Global Investing: An Entrepreneur’s Global Perspective With Sleem Hasan
Posted by John Livesay in podcast | 0 comments


As the years go by, it seems like the world has become significantly smaller. It has become easier by the day to reach other people and even set up your own business. In this episode, John Livesay interviews Sleem Hasan, the founder and CEO of Privity FZ LLE, to talk about global investing. He takes us through a global lens of his own journey that spans different countries and shares the different lessons and experiences he got. How can being globally competitive help you? What are the benefits of a global eye? Sleem answers these questions and more with John.
—
Listen to the podcast here
Global Investing: An Entrepreneur’s Global Perspective With Sleem Hasan
Our guest is Sleem Hasan who is an experienced owner with a demonstrated history of working in venture capital and the Japanese capital markets. He is skilled in investor relations, securities, asset management, investment advisory, and working with technology entrepreneurs. His strong entrepreneur professionalism is with a Part III Mathematical Tripos from Cambridge and a Mathematical degree from Oxford. He’s also the CEO and Founder of Privity, which is an independent Dubai-based advisory firm founded back in 2004. Sleem, welcome to the show.
Thank you, John, for having me.
I always like to ask my guests to take us on their own little journey, their own story of origin. You can go back to your days at Oxford or childhood when you first realized, “I’m interested in math,” or I’m guessing back when you were a child, the concept of entrepreneurship was not as well-known as it is now.
I usually share my background using six different flags. The first flag is that of Fiji island because that’s where I was born. The second flag is from Pakistan because that’s where my late parents hail from. The third flag is from Nigeria in West Africa because that’s where I grew up. The fourth flag is the United Kingdom because that’s where I went to study at university. The fifth flag is Japan because I spent 37 years of my life dealing with the Japanese markets, first at Nikko and then with Hasan Financial Corporation, my first startup. The last but not the least flag is the United Arab Emirates, which is where I reside in Dubai. That’s zero to date with six flags.
You would be the definition of a global citizen based on those six flags.
You could say that every part of it was not by choice where you’re born, where you grew up.
[bctt tweet=”You don’t need to get other people to believe in yourself when you believe in yourself.” username=”John_Livesay”]
After that, it becomes your journey. I’m sure a lot of people are as intrigued as I am to ask this next question, which is how many languages do you speak besides English?
Badly, probably about six. Fluently, probably 2 or 3 but I love languages. I speak my own language which is Urdu. Although, I grew up in the northern part of Nigeria. I’m comfortable in Hausa. I learned French at school, a bit of Arabic because of my religious background and a bit of Japanese I picked up working with Japanese. Having said that, I’ve picked up a bit of Italian along the way, a bit of Spanish.
There’s a real connection between music, math and languages, don’t you think? There’s a structure to all of it. There’s a rhythm to it. It’s a tuning your ear and formulas even about, “This is what pass perfectly is,” or those things. The Japanese language is extremely different than the Spanish, Italian, or even English and they write, I believe, with their hands as part of symbols.
It’s funny you say that because I go one step further and I draw parallels between actually Mathematics, which is what I studied at university and Entrepreneurship. What do mathematicians do for a living? They solve problems. What do entrepreneurs do? They solve problems too. In my humble mind, there must be some homeomorphic map in the mind of a mathematician and the mind of an entrepreneur.
I’ve never heard anybody else frame it like that and it’s brilliant because if you’ve ever had any kind of math and I did some calculus a little bit and things like that, or even basic geometry is all about solving for X or Y or whatever the answer is. If you think of yourself as a problem solver, when you create your company and I get into this is where our lives and our passions crisscross is my passion is helping founders be able to craft a story and show empathy for the people whose problems they’re solving. The better they can describe the problem to a potential investor. I think investors like you think, “This entrepreneur probably has the solution because they understand the problem well or they’ve experienced it.”
Whenever any two people meet, whether it’s entrepreneurial and investor, two friends meeting at university on open day or even a boy meeting a girl, what is the most important thing? You’ve got to catch them at hello. The minute you catch somebody at hello, the person gets engaged. That’s exactly what I tell entrepreneurs today. You’ve got to catch the investor at hello because it’s that first initial impression that we’re the chemistry exchange is pointed and very pertinent. If you can capture that and then they get engaged, they want to know more. If you’ve got a ten-minute pitch and you spend the first 5 or 6 minutes taking them down a cul-de-sac, the chances that they’re going to lose, you’re going to get lost in translation and they lose interest. That’s my two cents for whatever it’s worth.

Global Investing: It’s that first initial impression where the chemistry exchange is very pointed and very pertinent.
It’s worth way more than two cents. I tell a lot of investors when I’m working with them on their pitch, “You may have ten minutes in front of an Angel group or even more if you’re a venture level, but you only have 90 seconds.” Grab them at hello. I tell people, “The biggest mistake I see,” and I’d love to hear what yours are, “Is they waste those valuable opening seconds with cliché things like, ‘Thanks for this opportunity. I’m excited to be here.’ No one cares that you’re excited. It’s not about you. It’s about the investor.” I’m all about jumping right into a story that pulls people in.
