TSP075 | Lylan Masterman – Transcription
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John Livesay:
Today’s guest on The Successful Pitch is Lylan Masterman, who is a VC at White Star Capital. He talks about the importance of branding yourself and branding your company that they have to be in line. He said, “What are you doing for your personal brand that can make you memorable?” Whether it’s something you wear or something you are known for. He said, “It’s not enough just to be nice, you have to be nice and helpful.” He said, “Everything going on talks about investors love to invest in people that have a passion for what they’re doing.” He says, “Tell me a story that gets me excited. It doesn’t have to be something that’s necessarily an exciting product, money is sexy just in itself.” So have your passion for what you’re doing. He’s personally in passionate about the internet of all things, and tells us some really fascinating things that are coming down the pike as it relates to that.
The interview begins in 45 seconds right after this information on how you can get funded fast.
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Hi and welcome to The Successful Pitch podcast. Today’s guest is Lylan Masterman, who is a venture capital investor at White Star Capital in New York. He has primarily focused on late seed and series A investments. He’s also a Kauffman Fellow, where he is doing academic research project on the internet of things. He previously worked as a software engineer in product management for 15 years, and he joined Atlas division of aQuantive in 2004 where he focused on big data. He helped lead the company’s Rich Media advertising technology platform. He’s also led Product organization for 4 early stage companies, and prior to joining that he worked at Microsoft and he’s also worked at Sierra Ventures which is a San Francisco based VC firm, so we’ll be sure to ask him the differences between San Francisco and New York as I’m sure there’s quite a few. Lylan welcome to the show.
Lylan:
Thank you John. It’s a pleasure.
John:
Before we get into all the wonderful things you’re doing at White Star Capital now, would you take us back to your days of being a software developer at IBM, and then being a program manager at Microsoft, did you have a vision that you were eventually going to get into VC? Or how did you go from that to where you are now?
Lylan:
Yeah, I was a computer science geek. I went to University of Waterloo which, for people who are not familiar with the school, it’s considered the MIT of Canada, or for the people in France is the polytechnic of Canada. From there, my last internship per qua in the ’90s was at Microsoft WebTV in California, and my manager at the time, we’d discussed career options and there’s some people down the hall who were product managers, or by Microsoft Power Lens program managers. We kind of agreed that that could be a really good path for me because I was getting frustrated spending hours on that, then trying to fix a bug in the code that was a missing semicolon. I like the interpersonal aspect while also leveraging my technology background. So I went to Microsoft full time in Redmond, that was some of the first team to launch a Visual Studio .NET. So the first ever .NET team in C-sharp and J-sharp.
Then I went to a company that I’d never heard of that time actually, in Seattle called Atlas, part of aQuantive, and we doubled and tripled the business year over year. It was just fantastic. I ended up having 4 jobs simultaneously. I was running the Rich Media and a product, that Behavioral Targeting Product, User Experience, and Internationalization all at the same time, because that’s what you do when a company is growing quickly.
Then in my last year there, Microsoft required us, for the $6 billion which at the time was larger than all of Microsoft’s other acquisitions combined.
John:
That’s quite an exit there.
Lylan:
Yeah. Skype’s subsequently surpassed us. What was interesting there is that Mike Galgon, was one of the co-founders of aQuantive, and at one point I approached Mike for a little bit of mentorship. I was considering to go to my MBA and I was already in my 30s, so it was now or never. So Mike was a great mentor for me, and in the discussions we talked about the history of aQuantive. The web was different back then, knowledge about Venture Capital is different back then, your show is not on back then.
John:
That’s true.
Lylan:
And Mike, he told me what the history of starting aQuantive, which was then called Avenue A, he told me about how he and his co-founders started but also how he raised money from venture capitalists. I didn’t even know what a venture capitalist was. But similar to how my manager at Microsoft in the ’90s, urged me think about product. Mike didn’t necessarily urged me to think about venture, quite the opposite, but he did awaken my interest into it even though he didn’t necessarily — I think, having this as your best choice of career. Because, you know, it’s a dark side and all.
When I started thinking more and more into it, and I thought, “I might just absolutely love this.” It was a perfect timing for my career because I was going already to business school, business school’s a great time to try something new, right? While at business school, I decided that I was going to try venture capital. I did not know that the economy was going to tank, and that I’d be looking for an internship in 2009. So what I did is I networked, and for me what that meant was, I looked up every single VC firm I was aware of or could learn about online, I read the bios of every partner in principle in the firm, and I would find the one person in the firm who I thought had the most similarities to me, or most affinity to me as some people put it, and I would email that person.
I’ll give you the clue. The colloquial version of the email, because the email’s very formal, but the colloquial version email basically said, “Hey, we have this in common. We both study mathematics, we’re both Canadian, we both work in online advertising, et cetera et cetera, and I think what you do for your career is interesting. Do you have 20 minutes? I’d like to pick your brain.” Now a lot of people were — yeah, go ahead.
John:
I was just like, I love that so much because I’m constantly telling the listeners, you must do your homework on the investors you are fortunate enough to pitch. What you just did was — this is also obviously how you got a job, but it’s that same — Look at the similarities because you want to make sure that who you’re even approaching for money has a lot of things in common with you, whether it’s background, experience, connections. So it’s what you just shared is gold. I love it. Keep going.
Lylan:
Then one of the investors I reached out to is a New York investor, Geoff Judge. Maybe we should check to see if it’s okay with him that we use his name, and in my conversation with him at the end of the call, he said, “Hey Lylan, I like you. I think you have some good potential. There’s no space at my firm to take on an intern, but let me introduce you to somebody.” So he introduced me to his friend, Mark Fernandes, and Mark’s admin wrote me back and said, “Mark would be happy to have a call,” and I did what you trained to do, why? “I very much would appreciate a call but I happened to actually be going to the Bay Area in a few weeks. Is Mark available to meet in person?” She said, “Yes.” Then I booked my flying ticket.
Then I met Mark in person, and Mark made it very clear to me at the beginning of the meeting, they had never hired an intern before, they had no desire too, and what I subsequently learned also is that the head of Sierra Ventures, the founder of Sierra Ventures is Peter Wendell, who actually teaches venture capital at Stanford GSB. So one can reason that if Sierra where to bring on an MBA intern, it would be from someone from GSB, but by the end of the call or by the end of the in-person meeting, Mark seemed interested. I think my technical background, combined with fact that I was already in my 30s, didn’t need to be overly coached had an impact. He knew that you could bring me on and I could run independently. I just owe so much to Mark for giving me that break. It was an absolute joy. From there, I had a great experience at Sierra, and then I applied for the Kauffman Fellows program.
John:
Let me just ask you to pause because there’s another gem there, the objections you got at Sierra. Most people would just say, “Oh well.” So, lying is not something we have ever propose people do, but, you were willing to go the extra mile, put your own money and spend your own money or own dime to get yourself there for that interview that didn’t look promising, but you still were willing to do it. So that’s that extra mile that a lot of people like, “I’m not going to do that unless I really think I have a good shot,” but you still went. You get there, all you do is hear a bunch of objections about why they never do it, and if they do do it, it’s going to be from somebody from some place else, and then you are able to turn that around. That’s the kind of tenacity and persuasive selling skills or storytelling that’s required to get someone like you now to say yes, correct?
Lylan:
Yeah, very much so. The idea of what you said earlier, of researching somebody, of understanding their background, understanding your commonalities if there are some, you don’t need to have some but at least show your research mean, and you didn’t just simply do a copy and paste, right? Maybe we’re drastically different about something and you want to talk about that. That’s fine. But just show me that you didn’t do a copy and paste and that you’re willing to do a little bit of effort just the way I continue to do.
John:
It can even be somewhat playful, right? I see you speak French, I eat french fries, does that count, right? It’s something that…
Lylan:
Yeah. I haven’t received that one but yeah, at least it would show some level of research.
John:
Right, and some playfulness and some human — Like if you want to stand up from the crowd, sometimes you have to do something a little out there like that. Alright. So you’re doing well there and then suddenly the Kauff, tell us about the Kauffman experience.
Lylan:
Yeah. So at Kellogg, Azeus Jelani was a year ahead of me, and he’d been in there for the Kauffman Fellows program. I learned about it, a little bit about it from him. I looked up the list of Kauffman Fellows who have history in the program and there are many fellows who are part of the who’s who of venture capital. The program is a two-year program where we meet once a quarter for three or four consecutive days, right? And in the times that we meet once a quarter, there is a fixed curriculum. The curriculum is specifically on how to make us a better technology investor. So the curriculum doesn’t relate to term sheets and financial terms, let’s assume that we learn that on the job or we’ve already learned it, and if we don’t then we can just ask.
Let me give you two of my favorite examples of the curriculum. One example was how to be a better board member, and so what Kauffman did is that they invited internationally recognized VC’s who are known as being exceptional board members.
