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Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days by Jessica Livingston
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“Over the years, I've learned that the first idea you have is irrelevant. It's just a catalyst for you to get started. Then you figure out what's wrong with it and you go through phases of denial, panic, regret. And then you finally have a better idea and the second idea is always the important one.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“The goal - at least the way I think about entrepreneurship - is you realize one day that you can't really work anyone else. You have to start your own thing. It almost doesn't matter what the thing is. We had six different business plan changes, and then the last one was PayPal.

If that one didn't work out, if we still had the money and the people, obviously we would not have given up. We would have iterated on the business model and done something else. I don't think there was ever clarity as to who we were until we knew it was working. By then, we'd figured out our PR pitch and told everyone what we do and who we are. But between the founding and the actual PayPal, it was just like this tug-of-war where it was like, "We're trying this, this week." Every week you go to investors and say, "We're doing this, exactly this. We're really focused. We're going to be huge." The next week you're like, "That was a lie.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“the less energy people expend on performance, the more they expend on appearances to compensate.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“I think there are very few people who have a capacity to see the future. So it can be difficult when you are talking about something where nothing about it exists yet.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Paul Buchheit: I'm suddenly reminded that, for a while, I asked people if they were playing Russian Roulette with a gun with a billion barrels (or some huge number, so in other words, some low probability that they would actually be killed), how much would they have to be paid to play one round? A lot of people were almost offended by the question and they'd say, "I wouldn't do it at any price." But, of course, we do that everyday. They drive to work in cars to earn money and they are taking risks all the time, but they don't like to acknowledge that they are taking risks. They want to pretend that everything is risk-free.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Much better to figure out where the marketplace is going to be in a few years, focus on providing a solution to that, and let the market forces catch up to you.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Venture capitalists, with the exception of people like Don Valentine, would tell you that they'd rather fund a great team than a great idea. The reason is that if they have a bad idea, great teams can figure out a better one. Mediocre people even with a great idea can screw it up in its execution. Or if they have a bad idea, then they aren't going to be in a position to think about how to change it. They're just going to pursue it blindly.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“I didn't really want to patent it because, for one, I don't like software patents, and, two, if you patent it, you make it public. Even if you don't know someone's infringing, they will still be getting the benefit. Instead, we just chose to keep it a trade secret and not show it to anyone.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Wozniak: Well, we added up to the total everything that was needed. If there was anything that neither one of us knew how to do, Steve would do it. He'd just find a way to do it. He was just gung ho and pressing for this company to be successful. And me, I was pretty much only in my technical head with the circuits.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Livingston: What is the key to excellence for an engineer? Wozniak: You have to be very diligent. You have to check every little detail. You have to be so careful that you haven't left something out. You have to think harder and deeper than you normally would.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“A startup is a company that builds some kind of technology that people want. The mistake that a lot of founders make is to build something they think users want, but that users don’t actually want." - Paul Graham”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Because you'll go through so many changes, I don't think it pays off to overanalyze the first business plan, for example. The first business plan is there to make sure you can use Microsoft Word.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“..determination is the most important quality in a founder, open-mindedness and willingness to change your idea are key, and all startups face rejection at first.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“In big companies, there's always going to be more politics and less scope for individual decisions. But seeing what startups are really like will at least show other organizations what to aim for. The time may soon be coming when instead of startups trying to seem more corporate, corporations will try to seem more like startups. That would be a good thing.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Some famous person said, "Success is 50 percent luck and 50 percent preparedness for that luck." I think that's a lot of it. It's being ready to take advantage of opportunities when they arise.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Fred Brooks said that the second system is always late; sometimes years later than you expect. And in fact, because of the ambition, usually it won't solve any of the problems. They've got a long list of things, and it will solve almost none of them in the end. So that's exactly what happened with these guys. They told customers, "Don't use the old system, because we have a new one that should be shipping in 3 months and it will be better." It actually took them more than a year and a half. So they suffered all these sales losses because the thing was late. They killed demand for the old product by telling them the new product was "just around the corner." Then, when the new product finally came out, some critical pages were literally a thousand times slower than the old system.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“A company that is not designed to create high-tech products is very unlikely to have the culture or the DNA that it takes to create high-tech products. So if you are a high-tech person in that company, then you're basically a glorified typist in some sense. It's very unlikely that the kind of people who would be successful in an entertainment company would even understand what programmers do that makes them more than typists.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Livingston: Some aspects of business turned out to be less of a mystery than you had thought. What did you find you were better at than you thought? Graham: I found I could actually sell moderately well. I could convince people of stuff. I learned a trick for doing this: to tell the truth. A lot of people think that the way to convince people of things is to be eloquent—to have some bag of tricks for sliding conclusions into their brains. But there's also a sort of hack that you can use if you are not a very good salesman, which is simply tell people the truth. Our strategy for selling our software to people was: make the best software and then tell them, truthfully, "this is the best software." And they could tell we were telling the truth. Another advantage of telling the truth is that you don't have to remember what you've said. You don't have to keep any state in your head. It's a purely functional business strategy. (Hackers will get what I mean.)”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“I'd say determination is the single most important quality in a startup founder. If the founders I spoke with were superhuman in any way, it was in their perseverance.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Apparently sprinters reach their highest speed right out of the blocks, and spend the rest of the race slowing down. The winners slow down the least. It's that way with most startups too. The earliest phase is usually the most productive. That's when they have the really big ideas. Imagine what Apple was like when 100% of its employees were either Steve Jobs or Steve Wozniak.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“when you build only software that you absolutely need, you don't get more software than you'll actually use.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Innovations seem inevitable in retrospect, but at the time it's an uphill battle.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Pick a big enough project, something that's really hard, something that over the years you can work on.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“People like the idea of innovation in the abstract, but when you present them with any specific innovation, they tend to reject it because it doesn't fit with what they already know.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Paul Buchheit: Then you have what we do with PCs, and that's technically pretty challenging—to take this big network of machines that are unreliable and build a big, reliable storage system out of it.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“A lot of the machines that Google is built on—commodity is the polite word for them—they're regular PCs and so they're not always the most reliable.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“some of the founders are just hardcore geeks that are never going to develop into good managers of a large company. Some of them are founders precisely because they wouldn't be good managers of a large company. So in those kinds of companies, you probably do want to bring in better management, if you can find it.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Why things happen, I just don't know. Maybe somebody has a need and, in our case, we had a need. That's what triggered the idea. Sometimes ideas are born out of necessity: you solve a problem for yourself, and you hopefully solve it for a number of other people too.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“Second is, don't try to change user behavior dramatically. If you are expecting people to dramatically change the way they do things, it's not going to happen. Try to make it such that it's a small change, yet an important one.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
“It's better to be young because you can spend a lot more nights, very, very late. Because you have to get things done, and there's almost no other way to get around that. When the times come, they are critical.”
Jessica Livingston, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days

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