It’s very important to outline the problem with the story. I think starting your pitch with a compelling story is important. I even say that on my website when I talk about Privity. I say, “I’m agnostic to geography as I am to industry vertical. I only care about the underlying compelling value proposition of the idea.” Straight up on my website for anybody interested. Literally, you go to the first landing page. That’s the first paragraph you’re going to meet. I want to capture you at hello. If you go to Privity, you’ll see I’m practicing what I’m preaching.
First of all, that’s unusual because a lot of investors are not geographically agnostic nor are they open to multiple industries. I always love going to the portfolio page when I prepare to meet an investor whether it’s interviewing them for my show or if I worked with a founder who’s going to pitch an investor. That to me is a sign of respect that you’ve taken the time to do it. The one company that’s on your portfolio page that I would love to hear about is Kiwi Wearable Tech because I have a fashion background. That one intrigued me to know more about that one.
I’ll tell you how it came about. For better or for worse, since I built the portfolio, three companies I’ve exited and three companies crashed. Kiwi is one of the latter, which did not do well, but I had an interesting journey learning about the wearable technology. A brilliant founder I met in my early days in Dubai, got to know him and then we relocated to Canada. He came up with this idea of what he was doing, building up this wearable technology business and the IoT. This was early days IoT. It’s morphed since I got involved with Kiwi, but there was a lot of learning there. They did get an offer early. It was from Intel or Google, I forget which one, but it was a serious offer on the table, but it was a low offer like a $10 million or $12 million exit.
As the shareholder, I told the guy, “It’s a result. You’ve done well,” but like a lot of founders or entrepreneurs, they’ve all got the big unicorn on their minds and they all have the dream. The founder had majority stake in it and whilst we all advised him as shareholders to take the money and start again. He chose to go a different path and then he ran out of money. The classic story. There was a lot of learning one can get out of the Kiwi story and I’m glad you picked that one. Not everything that one gets involved in turns out smelling of roses. It’s being in the trenches, working with these companies day in, day out, and then learning from the mistakes. I always tell people it’s not success or failure, you either succeed or you learn. You learn from the mistakes you make and that should then reinforce when you encounter the next one, you’ve now got that data point you did not have the day before and that is worth its weight in gold.
I would imagine part of your magnetism as an investor too because if someone’s got a great idea, maybe some traction and revenue, they’re looking at multiple investors, like you look at multiple founders. I’m always advising founders, “You don’t want any money, you want smart money,” and someone with your experience and having those data points and references because without a frame of reference whether it’s connections to help the company grow or knowing the right time to exit or not is crucial in who you decide to go with.
[bctt tweet=”No meeting in life is ever a waste of time.” username=”John_Livesay”]
Whilst I don’t make any claims to be a Sand Hill road type VC nor do I even have a fund. I have built up a business in my own way, but I work with entrepreneurs. I cut deals with entrepreneurs because I’m an entrepreneur myself and it’s a different model that I’ve built out here and I have mobilized a significant capital for early stage investing through a network that’s kind enough to share the good, bad and ugly with what I do. There’s one particular investor who’s comw in four times as recent as July 2020 and as early as 2012.
He’s followed me into stuff I do. He’s benefited from the pluses and at the same time, he’s experienced some of the negatives, but he’s backed me because he believes that there’s a method in my madness, which he appreciates. I’m grateful for that. We’re all looking for the ball you want to bat out of the park, but I’m happy to crawl before I walk, before I run and keep working hard and building up that value. Hopefully, your LPs, your investors, people who would like to be part of your journey will see that down the road.
What is the kind of business you’re in, if you don’t mind me asking, that allows you to create an enough income to invest in startups?
I had a separate business which sold in February this year. It was my first startup called Hasan Financial Corporation. That was my first taste of entrepreneurship when I made multiple returns of my capital in the first three years, which was reported at UK Companies House with the UK Regulators. It was a buy and sell side advisory firm focusing on the Japanese markets. I ran that business for 24 years and I sold it in February 2020 before COVID broke. That was one of the funding vehicles I used to finance my experiment I would call it here in Dubai when I started Privity. In fact, the first five years of Privity, it was a nonevent. I got involved in a couple of branches, which were not tech because I was too early here.
Dubai was in build mode back then. I don’t know if you know Dubai, but there were cranes, construction work, real estate. That was the order of the day. I call it Dubai 1.0 because that’s what I found. Nobody was interested in tech. Nobody’s interested in venture. The ecosystem was not what it is. It’s quite robust. There’s a lot of activity in this space, in the region as a whole. A lot of FinTech companies are coming out of the region. There have been interesting exits out of the region. Amazon bought a startup in this region at a huge valuation. It’s on the radar and like anything else in the world. That’s why I talked about the six flags, right at the get-go of our conversation, because that is ultimately who I am.
I don’t have a parochial view to life. I look at the view of the world in a 360 manner. It’s very important. Maybe a data point in China can actually affect what you’re doing here or a data point up in Russia could be moving the needle down here. The whole interplay between all these different data points builds a very interesting fabric around your portfolio. And so I’m open to opportunities wherever they come from and thanks to the six flags I keep referring to, it’s been the biggest blessing in disguise. Perhaps, one of my strengths, it’s like moving a mouse seamlessly through from Japan to Nigeria, to London, to Pakistan, and back to the United States in 0.6 seconds, I can do that because I know where the bodies rlies and who the people are in those different geographies.