John:
Wow, and now are these advisory board members or a board member of directors?
Lylan:
The board of directors, because generally as a venture capitalist —
John:
Yeah, they’re on the board. Just want to clarify for the listeners.
Lylan:
Yeah, absolutely. That training was outstanding, and then there was another session on…
John:
Before I let you jump off of that, do you have one or two takeaways that what makes a great — or how can you become a better board of director?
Lylan:
Well, everything that happens in Kauffman is Kauffman confidential.
John:
Oh sorry, okay.
Lylan:
No, no, but what I can say, because a friend of mine actually recently published this, and so he leaked the information first if you will.
John:
Fair enough. Yes.
Lylan:
In addition to having great board members coming to speak to us, we had an entrepreneur coming and speak to us. A well-recognized CEO, and at one point the question was asked if he know about his board and his level of appreciation for the board, and there are many of his board members who he felt did not contribute as much as they’re capable of, they were not as helpful, and he thought that all those individuals had the networks, had the skills, had the intelligence, had all the attributes required to be helpful, but just had never invested enough time and effort and mental energy. When we asked him which of these people would you want in your board, again, the answer was surprising or was disappointingly low. So the key takeaways, they were often about some of the simple stuff John. Simple, read the deck, as a board member, read the deck a week in advance assuming it’s the CEO’s, so the two week in advance. And if you have questions start asking those questions in advance so that you’re not staling the board meeting unnecessarily.
John:
We’re going to tweet that out. “Time, effort, and mental energy. Those are the three key elements to be successful in anything, whether it’s pitching for funding, being a good board member.” It’s all, like you said, simple things, but putting your time, putting the effort, and not just effort of being busy, but mental energy. I love that. That’s such a great line.
Lylan:
If you just do what intuitively feels like the right thing, and you make your portfolio coming a priority, that should naturally occur. There’s a lot of the small things too, so your behavior in the board meeting. How often are you checking your cellphone or for email? Are you writing down notes for yourself about what’s been discussed, and about your follow up and your action, and as how to be helpful. That’s important stuff.
John:
Sure. Well, it shows you care, right?
Lylan:
Yeah it does and we should care, right? Because our job is on the line, our personal income is on the line, our reputation is on the line, and in the life of most companies out there, the CEO is a CEO that was driving the company, but there can be one or two seminal moments where an outsider, as in a board member will observe something that the operational team, the CEO, the C-levels, the VP’s, will not observe because they’re stuck in the wheats. And it takes an attentive board member to recognize a seminal moment and to make a certain recommendation or to even ask the intelligent question allows the CEO or the team to reach a certain conclusion.
John:
Well, I love that. That’s so great because it works both ways, doesn’t it right? When you’re pitching someone like you to get funding, you better be sure your phone’s turned off. You better be sure you’re listening to what you say and maybe even taking a note during the pitch meeting, right? So you show that you’re engaged.
Lylan:
Yeah absolutely, and it’s fine to have your laptop open the whole time if it’s clear that you’re taking notes, and you’re not overly multitasking. Or if there is something urgent in your life going on and you’re expecting a certain phone call, just say so. One little thing that I try to do, and I think I do more often than not, is when I do have a meeting with someone I know, I have another meeting coming up thereafter, instead of being the guy who is always checking his cellphone for the time or checking his watch, I set myself an alarm. So in that way there, I’m not rudely checking the time, I trust that my alarm will notify me when it’s time to start wrapping up the meeting.
John:
Right. Nice. That’s very helpful. Alright. So you’re meeting once a quarter, obviously it’s a huge commitment: how to learn to be a better board member. Is there anything else you can share from those confidential quarterly meetings that’s what you’ve learned or no?
Lylan:
Well, there was another session on how to best define your personal brand and your firm’s brand. You can imagine that the VC’s that we invited to speak on the branding side were different than the board member’s side. Because some people are much better at one than the other, and so for us we ought to pick and choose and learn from the best at each part of the curriculum, is key to Kauffman. On the branding, it’s all the normal stuff that we talked about just applied to venture. So branding is specially difficult for VC’s who are considered generalist, and a generalist is defined as a VC who invest in many different categories.
John:
Right. You don’t specialize, yeah. Like we only do medical or we only do fintech, then people will say, “Okay, that’s your brand.” But there’s still so much branding that can be defined and I can’t wait to talk about White Star’s branding in a second, but please keep going about what is it that the — I”m really curious about what they might have told you about how important it is to have your own personal brand?
Lylan:
Yeah. Your personal brand and your firm brand need to be very complimentary, I certainly hope so, but at the same time, we are each individuals, and we each have our own way of being memorable within the firm. That’s why it is, I hope with all firms. So be it that you organize events, be it that you wear some kind of a kick off to use a term, right? But at the end of the day those are great hooks into what is the core of you and your firm, right? So it’s fine to have that little memorable thing that gives someone a reason to remember you, but then they also have to remember you for the key two things which are being really really nice, or being incredibly helpful or useful. Because a nice person who’s not helpful is just not all that valuable, right?
John:
We’re going to tweet that out. “You must be nice and helpful, not just nice.”
Lylan:
Yeah, it’s absolutely critical and there’s some people out there who are known as the nice guys or the nice women. It’s important to be nice but the buck does not stop there.
John:
I also like this concept of your personal brand is defined by what can you do to be memorable. That’s another great tweet. It’s so important, so is it something you wear, a certain hairstyle, colored socks, or you’re known as the go-to guy for events, or you’re known as a go-to guy for being able to help people with their pitch or whatever it is, right?
Lylan:
Yeah, and it’s like there’s also — that stuff is a little bit kitschy but it works as long as it’s seen effectively. Then there’s just the core fundamental parts of branding. One of the firms that I admire the most in the whole wide world is Emergence Capital. Emergence is truly a top tensile firm, a fantastic portfolio. The people I know there are — I can’t speak highly enough of, and at Emergence, they define themselves early on as the firm that invests in SaaS, before people even knew what a SaaS was. They use a couple of other terms around SaaS because they started investing in SaaS before the term SaaS, I think, was even defined. Then they invested early on in sales for Stockholm, and so that’s a strong form of branding.
All the other stuff helps, right? First on capital. What do they invest in, right? There’s something nice about either by your name or just how you define yourself externally, that people know you for something important and as applicable to many entrepreneurs.
John:
Well, let’s talk about the branding of White Star Capital. Before the show started, you told me a little story about how they came up with that name White Star for the VC.
Lylan:
Yes, so White Star fundamentally, we are transatlantic firm. We have investments in many parts of western Europe including London, Paris, Berlin, Stockholm, and also in North America including New York, Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa. We even have some investments in LA and San Francisco, and looking at the history of what brings both sides of the Atlantic together, well, White Star Cruise Line, I may not have the exact details straight here, but it’s effectively the first cruise line, commercial cruise line across the Atlantic.
John:
Perfect. That said it all, right there, and even the little logo has a white star obviously. It instantly brands you as a place that is international and cutting edge, if you bring the first and all that other great stuff. Now in your bio, I talked that you live San Francisco as a VC and now you’re in New York as a VC. I rarely get the chance to talk to people who’ve done both coast and they’re so different. What would you say are some of the differences about being a VC based in New York versus San Francisco?
Lylan:
Yeah. The differences are shrinking, I must say that because New York is becoming very much more focus on all the industries of technology. It’s no longer so strongly focus on ad tech and fintech, and fashion media and so on. That being said, the competitive dynamics in the west coast historically in the last few years, even though it is slowing down a little bit now, are different. The time it takes to make an investment at the area has shrunk because of competitive situation. So my friends who are their investors, in order to make the best investments, some of them have learned to be more proactive at creating investment theses or mini theses if you will. So identifying some sub sector tech and researching it in advance, so that when it comes time to actually speak with a certain company that’s trying to raise the amount of money that you generally invest, that you already have your market knowledge and so you don’t need to do catch up. So the reliance of a lot of VC’s have an investing companies that’s introduced to them, that’s decreasing. It still exist so very strong, but the proactive investors who go out there and say, “Here’s what we invest in. Here’s where we have established in thought leadership. Here’s where we have strong knowledge.” That allows you to make investment decisions a lot more quickly.
John:
Now, one of the pride and glories of your portfolio is the Dollar Shave Club, which is such a success story. Can you share with us where you got involved? Was it seed into series A or how did you get involved with Dollar Shave Club?
Lylan:
Yes, so we are investors in a company called Science. Science is also located in LA as a Dollar Shave Club, and Science is effectively a startup incubator. They call themselves a studio, and that’s what really what they are as a startup studio. So one of the startup studio companies that came out of Science was Dollar Shave Club, and by being an investor in Science, the head of Science is very good at letting his investors know when there’s something good coming from his program from a studio. That’s when we learned about Dollar Shave Club and this was before the video came out. So it was very good timing.
