:36]
Ann’s second day at CRV was 9/11. What did she observe and learn about shepherding companies and investors through a stagnant economy during her time there? [1:22:05]
The most expensive words in investing. [1:25:27]
First principles thinking and the toughest leadership decisions that Ann sees come up most commonly. [1:25:49]
Knowing the difference between a winning strategy versus a strategy not to lose. [1:28:45]
In what ways might hedging manifest as a defensive strategy? [1:30:05]
The importance of focusing on your own race, as demonstrated by Oprah and Dan Gable. [1:31:55]
Ann’s take on why you need a little bit of aggressiveness in order to have the win. [1:34:08]
How did Ann meet Mikes Maples, Jr.? [1:35:09]
Why Ann pursued a PhD in computer security, what kind of company she was planning to start, and how Mike persuaded her to work with him instead. [1:38:36]
What was Ann’s initial reaction to this proposition, and why was it such an unusual proposition at this time in Silicon Valley? [1:41:20]
Why Ann’s first year at Floodgate was so hectic — and what she considers “the most creative and probably productive” period of her life. [1:46:07]
What’s Ann’s real first name? [1:48:18]
What constitutes a struggle for Ann, and how has she coped with difficult times? [1:49:17]
What are Ann’s superpowers? [1:55:10]
What are thunder lizards, and why is Ann hunting them? [1:59:23]
Is the scientific method dead? How does Ann see the world changing as a result of artificial intelligence and machine learning? [2:01:10]
Philosophy thought exercises and real world applications. [2:04:03]
Societal problems that need to be solved and figuring out who’s best able to solve them. Do collective interests and self-interests have to be misaligned? [2:07:07]
What books has Ann gifted or reread most? [2:08:44]
What recent purchase of less than $100 had the most positive impact on Ann’s life? [2:11:00]
What would Ann’s billboard say? [2:12:27]
What do the Japanese characters for Ann’s first name mean? [2:13:25]
Where Ann can be found online, how Floodgate got its name, and parting thoughts. [2:14:30]
PEOPLE MENTIONED
Mike Maples, Jr.
Frederic Chopin
Abraham Lincoln
Stephen Douglas
Socrates
Aristotle
John Rawls
Donald Trump
Allan Bromley
George H.W. Bush
Lou Platt
Bill Gates
Ann Livermore
Tina Seelig
Tom Byers
Ryan Smith
Ed Zschau
Michael Seibel
Stephanie Schatz
Richard Feynman
Lisa Brennan-Jobs
Steve Jobs
Ted Dintersmith
E.L. Doctorow
Izhar Armony
Sir John Templeton
Oprah Winfrey
Phil Donahue
Dan Gable
Diane Greene
Ramesh Johari
Jack Welch
Godzilla
Sam Harris