Global Investing: No meeting in life is ever a waste. If somebody is kind enough to knock on your door wherever they are, never say no.
You’re the global Sherpa.
If you can move from Asia, Africa, Europe, US seamlessly, that’s a huge swathe of land. It’s a huge content you’re covering. The beautiful thing about sitting in Dubai is that it’s probably one of the few geographies I’ve ever lived in that you can cover the entire world on the same business day, without compromising on your sleep. You could be a one-man shop or a huge multinational sitting in Dubai, but you’ll have that advantage because of its geographic location.
The fact that you have such a success record in FinTech, that must give you a lot of expertise. For looking at FinTech companies, I read one of your articles, you posted on LinkedIn around FinTech. That’s why I was curious to see what your expertise was while you’re not locked into FinTech, you certainly have an ability to analyze it not just from one country in the world.
You flatter me John, I’m not the clever one. In fact, however much somebody on this side of the guy who was writing a check or who’s helping get the checks for the people who wanted, the clever ones are the entrepreneurs. Let’s be clear about that. To me, I bow my head to the guy who’s generating the idea, not the guy who’s writing the check. To me, those are my teachers. In fact, I jokingly refer to Privity as the cheapest MBA program in the world because I’m learning from very very smart minds about different businesses.
That leads me to the question about LF Technologies. That one fascinated me as well. I’m sure there’s a story there. The first time you heard their pitch, the LF is all about rapid creation of marketplaces through how they’ve reinvented two things, online commerce and search. A lot of people I think would say, “I think we’ve got that handled with Google and Amazon. How do you reinvent that?” That’s what fascinates me to hear that story about LF.
You must be either clairvoyant John or something because the two companies in the portfolio have very interesting stories that’s still there. In fact, while it’s a UK holding company base, the operations are out of your backyard sir in Austin.
[bctt tweet=”You’ve got to catch the entrepreneur or the investor at hello.” username=”John_Livesay”]
That is a little same energy. I’m a big believer in quantum physics, energy and trusting your gut a little bit.
And in fact I met the founder through another portfolio company of mine called Boloro whose chairman is a YPO. I helped Boloro in 1st, 2nd and 3rd run. In fact, that was my third small exit out of my portfolio in 2019. This is a company based out of New York. The chairman reached out to me, what I was doing and he said, “I want to introduce you to somebody.” It was word of mouth. When I found out what LF is doing and what they’re doing specifically in artificial intelligence, I rolled my sleeves up and told the founder, “I want to be part of your journey.” Now, he’s a dear friend and we’ve been on that journey.
One of the things that stands out on your portfolio page about LF is they have a paradigm shift called an intelligent marketplace and that alone, as someone who loves stories and good soundbites, is something that intrigues our brain to want to go, “Wow.” I know what intelligence of things are and I know what an intelligent shopper might be, but an intelligent marketplace, that to me is intriguing. Can you shortly give a little hint of what they mean by that phrase?
Nowadays, cars are going to drive themselves. Your fridge will be able to talk to the supermarket and tell it’s running out of milk. Things are going to be talking to one another, but the one thing that still is in the dark ages ever since Google and Amazon came along is searching the marketplaces. What is Amazon? If you think about it. You’ve got a search box, you’ve got some kind of engine at the back that generates searching for let’s say a 40-inch Sony TV. It’ll come up with suggestions and maybe what is it that John Livesay wants doesn’t come up on the first page so you spend more time, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, and maybe 9th page right at the bottom, you may find what you’re looking for.
What if that platform learns a bit more about John Livesay and says, “I’m not going to show you 40-inch TVs. Maybe there’s a 60-inch TV that is within your budget. It’s a good brand?” You would respond to it, “If I knew a bit more, I could find a way.” Instead of you searching, it’ll fetch it for you. Like in the old days, when you used to ring up a broken the marketplace and tell the broker, “Buy IBM for me at $40 if the price hits. I’m not going to spend all my time watching the screen and stuff and if it hits that price, either buy for me or come back and tell me the markets where I can can trade.” Think of it that way. That’s the automation that one can bring into the world of search and market place. I don’t know if that answered your question.
It does, because I went through an experience moving here to Austin. You’ve been here, it’s beautiful. There’s a 300-acre park and there are all kinds of bike trails along the lake. I thought, “I want to buy a bike.” Not realizing that bikes are in the same category as paper towels and toilet paper during a pandemic. There’s a shortage of bikes, but the fact that I was trying to figure out where to go to get the bike, asking friends and started looking at things, suddenly I’m finding things in my feed about, “Here’s a helmet you might like and here are all these other things.” I’m like, “I’m looking for a bike.”
[bctt tweet=”It’s not success or failure. You either succeed or you learn from the mistakes you make.” username=”John_Livesay”]
This particular intelligent agent, intelligent platform can be applied to just about every single vertical you can think of. It could be a real estate, hospitality, travel. It doesn’t matter what the vertical is because the principle, you’ve got two sides of the equation. You’ve got a buyer and a seller. It affects you’re creating intelligent stock exchanges where everybody in the world, anybody can be a buy and sell at the same time. That’s the ultimate vision of it.
It’s because you’re giving people information when they need it at the right time. Otherwise, you’re wasting your time and money at marketing to somebody who’s not in the mode of buying whatever it is.