A funny story with Dollar Shave Club. I was having coffee with a friend of mine in venture capital a couple of months ago, and he had taken a deep look at Dollar Shave Club, but he ended the past thing and his reasons were very sound at the time, right? No product, no traction, they’re still are creating some video has going to go viral. Yeah right, and then of course they do the video, it goes viral, and all his friends who didn’t even know that he had even looked at Dollar Shave Club are now sending him the video.
John:
It kind of like rubbing it in your face, right? You can’t predict what’s going to viral or not. That’s for sure.
Lylan:
Yeah, and they didn’t know that they were rubbing it in his face as you put it, but yeah, and he was like, “Darn it!” But looking back at his notes, his logic was sound.
John:
Sure, but somehow you still did get involved with that, and it’s been a huge success.
Lylan:
Yeah, and it worked out really really well. The most recent round of financing was quite large, and the number of products that the company now has, it’s a lot more than just shaving products.
John:
Oh I know, I’m a customer. Everyday, from what to wipe your butt with to — I mean, it’s hilarious branding but it stays consistent. It’s as all funny.
Lylan:
It is.
John:
It’s great, and talk about disruptive, I just love it. Now, can you share with our audience since it’s called The Successful Pitch, what you think makes a good pitch?
Lylan:
Yeah, ultimately, giving a good pitch, I liken it to the word “story”. I assume some other VC’s have told you the same thing. It has to be a story that gets an investor excited. Now, don’t get me wrong. Some of the best stories for me are really unsexy boring businesses, but at the end of the day, money is sexy.
John:
There’s a good tweet, yup.
Lylan:
And that can be misinterpreted by some people. But people who understand the crux of what I’m saying, the genesis of what I’m saying, is that now you can be doing a startup on some improving database, server, something something, right? You tell your friends about, your non-geek friends, about improving something at database, and tell your parents if your parents are not technically inclined about improving something on database stuff. That doesn’t sound all that glamorous in a way, right? It’s not like working on a social media startup, but still, a company that’s working on massively improving a database in some form or doing some artificial intelligence product for the enterprise. Those can often also be really really a compelling businesses. They’ll generate meaningful revenue and meaningful recurring revenue.
John:
It’s great, and do you often have people come to you at seed, and then you’re there for their second rounds? Is that a common experience?
Lylan:
Yes, so there are times where we are the first institutional investor. Sometimes that’s often a seed round, and there are times where there are already great seed investors and it’s time for the company to raise an A, and those seed investors, they don’t have the capital, the check size is too big for them, and we’re there for the A. Ultimately, that’s a core part of the White Star strategy, is to do the late seed and the series A, and it helped our companies get to the B. That’s very important to the help and get to that next step.
John:
What would you say is, besides growth and traction and hitting the milestones are some of the things that are so important to help somebody get from series A to series B?
Lylan:
Yeah, the quality of the team, right?
John:
Because back — just of the same as a seed, it’s amazing how that never goes away, does it?
Lylan:
Yeah, but you know, suddenly when you’re trying to raise your — for every round, every subsequent round, there are higher expectations on the team. So, one of my colleagues, Christian Hernandez out of London, one of the founders of White Star, he blogged about this recently, how it’s important to be leading a company that is today’s company, not yesterday’s company. So today’s company, the CEO may have been also historically doing most of the finance, or heading a product. But at some point, the company should get big enough, that the CEO should not have time to do both. So you need to bring in a head of finance or the head of product, et cetera et cetera. It’s fine to go dabble a little bit in those areas and to coach on those areas, but ultimately at the end of the day, as your company continues to scale, you need to bring on leaders in each of those job functions.
John:
Including, I would assume, a more impressive board of advisors that you might have in the seed round, correct?
Lylan:
The board of advisors can be helpful. When an entrepreneur tells me that here she has an extraordinary board of advisors, I look at the name, the titles and all that, but then what matters most to me is okay, these are great names and all, but what have they done for you lately? How active are they? Are they people that you — that are in the office regularly or are they people that you have a call with one hour a week? Are they people who say, “Yeah, call me up, I’ll try to help you,” and at the end of the day, they end up calling me once or twice a year.
John:
Yeah, very different levels of involvement.
Lylan:
Yeah, and that’s critical because at the end of the day, the people who are working the greatest number of hours on average in the company, are often, not always, but often the most influential.
John:
Interesting. Now is there a book that you would recommend founders read about life or funding, or anything you just think is important to them to know as people?
Lylan:
Yes, so I’m going to avoid a lot of the obvious books, of that written by Mark Henry’s and all those kinds of, fabulous books by the way, Brad Felix’s et cetera. I’ll go a little bit off a beaten path. There is one book that I still remember something from, even though I read it in 2009, and the book is called The Trusted Advisor. In The Trusted Advisor they talked about the formula for being a trusted advisor, and really it’s not about being a trusted advisor, it’s a formula for trust.
John:
I love it.
Lylan:
And the formula, I call it the CRIS formula, and you’ll see why. To develop trust, you must have a high level of credibility, reliability, intimacy, and then a controlled level of self-interest. CRIS, C-R-I-S. I try to break this rule. I try to find errors in this and ultimately, really to come down to those four: credibility, reliability, intimacy, and just don’t have too much self-interest.
John:
Wow, control self-interest, that is a really tough one for a lot of people and it all goes back to have a little empathy for your customer, and a little empathy for the investor, right?
Lylan:
Yeah. Absolutely.
John:
Nice. It’s been such a pleasure having you on, Lylan. Is there a way that people can follow you on social media? What’s your twitter and all that good stuff?
Lylan:
Yes, so just a quick correction, my name is Lylan.
John:
Oh I’m sorry.
Lylan:
It’s alright. Yes, so my twitter handle is @lylanm. I don’t publish much on LinkedIn, actually LinkedIn, I think I’m also lyanm. Then I have a specific blogging strategy that I haven’t launched yet, but stay tuned. Ultimately through the White Star network, I’ll be publishing through there probably on medium. Who knows?
John:
Oh that’s great. Well it’s interesting because I take the podcast and transcribe it to a medium as well so we’ll be able to do that as well for you. Well thanks again, it’s been a pleasure. You’ve given us so many. I love this trusted advisor criteria and how important it is for the team to continue to evolve as the funding gets bigger. Those are incredible takeaways.
Lylan:
I appreciate it. Thanks John.
Thanks for listening to The Successful Pitch Podcast. If you liked the show, please go to iTunes and write a review, and encourage your friends to write reviews too. It really helps get the word out.
You know, people say that the longest distance is between someone’s mouth and their wallet. People can tell you they’re going to invest but when it comes time to write the check, they don’t do it. So, how do you get people to say yes and then follow through? Visualize yourself on the left side of a riverbank and you have to cross the river and on the other side of the river is where the funding happens.
So, first, you make up your idea and then you make it real and then you make it reoccur. Once you start dipping your toe into the water to get to funding, that’s where I can help. I get you across that river faster than you would on your own with a lot less frustration than you will get when you hear a bunch of no’s and you don’t know why. So, if you want some help getting funded faster with less frustration, go to my free funding webinar, sellingsecretsforfunding.com/webinar and sign up and get in depth information on how you can get funded fast. Thanks.
TSP074 | Laura Rittenhouse – Transcription
Posted by John Livesay in Uncategorized | 0 comments
John Livesay:
Today’s guest on The Successful Pitch is Laura Rittenhouse, the author of “Investing Between the Lines.” Warren Buffett endorsed her book, so she clearly knows what she’s talking about. She is an expert in candor. She has a candor investment fund, as well as a candor boot camp. She said, “When you lie to other people, you end up lying to yourself as well,” and she has seven systems that really help you be really focused on knowing how to be successful in investing. One of her key elements is looking at a shareholder’s letter and being able to predict how that company’s going to perform in the stock market, based on what kind of candor the CEO shows in that stockholder’s letter. So your communication is everything. She said, “Without candor, there is no trust, and nothing happens outside conversation.” So make sure that you’re having clear, concise conversations with people that tell them what your purpose is, that expands upon your vision for the company.
The interview begins in 45 seconds right after this information on how you can get funded fast.
Are you a founder struggling with your investor pitch? Do you need warm introductions to the right investors to get your startup funded? Do you need a funding road map to get you there fast? All of this and more can be found in Crack the Funding Code. Join host, John Livesay, and Judy Robinett, bestselling author of How to Be a Power Connector and board member of Illuminate Ventures, on their free Crack the Funding Code webinar. Simply go to judyrobinett.com – that’s J-U-D-Y-R-O-B-I-N-E-T-T dot com – and click on the webinar tab to see how to tap into their network of investors from around the world. There’s a link in the show notes as well. You’re only one click away from getting funded fast.
