This presentation consists of insights inspired by 33voices® interviews with Jenna Abdou.
Table of Contents
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Be an A+ Entrepreneur with Rebecca Kaden
How to Lead the Dream Team with Mike Townsend
Recognize When It’s Time to Let Go with TJ Parker
How to Choose Smart Partners with Emmett Shine
Remember Why You Started with Chieh Huang
Don’t Give Up and Don’t Get Pissed with Scott Birnbaum
Always Move Forward with Courtney Klein
Credits
Investors want to partner with entrepreneurs who are “crisp thinkers.” Bring your big vision
to life with the actions you’re taking today.
On A+ Entrepreneurs: “There’s a way they speak with vision, not
just about what they want to do next but six steps down the line; Being able to articulate
that in the first meeting and communicating that you have that big vision and then in the next sentence, when you drill down, being able
to say tomorrow we’re doing this.”
Your team is the most important indicator of your success as a founder. Those who succeed are intuitive about building their team, knowing
when they need to grow it, and successfully onboarding new team members.
Mike Townsend
@Mikettownsend
Co-Founder and COO of HomeHero
How to Lead the Dream Team
Define your culture and own it. HomeHero’s mantra is “Dream it. Plan it. Do it.” Establish a credo that enables team members
to completely own their roles and constantly initiate new projects.
Support your team members outside of the office. If your CTO wants to
get in shape or your VP of Marketing wants to learn Portuguese, make it a priority
to actively help them feel fulfilled.
Maximize your ability to be an intuitive and responsive leader by asking: “Are you as happy as you possibly could be here?”
Build Idea Teams. Despite proximity, cross-functional collaboration doesn’t evolve on its own. To ignite it, build HomeHero Idea
Teams: Groups of three team members who work in different departments.
Idea Teams meet for 45 minutes every week to discuss current projects,
challenges they’re facing, and new apps, products, and hacks they’ve learned. The
teams not only promote social relationships, they also enable you to constantly optimize
your organizational processes.
Praise the execution, not the output. “Appreciate, respect and give credit to
the execution of ideas.”
Whether the results are positive or negative, successful teams focus on
the effort placed rather than the outcome. The most telling aspect of a new project is
what the organization learned and how they can improve in the future.
Appreciate and celebrate incremental progress. Cultivate your team members confidence by
consistently acknowledging their contributions, regardless of the outcome.
Recognize your team members uniquely. Recognition is only as deep as the way it’s
received. As a founder, you’re responsible for understanding what makes individuals feel valued.
Whether it’s a donut on somebody’s desk, a quiet thank you or an announcement at your weekly meeting recognition is most
meaningful when it resonates.
TJ Parker
@TJParker
Co-Founder and CEO of Pillpack
Recognize When It’s Time to Let Go
Hire great individuals who are increasingly more successful at their jobs than you ever
were. Once you hire them: Get out of the way.
“Find a balance between being close enough to things to provide guidance and
make sure everything is consistent, as well as getting out of the way enough for people
to really succeed in their jobs.”
Practice the ability to clearly articulate where your business will be in five to ten years.
Drill the vision down into actionable items you can accomplish today.
Emmett Shine
@Emmettshine
Founder and CEO of Gin Lane
How to Choose Smart Partners
As CEO, you’re responsible for the brands your team partners with. Try asking these questions
before taking on your next project.
As CEO, you’re responsible for the brands your team partners with. Try asking these questions
before taking on your next project.What are the team’s ethos?
As CEO, you’re responsible for the brands your team partners with. Try asking these questions
before taking on your next project.Do they treat their employees well?
As CEO, you’re responsible for the brands your team partners with. Try asking these questions
before taking on your next project.How are their products made? Are they transparent, responsible and
ethically sourced?
As CEO, you’re responsible for the brands your team partners with. Try asking these questions
before taking on your next project.Does their product or experience
make the world better?
As CEO, you’re responsible for the brands your team partners with. Try asking these questions
before taking on your next project.What are the values grounding their vision?
As CEO, you’re responsible for the brands your team partners with. Try asking these questions
before taking on your next project.The deal breaker: Are they assholes?
As CEO, you’re responsible for the brands your team partners with. Try asking these questions
before taking on your next project.
Be cognizant about where you place your time and energy. As a founder, your
ultimate goal should be catalyzing projects. “Make them go from static to kinetic.”
Chieh Huang
Co-Founder and CEO of Boxed
Remember Why You Started
@Astrochieh
Your startup is and will always be your baby. However, there comes a day when you simply
cannot be a part of every decision. Identify exceptional VPs to lead each department.
“If you think you found the right person and you’re bullish on them, you would be doing a
disservice to yourself if you continue to inject yourself in that process.”
If you want each team member to own his or her role you have to understand what it requires. Chieh is incredibly active in Boxed operations, visits their warehouses weekly and spends a day there every weekend
to support his team.
When in doubt - Remember why you started. You will inevitably face challenges as a founder. Instead of panicking, ask
yourself how you would perceive your current success back in year one.
Not a single order was placed during the first 48 hours of Boxed’s existence. This is what
2013 Chieh had to say about it: “I can’t believe you’re doubting yourself. Things are obviously progressing well. Keep marching. What the
hell are you doing even looking back?”
Establish a clear definition of what it means to be on your team. As a leader, your
ultimate goal should be that every team member feels that his or her role building the company is a part of their life’s work.
This is how Chieh describes it: “Whether we push the button or ring the bell,
when we’re looking at that sign it’s going to be the folks surrounding me saying that: We
all built this. It is a true group effort.”
Actively invest in the individuals who work with you. Chieh started a
foundation to pay for Boxed team members’ children to attend college.
“I felt like it was the galvanizing moment for us as a company. People realized that ‘This guy says it all the time but he really believes in a long term vision for this company or else he wouldn’t do this.’ Walking the walk, as some
would say, really helped solidify that feeling across the company.”
Scott Birnbaum
@Scottdbirnbaum
Founder and Partner at Red Sea Ventures
Dream Bigger
Whether you’re a three person organization or a 3,000 person organization: Always
punch above your weight.
“It’s a numbers game. It’s about going and meeting with as many people as possible and continuing to hustle until
you get somebody to care.”
“Don’t turn someone into an enemy because they aren’t interested. Turn them
into an ally. Try to engage them as someone who can give you constructive feedback
and help you find the right partner.”
Courtney Klein
@courtklein
Founder and CEO of Storq
Always Move Forward
Silence the ‘what-ifs:’ “At the end of the day, I have to tell myself that there’s a reason I started this business. There’s a reason why
it’s going the direction that it’s going. I have to trust my gut, be confident, and not let all that
information erode that confidence.”
Always focus on what you’re going to do next. Don’t wallow or focus on things that happened
in the past. Embrace the path forward.
Hedge your bets by determining the magnitude of your decision and how it will impact your
business. Start small and deliberately. You’ll feel empowered to make decisions
when you can control the scale.
Be humble and kind to yourself. As a founder, it’s okay to say “I’m not perfect. I’m figuring it
out as I go. Hopefully I won’t make those mistakes again.” Remember, you’re
doing the best that you can.
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Presentation by Chase Jennings
Insights by Jenna Abdou