Inadvertently, you’ve picked on something else which was always my dream at Privity sitting here in Dubai, and that is I want to be agnostic to geography industry, but at the same time, I want to be global. You picked up two portfolio companies. One that’s in the portfolio, one that didn’t work, the first one you picked on was out of Toronto in Canada. The second you picked on is in your backyard in Austin, what you’re hearing about for the first time and where am I sitting? In Dubai. That is my vision. I don’t care where. If I have the good fortune of meeting the founder, whether it’s offline, online, and because of COVID, a lot of us couldn’t meet face-to-face. Zoom and Microsoft Teams are the order of the day. That was my vision to do that. There are examples that you’ve picked and I can talk about sitting thousands of miles away in my little garage in Dubai.
Do you have any last tips or thoughts you want to leave with us? Either a quote or a book you like, or philosophy about resilience or grit?
One of my favorite quotes is that of the late Stephen Keshi who was the coach of the Nigerian Eagles, the Nigerian football team. He said, “I don’t need you to believe in me to succeed. I will work hard and when I succeed, you will believe.” I’ll leave you at that.
What a great way to end the show. I love it. Think of yourself almost like a stock is my takeaway from that. When you know what your work ethic is and your skillset, then you’re not trying to prove anything to other people and you find the courage to stay focused on making your own stock, your own brand if you work stronger.
I also have two simple sayings in life. No meeting in life is ever a waste. If somebody is kind enough to knock on my door wherever he is, I will never say no. That is a conversation for another day because one of my portfolio partners, which has got nothing to do with tech was one of the biggest lessons in my life. If you’re interested, you can learn about an artist who’s in my portfolio by the name of Ralph Heimans. You’ll see it in my portfolio. It’s not a technology, it’s an artist. The question you should be asking is, “What is an artist doing in a tech portfolio?” That’s a conversation for another day and I hope that creates some intrigue.
That’s a fantastic way to get people to go to Privity.com. You’re on LinkedIn. Is there any other way you want people?
PrivityLLE.com is the URL. I’m on LinkedIn under my name. Privity is also on Facebook. I’m on Twitter as well under my own name and I’m socially on Instagram, the usual suspects. Thank you very much for your time.
It was a joy getting to interview you and know you a little bit.
Important Links
- Privity LLE
- Privity.com
- LinkedIn – Sleem Hasan
- Facebook – Privity LLE
- Twitter – Sleem Hasan
- Instagram – Sleem Hasan
- Better Selling Through Storytelling Method Online Course
Wanna Host Your Own Podcast?
Click here to see how my friends at Podetize can help
Purchase John’s new book
John Livesay, The Pitch Whisperer
Share The Show
Did you enjoy the show? I’d love it if you subscribed today and left us a 5-star review!
- Click this link
- Click on the ‘Subscribe’ button below the artwork
- Go to the ‘Ratings and Reviews’ section
- Click on ‘Write a Review’
Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share!
Join The Successful Pitch community today:
- JohnLivesay.com
- John Livesay Facebook
- John Livesay Twitter
- John Livesay LinkedIn
- John Livesay YouTube
Dealstorming – Interview with Tim Sanders
Posted by John Livesay in podcast | 0 comments

Listen To The Episode Here
Episode Summary
Tim Sanders has been involved with disruptive change for the past 30 years. He was on the ground floor of the mobile phone industry and the birth of the World Wide Web. He has written several books including Love Is the Killer App, Dealstorming, and more. Tim talks about his innovation template, how to build fantastic teams, and tell great stories.
Dealstorming – Interview with Tim Sanders
Today’s guest is Tim Sanders on The Successful Pitch. There are a few people in life that change your life and there are a few books in life that change your life. For me, I had the fortunate ability to have a book change my life and the author of that book changed my life. That book was, Love is the Killer App. That author was Tim Sanders. Over ten years ago, I read that book, was completely blown away by the content. I reached out to him via email. We started a relationship. I was honored and thrilled beyond belief that he was willing to write a foreword to my book that came out over ten years ago.

Love Is the Killer App: How to Win Business and Influence Friends
We have since had an amazing friendship and relationship. He continues to inspire not just me but thousands and thousands of people around the world. He spent most of his career on the cutting edge of innovation and change. He was on the ground floor of the quality movement, the launch of the mobile phone industry.
Today, he’s now all about disruptive change. He was an early stage member of Mark Cuban and Todd Wagner’s Broadcast.com, which had the largest opening IPO in history. After Yahoo acquired the company, Tim had a great title called the Chief Solutions Officer. He was tapped to lead their value lab, which enabled sales teams to close hundreds of millions of dollars. By 2001, he was often running as a leadership coach. Now, in 2005, he founded Deeper Media.
Tim, thank you so much for joining me on the show today. You have been a guest potential of mine since I started this. I’m now 70 episodes into it, I feel like I’m really prepared to talk to somebody like you.
My pleasure to be with you, John.
I always loved to hear this story because one of the things that I’ve learned from helping people on The Successful Pitch craft a good pitch is the importance of storytelling. Nobody tells a story better than you, Tim Sanders. I’ve heard you speak live multiple times. You just grab the audience with these amazing stories that are not just funny and interesting but have these great takeaways. Can you tell us how you became such a good storyteller?