Hi and welcome to The Successful Pitch. Today, I’m thrilled to have as my guest, Laura Rittenhouse, who is a trust and valuation expert, as well as a financial strategist and innovation coach to Fortune 500, and small kept companies. She’s the founder and CEO of Rittenhouse Rankings, and the author of an amazing book called “Investing Between the Lines,” how to make smarter decisions by decoding CEO communications. I’ve had the opportunity to talk with her before the show, and you are all in for a huge treat. Laura, welcome.
Laura
Thank you John. What a pleasure to be with you on this call.
John:
Well, you are, not only someone who’s smart and kind and connected, but just so enthusiastic about life. I just love people like you who make the world a better place. So, before we get into all the books and your connections to Warren Buffett, who by the way, everybody — Warren Buffet said that you are on the side of the angels. So Laura is in fact somebody that you’re going to want to get to know and you must read her books, Investing Between the Lines, Buffett Bites, just such an expert. How did you become who you are? Take us back a little bit before you started your company, and your first early jobs that made you want to get into all these world of investing.
Laura:
Well, coming out of college, my first job was being accepted as a Peace Corps volunteer.
John:
Oh, I love it.
Laura:
And I worked in an orphanage in Turkey, and that was one of the most meaningful — it was a great experience because I was a total failure. Well, it wasn’t a total failure but I was a failure in a sense that we had signed on for a two-year commitment, and it ended up being one year because the revolutionary fist of a free and democratic Turkey wanted to bang on their heads, and it started that it would be a good idea for us to leave the country at that point.
John:
Well, that leads me right into — I’m going to jump around, but we’ll go back to your background. You are ranked 100 most trustworthy people in America, by Trust Across America, so you’re an expert in candor and trust, but you just wrote this amazing blog “Clowns Without Borders”, and so now that I know that you’re in a Peace Corps, it then speaks more to why you have such authenticity around this. Can you just tell us a little bit about that great blog you wrote, “Clowns Without Borders”, and how you’re making such a difference in the world by just putting that out there for people?
Laura:
What an amazing story John, it also – the story gives us a window into the told topic of Candor. What I blog for forms, and what I’ve wanted to start is a series on candor heroes, and who are the candor heroes? They’re people who, and as you and I have discussed, are courageous and shining light into dark places. That mission is embodied in the very word. The word “candor” comes from the latin candeō which means to illuminate. So the word “candle” of course comes from that same root word, and when you think what does illumination do? It shines light into dark places. So the leaders who do that, very impressive and also very courageous, so the blog started out of a webinar I was listening to on a topic very much related to candor called Conversational Intelligence. Wonderful work and it links brain neural science. With the opportunity we have to use conversation on the way to create good things in the world and to avoid creating bad things.
So, the person hosted this, a man named Benjamin Croft, at the very end of the blog he said, “Well, glad that you’re on the call today and by the way, in a few weeks I’m going to be on the Syrian border, with Clowns Without Borders, which me luck.” And I was stunned, I thought, “Oh my heavens. Clowns without borders, I know about doctors but whoever heard of clowns.” So I immediately googled them, it’s a legitimate organization. I contacted Benjamin, he wrote back to me and we become friends since then, and yes indeed, this story happened after the Paris attacks. He was in Istanbul at the time, and he said “We have to do something. What can we do?” He used the money that they earned from giving this webinar, and they sponsored a tour of Clowns Without Borders. They brought Clowns over from the US, they contacted clowns in Turkey, and after about a week and a half of training and so on, they actually went to this refugee camps along the border.
There was one place, they went to an eastern Turkey, where only just a month before, of 20 people have been massacred on the same stage where they were performing. So it was almost like an exorcism there, to have this horrible experience and now transformed by the clowns into a place of joy. I felt so strongly that it was important to get this message out into the world, and I’ve got terrific response, wonderful emails back from people who were so inspired by it.
John:
Well, it’s just taking a wonderful concept of lighting something in dark places and bringing it to life because it doesn’t get much darker than that, and clowns are such an opposite. You don’t think you have time for laughter and joy when you’re in survival mode, and yet something like that can remind us all of how we can shift our focus so quickly, and like you said, “Don’t curse the darkness, light a candle”, right?
Laura:
Absolutely. I love what Benjamin said too when he said, “There are lots of things, we could’ve brought them stuff, but stuff can be stolen, stuff is used.” We wanted to bring something that couldn’t be stolen, that could last forever.
John:
That’s so wonderful.
Laura:
With a memory like this, how can you not love it?
John:
Making a difference. Now you were at Lehman Brothers for 10 years, being involved with corporate finance and then now you’re running Rittenhouse Rankings, and you really have become an expert in being able to cut to the chase as it were, really cut through that clutter and get to what’s going on, so tell us about candor investment fund and what you do there.
Laura:
So leaving Lehman Brothers, and you asked earlier, how do I get to do the things I’m doing today? So I love to be in the Lehman Brothers, this was the time when I was still very much guided by the value of making sure that funds were taken care of, and serving them, and coming up with brilliant ideas on how they could run their businesses better. But I reached the point in my life where I felt that — I think that a lot people if you’re lucky, you get to the point where you say, “Well, who’s life am I living? Am I living the life I should live or the life that I truly was born to live?” And so I decided I wanted to take some time out, to figure out what that was. So I spent a year travelling, talking to people. A lot of the CEOs that I had worked with on Wall Street, called me and they said, “We still want to work with you. What can we do?” And so we began to set up investor relations program which at that time, was a new thing to do. In doing that, it became clear that the reputation of the CEO was a major factor in the stock price valuation, and so if my CEO clients who’d become truly effective authentic communicators, and build trust because without candor there is no trust.
Then this would be a very powerful way to enhance the valuation of their company, and also, because if you have trust as the foundation of a corporate culture in a business, you’ve got people operating and also, there’s wanting to work together. They’re aligned in a mission, aligned in a strategy, and you’re going to be generating better results than your competitors who don’t have high levels of trust.
John:
We’re going to tweet that out, “Without candor, there is no trust.” That is so insightful. What do you think caused you to be ranked as 100 most trustworthy people at business. You’re clearly an expert on this. I’d love to have you define what makes people trustworthy as they have to be candor and transparent, right? I believe you’d thrown the things you’ve talked about before.
Laura
Well, I have a client that when he introduces me to people, he likes to say, “I’d like you to meet LJ Rittenhouse. She spots bullshit faster than anyone.”
John:
That’s great.
Laura:
I consider that a great tribute.
John:
It is. Well, one of your key expertise is looking at a shareholder’s letter and a stock report, and not even have to read anything else to determine whether that’s a good investment or not, right?
Laura:
Well that’s exactly right John, and that’s what has led to creating the first ever candor investment fund. So, in that work I was doing was CEOs, working with them on their strategies in order to be effective with your investors, you had to have a very compelling story and it had to be real. Again, the basis of conversational intelligence is that nothing happens outside of conversation, nothing. Conversation is the special sauce that creates things in the world.
John:
It’s not email, it’s not your proposal, it’s not your business plan, it’s conversation, right?
Laura:
Well, that’s conversations about the business plan. It’s emails that stimulate conversation and again, person to person is still more powerful ultimately than digital to digital. I don’t want to take anything away from digital. We’ve seen that it can have a lot of power too, but in terms of — in my experience, moving things forward in the world especially new things that something like candor. It’s funny, people are afraid of candor. When I say the word, they get nervous, because they think that I’m judging them as to whether they’re lying or telling the truth, and more importantly, what people missed is the element of authenticity.
Mark Twain wrote so many wonderful things about candor, and truth and lying. He said, “Tell the truth and they don’t have to remember what you said.”
John:
There you go. Well it is so important when you’re pitching for an investor too, that you are authentic, because you can’t lie. It will come out during due diligence and the whole deal will fall apart.
Laura:
Right. Well there goes the trust. There goes the trust, but getting back, so you’re asking about the shareholder letters. So as I was advising my CEO clients, I read lots and lots of shareholder letters. I read my client’s letters and then I read letters of their competitors or their peer companies. Over time, I began to see patterns, and that’s the first step in creating a model of reality. That’s the first step in creating a taxonomy, so that you could begin to find the similarities and the differences, and the ability to compare and contrast. Does that make sense to you?
John:
It does. I think it’s fascinating that you can measure something like candor into structure, and then make productions based on that.