I have been fortunate to live through a lot of really interesting stories. Over the course of time, I’ve always tried to learn something from every interesting encounter, because a lot of times, stories are really just that. They’re encounters. They’re problems, movement, encounters and solutions.
I began to really work earnestly on story development as I started to give more speeches on the lecture circuit because I needed to move audiences to action. I learned that as we tell stories, people are with you during your talk. If the story reinforces something, then they’re willing to make a change.

Give Your Speech, Change the World: How to Move Your Audience to Action
I read a book around 2002 titled Working the Room by Nick Morgan. It’s been retitled since then by Harvard Business Press as Give your Speech, Change the World. It’s by Nick Morgan. He blogs at PublicWords.com.
I hired him to be my coach because he specializes in learning how to write a speech that is structured around one of the five archetypal stories, then learning how to use anecdotes, what most of us call stories, how to use anecdotes to change the viewer or the attendees’ perspective.
He taught me that there’s only five stories in the world. There’s the love story. There’s the revenge story. There’s the hero’s journey. There is the fish out of water, also known as the stranger in a strange land. Lastly, there’s the coming of age. That’s it.
These five stories are deeply coded into our collective psyche, the mythology and storytelling. We know these stories inside and out. As a communicator, if you think of your speech or if you’re telling an anecdote, if you think of your story as following one of those five lines, then it is a very predictable plot.
It has a beginning, it has dynamics, it has a result and the result has a moral to it. The moral becomes actionable to the people that hear it. That’s what I’ve worked on for a really long time. In my business, I write books, I give speeches to help people change their perspective or validate their perspective. These stories move people.
I’ll say this finally, perspective is just our story or stories about how the world really works. Whether that perspective is a religious belief or a political ideology or a business best practice or an entrepreneurial habit, these are all based on the stories that are in our mind about how the world really works. What’s successful, what does karma mean? All these things. That’s why stories are so powerful because they feed one’s overall perspective.
[Tweet “Stories are so powerful because they feed one’s overall perspective.”]
That’s great. It either helps you reinforce your perspective or give you a new one. That’s literally what you’re trying to do when you’re pitching an investor, is to get them to think about something, i.e. your idea or app or product, in a way that they haven’t thought about that would generate them to want to write a check to you versus all the other pitches they’re hearing in a day.

Dealstorming: The Secret Weapon That Can Solve Your Toughest Sales Challenges
You have a new book coming out called Dealstorming. I just think the title and where it came from is so fascinating. Would you tell us that story of deal making and brainstorming from Yahoo days?
Absolutely. It actually traces all the way back to when I was at Broadcast.com. Basically, what happened is we got a new sales VP that came in. He had been with a variety of different startups that had gone from zero to a billion dollars. He knew that the problem for most of us is that we’re so underfunded in the startup. We’re just trying to do everything on our own.
He taught me in a meeting, “If you want to be successful, you’ve got to learn how to never go down alone.” That when you get stuck in a situation, say, trying to raise money, trying to make a sale, whatever. He says, “Build a team.”
[Tweet “If you want to be successful, you’ve got to learn how to never go down alone.”]
What he taught me is the difference between a tall team and a wide team. A tall team is a team of people that work in line with each other all the time. In the business world, think of it like sales manager, salesperson, account coordinator. Those three, they work in a vertical line. A lot of times, that’s who’s collaborating to finish the sale.
Those teams aren’t as successful as the wide variety of teams. For example, think of the account executive partnering with someone in the marketing department, partnering with someone in operations who actually delivers on the signed deal, and then partnering with someone in pricing, in the finance division.
That’s a wide team. Multiple disciplines coming together around an opportunity because they all have a stake in the outcome. The wide teams absolutely beat the tall teams in the market because when you bring together diversity, ideas bump into each other, perspectives collide together. That’s where innovation really happens.
[Tweet “Is your team tall or wide?”]
When I went to Yahoo after the acquisition, I specialized in creating wide teams to conquer business development challenges. Whether it was trying to sell something, trying to buy a company or look into an acquisition, trying to do partnerships.
We worked a lot John, on rapid problem solving because I believe that the speed in which we solve all those little problems that lead to the done deal is our only competitive advantage. Rapid, rapid, rapid problem solving is how companies stay great and get great.
[Tweet “Rapid problem solving is how companies stay great and get great.”]
When you look in the world of startups, whether you’re going to go back and look at Facebook or AirBnB or Uber, that’s what those people did. They just cycled through the thousand little problems that were between vision and reality. They did it faster.
Think about this in the world of startups. Facebook was faster at solving problems, whether they were technical problems or BD problems, they were faster than MySpace. Uber was faster than ZipCar, who was the big kid on the block when they first came on along. AirBnB was faster than HomeAway, who was also the industry leader when they came along.
When you look at a lot of these real trophy case studies on Startup World, what I see is not a brilliant invention but in fact rapid problem solving culture. Because in every one of those three cases, they were merely improving on an existing product.
That’s so great. We’re going to talk about both of those ideas. When you give a pitch to an investor, one of the key slides is who’s on your team. If a startup founder was smart enough to buy Dealstorming and quote from it that they don’t just have tall teams even though they’re lean, they have a wide team and that everybody in the company is part of the team and part of the sales process to generate revenue.
That would make an investor sit up and pay attention, “This person has created a culture that’s a little bit different than other startups I’m talking to.”
Let’s talk about that for a second, you make a good point. I’ve built a couple of startups in my day. I fell for the romantic notion that the ultimate startup is two engineers. Have you ever heard of that? I’m not an engineer. I’ve had a startup where it was me and two engineers. They added more engineers, and then we raised the money and they added more engineers.
What’s wrong with that? You basically had an engineering stack and a non-engineering founder. That is not a wide team. When you think about a startup, you need to have your core engineering team but you need to make that add from for marketing and sales. You need to make that add for operations. Or it could be operations/findage. You need to make that add to have somebody that’s dedicated to say, partnership development or whatever. I’m just making this up.
As an investor is able to look at a founder tree and see that they’ve recruited the center, the forward, the point guard, the shooting guard, the power forward. They go, “Okay, that’s a real team.” Here’s the issue, if all you do in Startup World is put together the skill positions, the engineer for example, that’s the equivalent in the NBA world of having a team comprised of the five best point guards in the world. But that’s all you’ve got. They won’t even win half their games. I don’t care who you pick. That’s a very good point.
[Tweet “Rapid problem solving is a competitive advantage.”]
Great. The other thing that you’ve said that I just love, we’re going to tweet that out, is, “Rapid problem solving is a competitive advantage.” Because that’s another key slide that investors look for on the pitch deck, which is what’s your barrier to entry.
If you can show and create the mindset and be an example would even be better of how you solve problems rapidly with a short story. Again, boom, that sets you apart from all of the other pitches they hear. Those two are great, great points. One of the things you say that I also love is that sales genius is a team sport.
[Tweet “Sales genius is a team sport.”]
If you want to build a collaborative culture, you must dispel yourself and your people of the myth of genius that believes in the lone inventor, the one person. The one person who comes up with the idea and on his or her own, changes the world. It is John, a romantic notion that is not true.
That’s a big myth buster, isn’t it? Because so many people are wanting all the credit, especially if you’re a founder, you think that you have to do it all by yourself and all the weight of the world is on you and it can feel very lonely. If you start collaborating with other people, maybe even outside of your company, to get other ideas and other perspectives, and ask for their advice. It suddenly frees up your creativity doesn’t it?

Think about all the collaborations that Steve Jobs depended on to be the world changer he was.
It does. Think about Steve Jobs if he never worked with Steve Wozniak, if he never worked with Jony Ive, if he never worked with Tony Fadell on the iPhone. Think about all the collaborations that Steve Jobs depended on to be the world changer he was.
Another way to think about it is from the invention community. I don’t know if you know this John, but Thomas Edison is more of a brand that stands for 14 people in a lab than the individual that we think of that had the light bulb moment.
I didn’t know that.
That was a consortium. There was a guy named Thomas Edison, he certainly was a coach/figure head. His name went on the patent. In the scientific community, they typically always attribute an invention to one person. It makes it easier to market those articles or those inventions. The reality is, over and over again, from Charles Darwin to Eli Whitney, I can prove to you none of them did it on their own. It’s just a romantic notion.
That’s important. If you understand that a great innovation is a bunch of people and a bunch of ideas creating a soup and then somebody notices something in the soup, called the Alphabet Soup, they notice a legible word. That’s when it all happens.
It doesn’t happen unless we bring people together. We have to believe that genius is a team sport. What I mean by this is genius is not in the person. Genius is in the work. If we as leaders and entrepreneurs, if we don’t understand that, then we won’t collaborate unless we have to. Collaboration is not the last resort. It is the first step that we take.
[Tweet “Collaboration is NOT a last resort. It is the first step.”]
That’s another great tweet. “Collaboration is not the last resort.” That’s great. That’s the whole tone for the culture of the company you’re creating. One of the things I want to ask you about Tim, is what you’re doing in Dealstorming with innovation templates. As you know, that’s what everyone is looking for, the big idea that’s going to change things, that’s going to have a huge growth. How did you come up with the concept of an innovation template and what’s in it?
I started out my professional career in quality circle management. This goes back to the 80s. At the time, United States manufacturers were under fire by Japanese competitors who had learned this new quality management technique. It was called TQM. Here in the US, we called it Six Sigma.
Basically, it was all about being able to trace down a manufacturing defect to the root cause and then using statistical process to design away from it. We basically, in the United States, we had to catch up and we had to learn that inspection, that’s not how you determine quality and manage quality. You determine and manage quality by finding the root problem and then collaborating your way into a statistical model to eliminate defects by design.

The Five Whys is what a manager would ask to get to the root cause of the defective product.
I started to use a couple of different techniques. They worked for me again later in sales and business development. I’ll give you an example, John. In lean manufacturing in Japan, starting at Toyota, there was a process called the Five Whys. The Five Whys is what a manager would ask to get to the root cause of the defective product.
Someone might say, “We are getting a lot of brakes returned because the left and the right don’t match perfectly.” That’s a defect. That’s a symptom. The manager might ask, “Why is that?” “Because the lathe at the factory doesn’t cut them 100% equally. They’re only perfect 90 times out of 100. That’s why we have 10% defect.”
“Why is that?” Second why. The person says, “Because they go slightly out of calibration over the course of several days. That’s why eventually, since we only calibrate once a week, that’s what creates the variance.”