Laura:
Well the book, “Investing Between the Lines”, which I was so — I’ve never expected this. It was more than a dream come true, but this book was recommended by Warren Buffett in his shareholder letter. The grand daddy, the gold standard of all shareholder letters, and Warren throughout the years has been very supportive of our work. So, what the analysis when investors, portfolio managers, I’ve talked with them over the years and I’ll give them my conclusions about the value proposition, the investing value proposition in a company. It’s almost a ludacrest, they’ll say, “Yup, we understand. We agree with that. Yup, we agree with your assessment and management. Spot on. Yes, this is a strategic vulnerability they have. Yes they’re doing great. They make great products.” So much agreement, and at the end, I’ll sit back and I’ll say, “Well it’s just great that we see so much of the same thing, but let me just observe something.”
Number one, you spend hours and hours running spreadsheets, talking to management, talking to employees, visiting customers, talking to competitors, going to industry conferences, you’re spending — doing all these effort, all I did was read the shareholder letter and we came out with basically the same conclusions.
John:
Crazy. It’s a huge amount of time and money you’re saving people if they just use your expertise. So what advice would you have Laura, for someone who is a founder, maybe they’re public, maybe they’re not, but if they have to communicate in whatever form that’s going to be whether it’s a pitch, or a shareholder’s letter to people so that you can get a sense of who they are. Is it the candor that we’ve had some troubles and we’ve address it, versus trying to just gloss over things? What is it you really look for when you’re looking at those letters?
Laura:
Well there’s something called a Strategic Balance and I described this in my book. After all the years of reading these letters and creating this taxonomy, it became clear that all the topics we were coding and scoring for, could be organized into a seven system model. And those seven systems are strategy supported by accountability systems such to, vision supported by strong leadership, the backbone of a company of the stakeholder relationships, the quality of the those relationships, and then the center of a business is the commitment to capital stewardship, after all, it’s a profit-making company, and if you’re not focused on how smartly you’re allocating the capital, you’re probably wasting it and you won’t be meeting your investor’s expectations and you could go out of business. So capital stewardship is a key principle, something to observe, and most importantly, is candor – that’s the seventh system in this business. As we’ve said, candor supports the quality of the stakeholder relationships and builds trust.
Now, you asked how do we make assessments of companies? Well, we have seen over time that companies that are balanced, which have high scores, high linguistic scores, content scores, and are balanced between — they’re not all strategy, but they have good balance between strategy and accountability systems. Good balance between vision. It’s not over 50% vision and then very little on the other system. So companies that are very well-balanced, and you think about it, that gives them a solid foundation to deal with whatever the economy, their competitors, whatever gets thrown at them. So that’s one factor.
Another factor is the BS and the truth telling, and that’s a very important factor and those are the rankings that we publish every year. We rank order a hundred companies based on how much candor, positive candor, truth telling they have, and how much of the discussion or BS they show in their communication. Then when we correlate these top ranked companies and the bottom ranked companies, we found over the past decade that the top ranked companies outperform the bottom ranked, and also outperform the market over this period.
John:
So let’s talk about the connection between candor and vision, which is one of your other strategy, the systems that you talked about, I’d love to hear that connection and how important it is to balance your vision and your candor.
Laura:
Well, let me ask you, what do you think of when you think of vision?
John:
Well I think it’s important for a founder to have a vision that they can communicate to their employees, about where they see the company going, what the mission statements is, what the big picture is, and then turn around and communicate that to anybody who is going to invest, whether it’s an angel investor or stockholder eventually, and so having that vision and if that vision needs to change being able to communicate that with candor.
Laura:
I’m so glad you asked me that question because it gives me a chance to focus on something that I’ve been spending a lot more time thinking about. So you’re absolutely right. When people think of vision they often think of what’s our mission, and I think the word that kind of relates to that but I think is more powerful, is what is our purpose.
John:
There we go. Yup.
Laura:
What is our purpose, and I’ve been watching this video of Richard Leider, who does a lot of focus on this and he likes to say, “So, what are two most important days in your life? We can look on this as both a business and as one’s own individual life. Is it the day you were born or the day you die?” ‘No,” he says. Two most important days are the day you were born and then the day you learn why you were born – for a purpose.
John:
Nice. I love that. We’re going to tweet that out, “The day you were born and the day you learn why you were born.” Great.
Laura:
And that is no different from a company. If you’re in a company where you feel that this company is bringing something meaningful into the world, doing it with integrity, you can see what a difference it’s making. Boy! That gets you up in the morning, picks you up. It’s like Warren Buffett who likes to say, “I tap dance to work everyday.”
John:
What a great image that is, because there’s a purpose behind what he’s doing it. It’s not just to make money, right?
Laura:
Well, it is about making money because it’s his scorecard to tell who’s winning, right?
John:
Right, but if not just about that. He’s making it — yeah.
Laura:
But for him, it’s how he’s making that money — that support.
John:
Yeah. There we go, with integrity.
Laura:
How can we analyze companies better than others who are smartly, and who’s the really important distinction. How can we do it for the long-term? And what we have is the cancer, the cancer in our financial system. Here’s a tweet for you. “The cancer in our financial system is this focus on short-term dism.”
John:
Yes. That is a cancer, right, because you’re just constantly — that’s what causes turnover, that’s what causes moral, that causes fear, when you’re just focused on short-term vision of, “Oh, if we don’t hit number for the quarter year I’ll fire her.” We’re totally changing our purpose and our mission statement, and shutting down factories as opposed to seeing the big picture of what it could be.
Laura:
Exactly.
John:
What are some of your other quotes that you like from Warren Buffett? Because he has so many and I just want to hear what’s some of your favorites are, since you’re so connected to him.
Laura:
Well the one we shared that comes from his owner’s manual, and the reason why — it’s so interesting, Berkshire is the only company that has published an owner’s manual which means, just like if you’re buying an appliance and you get the instructions here, this is what you can expect from using this so he wrote the owner’s manual. If you buy the stock, this is what you can expect from us, it’s in the owner’s. The reason that candor is one of the principals that he follows and promises to investors, is because he says at the end, “The CEO who misleads others in public will eventually mislead himself in private.”
John:
There we go. That’s it. There’s the gem. If you lie to other people, you’re eventually going to lie to yourself, right?
Laura:
Exactly right, and thank you for saying that because that gets us into the topic of candor boot camp. I have worked with corporations on how to bring more candor into the organization, and that means working with teams. What’s most successful is when I worked with multi level teams, anywhere from presidents down to factory workers. It’s so powerful to get the people who don’t normally get to communicate with each other, have conversations with each other, to stimulate that, and there’s so much learning that goes on. It requires a certain humility, bringing humility to that, and hope in this that leads to innovation and creativity.
But, candor boot camp, when you think about it John, this is what we’re developing now, candor boot camp needs to be taught in three modules. So, first, and it’s what we’ve just mentioned in relation to the Buffett quote, first is intrapersonal candor. Bringing people together and helping each other. Suddenly confront the BS in their own lives. Now, what am I lying to myself about? What is special? What’s my purpose? What is my purpose and if I don’t know what it is how can I find that out?
So there’s that whole piece and you come up — people come out of that session and it’s almost like, I don’t want to say they’ve been to church because that has a certain kind of take these days, but it’s very free. However, once people have experienced what it means to live candidly, so go back into the workplace and work with other people that haven’t have this experience can be very hard.
So the next module is to bring teams together and practice different type of skills, and exercise so that people can practice team-based behavior.
John:
Because that allows everybody to be speaking the same language when you do that, right?
Laura:
Exactly, and feel safe. The whole point about candor, is that you create an environment where people feel safe to say what they’re really thinking and what they really need.
John:
You know Laura, it’s so interesting you said that, because to me that’s the highest compliment anybody can ever give me is, I say it, I feel safe when I’m with you to be myself. And if someone says that to me, and it’s also the highest compliment I can give anybody, right? I can take my mask down, I can be a little bit vulnerable with you. When you said earlier about humility, is one of the keys to innovation, that’s such an important takeaway for our listeners. When you’re pitching for funding for your company, you have to come across confident and humble at the same time. In other words, you have to be coachable because that’s where the innovation comes. You can’t know everything and nobody wants to invest in somebody who thinks they know everything, but they want somebody who has a vision, with candor and humility, right?
Laura:
Beautifully. Beautifully said. So that gets us to the third module which is creating the candid enterprise.
John:
What’s a candid enterprise? Tell us about that.
Laura:
We’re inventing that even as we speak.
John:
Love it.
Laura:
So, what it means is, okay, you start from the individual, the individual works in teams, but then there is a business, an enterprise or corporation, whatever, that has a set of principles, a set of goals and strategies that if these are not based on candor, then your teams are not going to be able to be supported in their efforts to candidly co-create and work together, and achieve greatness. So, there needs to be a design, design work, to make sure that the enterprise itself has principles and expectations built into it that — going back to our — just prior comment, that make it safe for people to experience candor on the job.
John:
It goes back again when you said this, “If you have a purpose of doing greatness, then everyone’s focus on that, as opposed to necessarily trying to claim all the glory for a big idea or something, right?