“Why is that?” “We only do the calibration once a week because we have to bring in an outside company to do it. We don’t have the budget for that. We only have the budget for it once a week.” “Why is that?” “Because when we made the presentation in Japan about defects, they told us that that was an acceptable amount and that we have our budget for calibration based on that. Obviously, that’s not right.”
The last question is, “Why is that?” It’s that “Because Japan headquarters doesn’t understand the cost of rework. They don’t realize that rework is three times more than manufacturing.” There’s the root cause. Now, the manager goes, “Oh, the solution, this cascading solution to all of this is to create a cost of rework down to the skew level.”
Now, they’re not just listening to some general number, like 10%. They’re realizing that it’s causing the factory to lose $250,000 a day. It cascades, “Now, we will approve calibration every single day to give it a variance.” That’s exactly how Japan conquered their quality problems.
This is the same for a business, when somebody calls and says, “We can’t get a term sheet from that VC.” You just ask five whys. You back into it. You start out, “Why is that?” “First of all, you can’t get them to call us back. We think they pulled up.” “Why is that?” “Maybe when we presented to them, they kept pounding away for traction and we were explaining how, but we just don’t have that many users. We really were stuck on traction.”
“Why is that?” “Because this particular VC only invests in traction. They don’t really invest in IP or teams.” “Why is that?” “Because this VC got burned three years ago by investing in a great team.” Now you have your problem. Do you get it?
I totally get it.
You’re going from, “We can’t get the term sheets signed,” to “We have to help this VC get rid of this hangover.” Or, “We have got to find a VC that does invest in people and ideas, not just traction.” I’m using a startup centric Five Whys. That’s a template. That’s a really good template.
To quote John Dewey, “A problem well defined is half solved.” What I found is that in many situations, we try to brainstorm before we know the root cause of the problem. We brainstorm a solution that reveals yet another problem. It frustrates us. It’s like whack-a-mole and you’re the mole.
[Tweet ““A problem well defined is half solved.” -John Dewey”]
Don’t brainstorm until you really get to the root of the problem. It’ll save you times of lots of frustration.
Yeah. I’ll give you another quote. I’m a quote machine. Abraham Lincoln, “If I had six hours to chop down a tree, I’d spend four hours sharpening my ax.” When you think about collaboration, please invest at least 25% of the time having an honest and transparent discussion about the root cause of the problem that has you there to begin with. Because every deal is a hundred problems solved.
That’s so true for an investor. What the investors are looking for when they listen to a founder pitch them is, how do you think? How did you come up with this idea? How did you get this team? The fact that you could talk about have you solved problems rapidly to get this competitive advantage we talked about earlier through this innovation platform of the whys would really making your pitch standout, wouldn’t it?
Yeah. If you’re in front of an investor and you say, “We have a product that is going to appeal to a really big addressable market. We think it’s an outstanding, very fit competition to all the other existing products in this space. What makes us different is that we have a culture in place of rapid collaboration and we’ve built a process that’s scalable and repeatable, that helps us bring people together when we get stuck anywhere. Business development, product development and rapidly solve problems. We benchmark solving problems faster than our nearest competitors.”
That’s going to impress an investor because that speaks to maturity. When I’ve looked at some recent investments, that’s always my question. “Give me a situation where you can get stuck on traction. Whatever it is.” Build a product, make a sale, acquire users. That’s usually the three areas you get stuck in. “What do you do when you get stuck in acquire users? Talk to me about that process.”
If they look back at me and say something like, “We try something new or we try it again.” I’m like, “Who is this we?” If they point to the other guy and say, “Me and my partner.” That is not collaboration. That is partnership. There’s no diversity there. It’s two point guard I’m staring at. That freaks me out.

“After the meeting, we have this execution process in place. We repeat and rinse until we solve it.” That is really impressive to an investor.
I want to have them look back at me and say, “That’s part of why we want you to invest in us because we want you to join our collaboration web because this is what we do. When we get stuck, we talk to competi-mates, other startups we’ve met at conferences who have the same problems. We talk to existing business partners like Rackspace. They help us. We’re actually good at recruiting inside champions, like the customer. We collaborate. We have this process.
“What we do is we pick a team of everybody that has a stake in the outcome or expertise about the problem. We write a deal brief. They get the brief three days in advance. We have a two hour meeting with the following structure. After the meeting, we have this execution process in place. We repeat and rinse until we solve it.”
That is really impressive to an investor because that’s something that mature companies eventually figure out. The startups don’t do it that way.
It’s that emotional intelligence that you were speaking to earlier. That’s why investors love investing in serial entrepreneurs, because hopefully they have figured that out. The information you just gave somebody who is possibly starting their first startup, they can now save all that frustration and make themselves look like an experienced startup by just having that kind of an answer and structure set in place.
I always call it the four Ps of investing. Investors invest in past, meaning how many times have you exited. That’s the big one, by the way. There’s nothing in your bio descriptions that will sing more than, “Got somebody’s money back.” Or was on a team that had a big exit. There’s a past.
The second P is people. What that means is they can execute and build something. It’s really important that when you talk about someone’s bio, if they don’t have a past of returning money or being part of an exit, they do have a past of building stuff.