Laura:
Exactly.
John:
Yes because that’s — not only do you have to create a great team to get investors to want to invest in you, but then you also have to keep them working well together. It seems to me that this candor boot camp is the secret sauce to keeping a team on the right track, because you can get somebody who wants competitiveness and I want to get promoted over you, and I want credit for this, and you’re way of purpose, right? And it happens all the time.
Laura:
That’s right, and then that’s why those three levels, interpersonal team-based and enterprise, are absolutely essential to be viewed together, because if you have one and not the others it’s just, you can’t support people in this candid enterprise.
John:
How did you come up with the title “Investing Between the Lines”? I love the title so much and it implies a little bit of intuition, but I would love to hear how you came up with that title.
Laura:
Well, it’s a play on words, right? In fact a lot of people say to me, “Well, I love your book Reading Between the Lines,” and I have to say “No, no, no. It’s Investing Between the Lines.” But of course, that’s the phrase that most people are familiar with, and what does Reading Between the Lines means to your point? It means that you intuit that you’re taking signals on what’s obvious, the surface and you’re getting deeper meaning from it. So similarly, Investing Between the Lines means okay, I’m reading this and I’m intuiting ideas and analyzing, I’m processing information that allows me to make a better smarter investment decision.
John:
It’s so great. I love it. Laura, how can people find out more about you, Investing Between the Lines, the candor boot camp, Twitter, all that good stuff?
Laura:
So, first of all you go to our website www.rittenhouserankings.com. Secondly, visit my blog ljrittenhouseforbes.com.
John:
Great. Did you have any last thoughts for our listeners about how we can all have a bigger purpose make a bigger difference in the world? From what you’re doing is there something that you would like to leave us with that’s inspirational?
Laura:
Well, here’s a very very important concept. People often say, “We need more trust in the world. We need more candor in the world.” Well, that’s only going to happen if everybody makes a commitment to be trustworthy. If everybody makes a commitment, okay, I will say what I really think, what I really mean, then I’ll say it in a way not to attack people, not to be a jerk, not to beat around the bush, but because I committed my purpose here. I’m committed to work creatively with other people to make a positive difference.
John:
Nice, and what’s so great about you is how did you put that out there, but you also show people how they can do that and make money at the same time, and most people think it’s one of the other, a newer, a living example of how to put something positive into the world and be strategic, and still make a great return on your investments. Laura, I can’t thank you enough for being on the show today.
Laura:
John, thank you for having me and thank you for the work you’re doing.
John:
Thanks.
Thanks for listening to The Successful Pitch Podcast. If you liked the show, please go to iTunes and write a review, and encourage your friends to write reviews too. It really helps get the word out.
You know, people say that the longest distance is between someone’s mouth and their wallet. People can tell you they’re going to invest but when it comes time to write the check, they don’t do it. So, how do you get people to say yes and then follow through? Visualize yourself on the left side of a riverbank and you have to cross the river and on the other side of the river is where the funding happens.
So, first, you make up your idea and then you make it real and then you make it reoccur. Once you start dipping your toe into the water to get to funding, that’s where I can help. I get you across that river faster than you would on your own with a lot less frustration than you will get when you hear a bunch of no’s and you don’t know why. So, if you want some help getting funded faster with less frustration, go to my free funding webinar, sellingsecretsforfunding.com/webinar and sign up and get in depth information on how you can get funded fast. Thanks.
TSP073 | Lee Caraher – Transcription
Posted by John Livesay in Uncategorized | 0 comments
John Livesay:
Today’s guest on The Successful Pitch is Lee Caraher, who is the author of Millennials & Management: The Essential Guide to Making it Work at Work. Lee said, “Communication is currency,” and that the millennials can be broken up into three different age groups: the 16 to 22, the 23 to 28, and the 28 to 36, and they each have different skill sets and different mindsets. It’s so important to know this when you’re creating a team, and also when you’re pitching to people who are millennials. She said you need to frame a problem and the scale of that problem. You need to have inspiration as to why you’re doing this. Finally, you have to make sure that your approach is unique. She said, “Innovation is what causes scale, not just efficiency.” She said the three big questions when you’re pitching are what are you doing? Who are you doing it for? And what difference are you going to make?
The interview begins in 45 seconds right after this information on how you can get funded fast.
Are you a founder struggling with your investor pitch? Do you need warm introductions to the right investors to get your startup funded? Do you need a funding road map to get you there fast? All of this and more can be found in Crack the Funding Code. Join host, John Livesay, and Judy Robinett, bestselling author of How to Be a Power Connector and board member of Illuminate Ventures, on their free Crack the Funding Code webinar. Simply go to judyrobinett.com – that’s J-U-D-Y-R-O-B-I-N-E-T-T dot com – and click on the webinar tab to see how to tap into their network of investors from around the world. There’s a link in the show notes as well. You’re only one click away from getting funded fast.
Hi, and welcome to The Successful Pitch. Today’s guest is Lee Caraher, who wrote a wonderful book called Millennials & Management: The Essential Guide to Making it Work at Work. Lee has over 20 years’ experience in Silicon Valley, producing integrated work teams that get a great deal done and have fun at the same time. She’s known as a communication strategist for practical solutions to the big problems. She founded Double Forte in 2002 to work with good people doing great work for good companies. Her clients span from well-loved brands and high tech startups not only in the San Francisco Bay Area, but Boston, New York, and even Europe. So, she struggled with trying to figure out how to work well with the millennial clients, and more than half of her own staff is under 32. So, she wrote this book saying, “I was fed up with the negative stereotypes that millennials are burdened with that they’re determined to figure out how to create a culture where boomers, and Gen X’ers, and millennials can all thrive together.” Lee, welcome to the show.
Lee:
John, it is so great to be with you. Thank you so much for having me.
John:
Well, I love people who have fun at work and have high energy, and like to solve problems, because that’s what the key to get funded is is what problem do you solve and is it a big enough problem that I could get a big enough return on my investment, right?
Lee:
Right.
John:
So, that’s what our audience loves to hear. But, before we get into how you started Double Forte – obviously you’re an entrepreneur yourself – take us back to your experience in being an entrepreneur even before Double Forte.
Lee:
Sure. Before Double Forte, I worked for Interpublic, a very large multinational media firm, and before that, I was at SEGA of America, the video game company, when SEGA of America was about a billion and a half dollar company. I left SEGA to go to Interpublic Companies in the dotcom boom, and I worked with, I can’t even count, how many startups and took more than 20 public and all that kind of stuff, and got acquired. Then, the boom crashed, right?
John:
Mm-hmm.
Lee:
In 2001, at 9/11, I decided — really, 9/11 was a big moment in my life when I decided that I didn’t want to be in the big firm anymore. I really wanted to be able to craft what was important to me and create that workplace that meant that I was doing what I wanted to do more than flying around the country and sort of waving my magic wand. I had 750 people when I was in that company. They are very, very generous to me, but 9/11 really crystallized sort of that wasn’t for me; it was for somebody else. So, my intention was actually to take a whole year off.
I had two young children and I went to yoga and then I organized my house and I did all these stuff. I’m the chief bacon officer in my house. My husband is the chief home officer – that’s what we call each other – and I basically drove my husband crazy. With the color coding and the flower arranging, which people who know me are like, “You flower arrange?” Well, I don’t say I flower arrange. I say that I aspire to put the flower in the right place. I mean, I ask for books for the holidays. I mean, it was terrible. Oh, my gosh. I had three glue guns. I just really — it was just destructive. But, I drove my husband crazy and he’s like, “We’re not going to make it if you don’t use your time outside of the house.”
I have always been intrapreneurial. I’ve always been very intrapreneurial. I started two companies for Interpublic Company, and at SEGA, I did all this intrapreneurial stuff as well. But, I was sort of pretty risk averse. Then, in 2002, it was clear that I needed to go back to work. I wasn’t going to last a year glue gunning everything, that’s for sure. I am the breadwinner and we had all these unexpected expenses and blah-blah-blah. And I was looking for jobs. I was in the running for two very big jobs and then my mother got sick. I live in San Francisco and my parents lived in Wisconsin and my mother got sick. She got diagnosed with four months to live and it was very clear that I was going to go be with her.
So, I withdrew and I couldn’t take either of the jobs because I was going to go be with my mom when she needed it. And, out of necessity, I created my company because I had to bring home the bacon and I had to be in Wisconsin, and my home is in San Francisco. In my kind of work, when you’re inhouse, you don’t really have the freedom to be wherever you want to be, even in today’s world. So, I decided that I really like this job that I do. I didn’t like how it gets expressed in a large, publicly traded media company, but I love what we do. Like, figuring out what to say and who to say it to, and helping people really understand their story and how to convey it. Because, people aren’t really good at it, you know?
I feel like when you’re really close to an idea, it’s harder, and harder, and harder to explain it to someone who’s not close to it. So, that’s when I decided to start Double Forte, and here we are 13 years later, and I guess I’m now fully fledged entrepreneurial. Because, when you’re an entrepreneur, what you start and what you are in are probably two very different things. A plan is wonderful, but really, the goal is more important.
John:
I like that.
Lee:
You know, plans should be in sand, but goals need to be in concrete. Then, you react to or respond to what the conditions are. So, we have probably reinvented ourselves four times since we started in 2002 to respond to the economy, to what the world’s doing in communication, to the competitive situation and to who we want to serve. So, today, in 2016, we’re going to be 14 in a few months. I’m not sure I thought that when I started, but here we are, and it’s new every day, which is what keeps me interested.
John:
I’m going to tweet that out. “A plan is in sand, but goals should be in concrete.” That’s a great line. That’s really helpful. Well, let’s take a second and take a little deeper dive into what you said earlier because since you’re such a master storyteller in crafting something, especially if it’s techy. You do it for the media, but the same skills apply for crafting a pitch for investors. Do you have any tips on how to take something that’s fairly complicated or techy? How do you craft that for the media? They said the listeners could think about how they could do that for their pitch to investors.
Lee:
Yeah, I think the most important thing in crafting your story is to frame your story with a problem, and to describe the problem and the scale of the problem quickly up front, and then to explain. So, that’s number one: what’s the problem, what’s the scale of that problem? Number two: what is your inspiration to solve that problem? And number three: what is your approach to solve that problem and how does it differ from what’s in the marketplace today?
So, if you can be very clear about this is a problem and it’s big. It’s worth so many dollars, number one. Number two, that you have a passion to solve it and why you were inspired to do it. I think investors are looking for people who are smart, who are business-savvy, but who are just compelled to do something to get it done, and they have a big passion for that problem they’re solving. At least good money, right?
You know, in an investment, there’s bad money and there’s good money. It’s all money, it’s all dollars, but bad money, from my perspective, and I have a lot of clients get bad money, bad money is money that just looking for that quick ROI, not really there to serve and help you get there. Not a connector, not help, but mostly just criticizing and diverting you from the goal. Diverting you from the goal and saying, “That wasn’t your plan.” Well, I’ve never seen a plan that executed 100% ever in my career because you just can’t control everything. The purpose of a plan is to know where you should be so you can try and get it back to the point.
But, in my experience, good money is from people who support the passion and the brains of the founders. So, if you can scale the problem immediately, like give a big — there should be some dollars there, you know? Number two, why are you inspired to solve this problem? And number 3, how are you going to do it? What’s the innovation? Because scale comes in innovation. Scale doesn’t come, necessarily, in just getting more efficiency. Scale comes in innovation and investors are looking for innovation and scale to get their ROI out in a productive way.
John:
Ooh, that’s another great one. “Scale comes in innovation, not efficiency.” Love that. That will make a great tweet. It’s all about, yes, finding the good money that supports the passion of the founder, and then that goes to the whole point of whether you’re creating a team of people to work with you or investors, they all need to fit into the same culture. So, that’s the perfect segway into your expertise around millennials. Let’s just define for everybody exactly how old millennials are right now.
Lee:
Sure. So, millennials in 2016 will turn 16 to 36. So, it’s 20 years. It’s a big band, right? I break them down into three sections. The first section is the oldest section. So, 28, to 29-year-olds to 36-year-olds, and these people came into the marketplace after 9/11. As adults, they’ve never been to the gate to pick up a family member or a girlfriend, or a boyfriend or a friend. They’ve never done that at the airport. They are used to giving their IDs to get into a building. Their idea of privacy and security is very different from their older colleagues.
Next group is probably 23 to 28, somewhere in there, and these people came into the workplace, into the work market after 2008, 2009, and this is the group that’s had the toughest time finding work commence with their education. And there are still millennials looking, trying to catch up to where they thought they should be, given their education and the economy, right?
Then, the third group is going to be 16 to about 22. So, people who are in school. So, high schoolers and college students. This group of people learned entirely different from that oldest group. The iPad did not exist for the oldest group, and now schools have iPads for every kid and they’re looking at videos at night and doing their homework in the classroom during the day. So, they learn very differently. They’ve had very different kinds of technologies. The whole generation definitely benefits from being technology savant, for sure. They’re digitally native, right? They all benefit from that. But, the youngest group is probably going to benefit from it the most.
John:
So, it’s so funny because, in business, really, luxury, high-end companies do well and really low-end, the Walmarts of the world, and it’s that middle ground. Same thing with restaurants. Fast food or really expensive restaurants, and then that middle ground always seems to struggle the most, and the same thing is true the way you broke up this millennial age group that that middle ground is struggling to get where they need to be. I’m fascinated. I never thought of it at the 28 to 36-year-olds never dropped people off at the airport and all that stuff because of 9/11, right?
Lee:
Right.
John:
Yeah, you just get yourself there and I’m not going to wait in line to pick you up, and it doesn’t mean that I don’t love you. It’s just that they’re going to consider it, right?
Lee:
Well, I guess, there’s too much — you know, there was a time, in some airports around the country, that you couldn’t even get to the airport unless you showed your boarding pass, you know?
John:
Right.
Lee:
But, definitely, have never been to the gate, have never gone through security to get to the gate to say goodbye at the gate, or welcome someone at the gate ever.
John:
Yeah, those emotional closing goodbyes. You told me, before we started this show, that you spoke at the White House about this. Tell me about that experience. How did that come about?
Lee:
They called me.
John:
Did you think it was a prank call?
Lee:
I did. In fact, I thought it was a prank call, so I said, “I’m very happy to talk with you. I’m on my way to a meeting. If you can email with what you need and what the dates are, I will be happy to call you back,” and sure enough, an email came through at whitehouse.gov. I was doing a keynote in D.C. about millennials in the government, and I think some of their people were there. So, they have seen the roster and they invited me to come. It was an amazing experience, you know. That is a dedicated group of people who are doing just — you know, no matter where you are on the political spectrum, the people who are in the White House working every day for us, they’re just doing tremendous work, and I just gave a workshop on, mostly about interns, they have over 150 interns at a time, and how to productively work with interns so that everybody benefits.
Interns, no matter where you are – it has nothing to do with the White House – but interns, today, a lot of companies start with interns to try them out before they buy them, you know? Not the White House. The White House works very differently. But, in commercial world, and interns often show up into the business world just ready to go in that business pitch with you, like, “Well, you know, first we need to change your wardrobe and then you don’t get to go to the top sales guy day 1 kind of stuff.”
So, there’s just a lot of expectation, false expectation, that have been set by the media, and by parents, and by education, I think, about what an internship’s all about. I have lots of stories in my book about interns and interns are the life blood, frankly, of the future, because millennials who are getting out of college, they’re super smart. Super smart, super capable, they have a lot of energy, and they want to matter. They want to matter immediately, and you have to sort of figure out a way for interns to matter, and not go into — not drop down into your boss’s desk and say, “Hey, what’s going on?” Because that is normal. That happens all the time. How I work with companies who use interns is just helping them set expectations before they show up and explain what you’re going to get out of being an intern in the company.
John:
Now, you’ve been called the “Millennial Whisperer”. How did you get that title?
Lee:
Oh, my gosh, my friend called me that and she tweeted it out. She goes, “Lee is the Millennial Whisperer,” and I was like, “Oh, my gosh. That’s a little pretentious. I can’t call myself that. But, then all of a sudden, all my friends were like — they’d call me and say, “Okay, we have this millennial, I have a problem with him. I didn’t know what to do,” and I would help them figure it out, sort of like the Dog Whisperer, I guess. Cesar, right?
John:
Right. I love it.
Lee:
So, it just picked up from there. I prefer the “Millennial Champion” because a lot of what I read when I was researching my book — well, the book came about because I failed miserably at hiring and keeping millennials. I hired six millennials within — or my company did, hired six millennials within about eight weeks of each other and they all were gone within three months. One person could be their problem, two people could be, maybe, their problem, but all six at the same time, that had to be us. When I started looking into it, I didn’t know there was such a thing as a millennial at the time. It was all negative; it’s so negative, and I just can’t be negative every day. An entrepreneur is an optimistic person. An entrepreneur believes that they have a future that they can make things happen, right?
John:
Sure.
Lee:
And I’m an optimistic person. Frankly, if you don’t have millennials in your business, you don’t have a future in your business. So, my point of view is there’s got to be a positive way to do this. So, we figured it out in the company, and my book came out of that. So, more than a whisperer, I prefer to be a champion because I want people to know that I’m not — I hope I’m not being patronizing when I talk about it.