We don’t care where you went to college. We really don’t. We don’t care what product you’re associated with or what great company you’re associated with. We want to know what you’ve built. When I talk to a lot of really good VCs, they’re always asking, “Is that guy a salesman or is he a real builder?” When they look on a bio sheet, they’re either looking for people that can get work done with their money. That’s the most important second P.
[Tweet “We don’t care where you went to college. We want to know what you’ve built.”]
The third P is product and the fourth P is process. Process might be, it’s almost what I like to call the human software of the company. This is the process by which we attract users. This is the process by which we build or improve products. You get what I’m saying?
Yes.
Those are the four Ps. Once again. Past, people, then there’s product, then there’s process. In that order, by the way.
I love that because the two reasons companies go out of business that are in startup mode is lack of funding and lack of customers. You, as the founder, have to make sure you have a good product market fit so you get customers something they’re willing to pay for.
Then you have to be able to sell yourself to get funding. You’re selling yourself to get customers, you’re selling yourself to get funding, which really makes Dealstorming the number one book that every startup should be reading because they’re going to need those skills for customers and fundraising.
That’s right. You’re going to need it over and over again. Raising money is just the first hard deal. The other thing I’ll say is, if you sell a service to a business, whatever, a technology solution, an advertising solution. If you are B2B, you cannot social sell and test and scale and be successful. This is the Millennial’s dream, but it’s not true.

If you are B2B, you cannot social sell and test and scale and be successful. This is the Millennial’s dream, but it’s not true.
This is a big concern I have for startups. We live in a world today where they want to build a sales development rep model where they social sell to create contact. They use email to get you to try the demo. They give it away to you free then you eventually subscribe. They scale up your subscriptions where it starts out at 5,000 a year with the dream of going to half million a year.
Guys, that is not a sustainable business. Let me tell you why, a competitor who’s got more courage to go after the million dollar in the first place, put a human being in front of that buyer or buying team, they will eliminate all of the room for you on the deal.
I can’t tell you how many small startups are like, “We were inside Zappos. We’ve been working with them for ten months and we’ve gone to 500 users. We’re building 6,100 a month.” All of a sudden, this other startup came and did a $700,000 deal. Everything is gone.
I’m like, “How long did it take them to do that?” “Two months.” They showed the customer how much they could save by working with one solution provider. How much more efficiency they could get by getting reporting from one solution provider. I’m like, “The difference between you and them was they had the process and the courage to go after the whole deal. You were stuck trying to do what I call the no resistance model of startup sales.”
Just give us a little sliver, let us prove to you this works and there’s no risk. The risk is somebody else is going to be brave enough, as you said, to come in and ask for the big enchilada.
Yeah. I like this one, “We’d rather be ignored than rejected.” That’s why social selling is so hot. That’s why email marketing is so much more fun. You’d just much rather like somebody’s content and then message them and say, “I’ve seen you do the thing. I’d like to have a quick webinar with you to show you our product.”
Maybe you email them a link to the demo. You never have to have a live conversation like you and I are having right now where they could basically say, “No, I reject you and your product.” Or even go through what our parents went through. Trying to set up a meeting and then going to their office and going into their conference room and having a live one-on-one and asking for the big check and all of those really hard things.
We don’t want to do that anymore. The quality deal really is the only way that you build barriers to entry in the world we live in today. Dealstorming gives you a process, even when you’re small, to build a quality team inside, outside your company and conquer huge deals.
[Tweet “The quality deal really is the only way that you build barriers to entry in the world we live in today.”]
I have worked with startups in the last few years that have had to go in and ask for two, three, four, five million and they’ve ended up getting to avoid a B round by making a sale. If your B round was a couple of big deals instead of another beat down or another delusion, I’m telling you, that’s the way you want to do it.
Too often, especially these B2B startups, they just believe there’s going to be a friends and family, there’s going to be an Angel, there’s a going to be an A and a B and a C. No, I say, pursue quality deals early enough with this Dealstorming process, an A round might be your last.
Nice, that’s such great information. The time goes so fast with somebody like you, with such specific takeaways. I did want to make sure that people know how to A, get Dealstorming, follow you on social media, what’s your Twitter and all that good stuff.
If you want to get a free chapter of Dealstorming, it’s titled Sales Genius is a Team Sport, 30 pages plus, just go to DealStorming.net. On all social media networks, I am @SandersSays everywhere. I accept all LinkedIn requests.
Nice. Tim, it’s been a pleasure. I’m so excited for everybody to get Dealstorming in their hands because I know all your other books have been hugely successful. This is going to be the biggest one yet.
Thank you so much, John. I appreciate you, buddy.
Likewise.
Links Mentioned
JRobinett Enterprises
Give Your Speech, Change the World by Nick Morgan
Public Words
Dealstorming by Tim Sanders
Dealstorming
Tim Sanders’ Twitter
Tim Sanders’ LinkedIn
Tim Sanders talks about Becoming a Sales Leader
Crack The Funding Code!
Register now for the free webinar
Check out John’s Latest Book
Share The Show
Did you enjoy the show? I’d love it if you subscribed today and left us a 5-star review!
-
- Click this link
- Click on the ‘Subscribe’ button below the artwork
- Go to the ‘Ratings and Reviews’ section
- Click on ‘Write a Review’