John:
Right. Well, for people who are working on building their team to talk about when they get funded to an investor, one of the things you’re going to be doing is hiring X, Y, Z developer, and this kind of thing, but as they continue to grow, as you said, they’re going to have to hire some millennials if, in fact, they’re not a millennial themselves.
Lee:
Exactly.
John:
What tips do you have for them to make sure that the millennials fit into the culture and they don’t have high turnover.
Lee:
I think the most important thing is to be crystal — well, several most important things. One, be very crystal clear on what the values and the company is there for. What is the mission of the firm, what is the mission of the company, what are you trying to do, and what values drive the company? Because, that will dictate what the behavior is acceptable and what behavior is not acceptable. In general, millennials are looking for something that’s going to make a difference. So, if you can’t articulate yourself in making a difference, you will have very little chance of getting the A-list, the top notch talent in the millennial generation.
The second piece is setting expectations really early, like day 1. Here’s how we work here. Every company has a different schedule. We work with a lot of technology companies. We’re lucky if they show up by 10:30. I’m strolling in 10:30. Other companies, 6:30 in the morning, they’re all there at the gym and then they’re all in their seats by 8 o’clock. So, what is the culture of your company? When do we expect to see people? What is the work from home policy? When is all hands on deck? What do you expect? Because, you should not — I hate that word “should”. It’s so full of judgment.
But, if you expect them to understand that your day is 10:30 to 8:30, and you don’t say so, well, if they leave at 6 o’clock, you can’t be irritated with them because you didn’t tell them, and this happens all the time. All the time. The hours thing is the biggest point of contest. Like, “Well, they should know that these are our hours, or they should know I’m here at 8 o’clock. They should know that they’re late at 9:30.” I talked about this woman in my book and I said to her, “Well, how would she know?” “Well, I’m here at 8 o’clock.” “But, she’s not. So, she doesn’t see you! So, how would she know? For all you know, she thinks you got there at 9:29.” That one woman, she thought she was going to have to fire this younger woman and I said, “Well, you can’t fire her without telling her that she’s been late and what the expectation was,” and then I said to her, “Well, how long has this been going on?” “Six months.” I’m like, “Oh, my goodness. Well, be prepared for her to be pissed off because you let her be wrong for six months and you said nothing.”
Which leads me to tip 3, which is give a lot of feedback. Don’t let someone be wrong. No one wants to be wrong. Don’t let someone be wrong for a long time. Just get in there and say, “You know, that was a good effort, and let me talk with you about how we can improve it next time.”
John:
Love it. No one wants to be wrong. That’s such a great line. Let’s flip the story now. Let’s pretend that we’re over 40, over 50 even, and we’re pitching millennials, and the millennials might think they know more than we do, and we have more experience than they and we’re the ones pitching them for money. We might automatically think, “Oh, they’re only going to give money to other millennials and not somebody who’s older than they are.” How do you help people shift all that negative thought?
Lee:
Yeah, well that does happen, and I think sometimes it happens because if millennials have been burned by their older colleagues or their older cohort, then — or if anyone’s been burned, right? It’s not just millennials, then they show up with a bias. So, how do you break through a bias and think, one, you have to figure out where the bias is because you don’t want to go in assuming there’s a bias, because that is just irritating and disrespectful. There’s no way to get no money faster than being disrespectful. The difference is people think disrespectful means something different depending on who you are.
Then, I think the explaining the company in the context of the future and making — if you’re 54 and you’re talking to a 29-year-old investor, your research better be about that generation and what their potential is in that generation and how you know that. Not just saying, “Oh, we could fix it.” But, you have millennials on your team or you have a panel of millennials or whatever it is, if you’re not relating it to the future generation, well, that’s a little tough.
John:
That’s a great tip.
Lee:
Number one, and then number two is are you relevant? I think I say to boomers and X’ers all the time, X’ers this year will turn 51. So, they’re 37 to 51 and boomers are 52 to 69, something in there. We all expect we’re going to work longer than we plan to, and if you’re not relevant to the millennial generation, which is the largest generation, you are going to be co-opted out of a job pretty quickly even if you’re the CEO or not, or if you’re just a worker, whatever work to be. How you stay relevant, like are you reading the things that millennials are reading? Are you using apps on your phone? The reading thing alone, like do you know what the scheme is? Do you know what these different apps are? Had you used them at all? And just being versant in that stuff. So, so important because if you’re not versant in the way millennials communicate and how they get information, well, there’s going to be a big divide before you even start your pitch on what problem you’re trying to solve.
John:
Right. Well, just that whole communication preference, right? If you leave somebody, God forbid, a voice mail, nobody does that anymore, for the most part, or you say, “I sent you an email, although I prefer text,” and you’re not really comfortable with texting or there’s something else you prefer. I prefer Snapchat. Who knows, right? Or, send me a message on Skype. There’s so many different variations that you have to keep being flexible to whatever the language is of the day.
Lee:
Of the other person.
John:
Whatever their currency is, I guess.
Lee:
Yeah, their communication is currency, right? The person you’re trying to influence is the person who has the card. You got to move to them. They’re not going to move to you. Then, once you got them, then they can move to you, particularly in the money situation, right? So, if you’re on Slack, maybe your company is on Slack or not. Some companies only work in Slack, and they don’t use email or whatever it is. But, finding out how people like to communicate is probably the first — you got to keep track of all that stuff because you might go up and down Sand Hill Road one day and go from an email guy to a text person to a phone person to a “I only meet in person” person. Keeping track of who does what is super, super important.
John:
And crafting your pitch accordingly. You have to have a short pitch, a long pitch, on and on and on. This has been great. So insightful and such a unique perspective on how to communicate a pitch not just to investors, but to craft that great team that everybody needs to be successful, and to show investors that you have a diversity within your company not only races, but also ages.
Lee:
Age is so important.
John:
Yeah, so that you can have a future focus. So, is there anything else you want to leave us with? The time goes so fast when someone like you with such great takeaways: “Frame your problem and scaling it,” “the inspiration,” “why me?”, and of course, the innovation, “what makes us unique?”, and really focusing on what is your mission and how do you make a difference at this company? It’s going to make a big difference on whether you can attract top talent and keep them. Then, of course, the feedback and expectations. I mean, those are such amazing takeaways from today’s episode. Is there any last little bit of insights that comes to mind that you want to leave us with?
Lee:
Yeah, I think that, sometimes, all those things sound so daunting, right? Like, “Oh, my gosh. I remember doing all this stuff,” and in the end, it just boils down to very simple concepts: what are you doing, who are you doing it for, what difference are you going to make? If you can just get it right down to those very short sentences on those kinds of things, then people can grab on. Then, the point is to be consistent and to just keep doing it. You cannot overcommunicate today. If you’re over 50 or over 45 and you’re used to sending a memo or an email, and that’s it, think about — this is one thing. From your advertising days, right?
John:
Yes.
Lee:
We used to use the number 7. The seven times you had to see something to maybe convey your message. Well, today, we use the number 35, and I’m not telling you to do things 35 times to the same person, but you need to think about the fact that you’re in that. This is the situation. People are seeing things 35 times before they actually grab onto them. So, one time does not do it. You got to find multiple times to reinforce, reinforce, reinforce. Don’t worry about it. Until someone says, “Shut up,” you have not conveyed it.
John:
Good point. But, with all the social media distractions and everything, to break through the clutter requires a lot of frequency.
Lee:
And a lot of focus.
John:
And a lot of focus. Ooh, there you go. The two F’s: frequency and focus. I love it. You’ve been a terrific guest. We’re going to put your book in the show notes where the people can click and buy it. “Millennials and Management” is the name of it. How can people follow you on social media and what’s your Twitter and all that good stuff?
Lee:
My Twitter is @leecaraher L-E-E C-A-R-A-H-E-R. My personal website is www.leecaraher.com where you can find my company, Double Forte, and all my book and my speaking stuff.
John:
Terrific. Thanks again, Lee.
Lee:
Thanks so much. It was great to be with you.
John:
You too.
Thanks for listening to The Successful Pitch Podcast. If you liked the show, please go to iTunes and write a review, and encourage your friends to write reviews too. It really helps get the word out.
You know, people say that the longest distance is between someone’s mouth and their wallet. People can tell you they’re going to invest but when it comes time to write the check, they don’t do it. So, how do you get people to say yes and then follow through? Visualize yourself on the left side of a riverbank and you have to cross the river and on the other side of the river is where the funding happens.
So, first, you make up your idea and then you make it real and then you make it reoccur. Once you start dipping your toe into the water to get to funding, that’s where I can help. I get you across that river faster than you would on your own with a lot less frustration than you will get when you hear a bunch of no’s and you don’t know why. So, if you want some help getting funded faster with less frustration, go to my free funding webinar, sellingsecretsforfunding.com/webinar and sign up and get in depth information on how you can get funded fast. Thanks.