用13句话讲清楚创业
用13句话讲清楚创业
想创业吗?申请Y Combinator融资。观看本文的写作过程。2009年2月
我经常告诉创业者一个我从Paul Buchheit那里学到的原则:让少数人非常满意,比让很多人半满意要好。最近我告诉一个记者,如果我只能告诉创业者10件事,这会是其中之一。然后我想:其他9件会是什么?
当我列出清单时,发现有13条:
- 选择好的联合创始人。
联合创始人对创业公司来说,就像位置对房地产一样。你可以改变房子的任何方面,除了它的位置。在创业公司中,你可以轻易改变你的想法,但改变联合创始人很难。[1] 而创业公司的成功几乎总是其创始人的函数。
- 快速发布。
快速发布的原因并不是说尽早将产品推向市场至关重要,而是直到你发布,你才真正开始着手处理它。发布教会你本应该构建什么。在你明白之前,你都在浪费时间。所以无论你用什么发布,其主要价值都是作为吸引用户的借口。
- 让你的想法进化。
这是快速发布的第二部分。快速发布并迭代。把创业公司当作仅仅是实现某个绝妙初始想法的事情是个大错误。就像写文章一样,大多数想法都是在实现过程中出现的。
- 理解你的用户。
你可以将创业公司创造的财富想象成一个矩形,一边是用户数量,另一边是你改善他们生活的程度。[2] 第二个维度是你最能控制的。实际上,第一个维度的增长将取决于你在第二个维度上做得如何。就像在科学中,困难的部分不是回答问题,而是提出问题:困难的部分是看到用户缺乏的新东西。你越了解他们,做到这一点的机会就越大。这就是为什么这么多成功的创业公司都制造了创始人自己需要的东西。
- 最好让少数用户喜欢你,而不是让很多人无感。
理想情况下,你希望让大量用户喜欢你,但你不能指望一蹴而就。最初你必须在满足所有潜在用户子集的需求,或满足所有潜在用户需求子集之间做出选择。选择前者。在用户数量上扩展比在满意度上扩展更容易。也许更重要的是,你更难欺骗自己。如果你认为你距离好产品还有85%的路要走,你怎么知道不是70%?或者10%?而知道你有多少用户是很容易的。
- 提供令人惊讶的好客户服务。
客户习惯于被虐待。他们打交道的大多数公司都是准垄断企业,能够逃脱糟糕的客户服务。你对可能性的看法已经被这些经历无意识地降低了。尝试使你的客户服务不仅好,而且令人惊讶的好。想方设法让人们快乐。他们会感到惊喜的;你会看到的。在创业公司的最早阶段,提供难以扩展的客户服务是值得的,因为这是了解用户的一种方式。
- 你会得到你衡量的东西。
这是我从Joe Kraus那里学到的。[3] 仅仅衡量某件事就有一种不可思议的改善它的倾向。如果你想让你的用户数量增加,在你的墙上贴一大张纸,每天标出用户数量。当它上升时你会感到高兴,下降时会失望。很快你就会开始注意到是什么让数字上升,你会开始做更多这样的事情。推论:小心你衡量什么。
- 少花钱。
我无法强调创业公司保持廉价有多么重要。大多数创业公司在制造出人们想要的东西之前就失败了,最常见的失败形式是资金耗尽。所以保持廉价与快速迭代(几乎)是可以互换的。[4] 但这不仅仅是这些。廉价文化就像锻炼保持人们年轻一样,能让公司保持年轻。
- 实现拉面盈利。
“拉面盈利”意味着创业公司的收入刚好足以支付创始人的生活费用。这不是商业模式的快速原型(尽管它可以是),而更像是一种黑客投资过程的方式。一旦你实现拉面盈利,你与投资者的关系就完全改变了。这对士气也很棒。
- 避免分心。
没有什么比分心更能扼杀创业公司了。最糟糕的类型是那些付钱的:日常工作、咨询、有利可图的副项目。创业公司可能具有更多的长期潜力,但你总是会中断在它上面的工作,去接那些现在付钱给你的人的电话。矛盾的是,融资就是这种类型的分心,所以也要尽量减少它。
- 不要气馁。
虽然创业公司直接死亡的原因往往是资金耗尽,但根本原因通常是缺乏专注。要么公司由愚蠢的人经营(这无法通过建议修复),要么人们聪明但变得气馁。开始创业公司是一个巨大的精神负担。理解这一点,并有意识地努力不被它压垮,就像你在拿起重箱子时要小心弯曲膝盖一样。
- 不要放弃。
即使你气馁了,也不要放弃。仅仅通过不放弃,你就能走得比你想象的远得多。这在所有领域都不成立。有很多人无论坚持多久都无法成为优秀的数学家。但创业公司不是这样的。纯粹的努力通常就足够了,只要你不断调整你的想法。
- 交易会失败。
我们从Viaweb学到的最有用的技能之一是不抱太大希望。我们可能有20个各种类型的交易失败了。在前10个左右之后,我们学会将交易视为我们应该忽略直到它们终止的后台进程。开始依赖交易完成对士气来说是非常危险的,不仅因为它们经常不完成,而且因为这使它们更不可能完成。
当把它缩减到13句话时,我问自己如果只能保留一个,我会选择哪一个。
理解你的用户。这就是关键。创业公司的基本任务是创造财富;你最能控制的财富维度是你改善用户生活的程度;而其中最难的部分是知道为他们制造什么。一旦你知道要制造什么,制造它就只是努力的问题,大多数像样的黑客都有能力做到。
理解你的用户是这个清单中一半原则的一部分。这就是要早期发布,以了解你的用户。发展你的想法是理解你的用户的体现。很好地理解你的用户会倾向于推动你制造让少数人深度满意的东西。拥有令人惊讶的好客户服务的最重要原因是它帮助你理解你的用户。而理解你的用户甚至会确保你的士气,因为当其他一切都崩溃时,只要有十个用户喜欢你,你就会继续前进。
注释
[1] 严格来说,没有时间机器是不可能的。
[2] 实际上,它更像一个参差不齐的梳子。
[3] Joe认为是惠普的创始人之一首先说的,但他不记得是哪一个。
[4] 如果市场停滞不前,它们是可互换的。既然不是,工作速度快一倍比拥有两倍时间更好。
Startups in 13 Sentences
Want to start a startup? Get funded by Y Combinator. Watch how this essay was written. February 2009
One of the things I always tell startups is a principle I learned from Paul Buchheit: it’s better to make a few people really happy than to make a lot of people semi-happy. I was saying recently to a reporter that if I could only tell startups 10 things, this would be one of them. Then I thought: what would the other 9 be?
When I made the list there turned out to be 13:
- Pick good cofounders.
Cofounders are for a startup what location is for real estate. You can change anything about a house except where it is. In a startup you can change your idea easily, but changing your cofounders is hard. [1] And the success of a startup is almost always a function of its founders.
- Launch fast.
The reason to launch fast is not so much that it’s critical to get your product to market early, but that you haven’t really started working on it till you’ve launched. Launching teaches you what you should have been building. Till you know that you’re wasting your time. So the main value of whatever you launch with is as a pretext for engaging users.
- Let your idea evolve.
This is the second half of launching fast. Launch fast and iterate. It’s a big mistake to treat a startup as if it were merely a matter of implementing some brilliant initial idea. As in an essay, most of the ideas appear in the implementing.
- Understand your users.
You can envision the wealth created by a startup as a rectangle, where one side is the number of users and the other is how much you improve their lives. [2] The second dimension is the one you have most control over. And indeed, the growth in the first will be driven by how well you do in the second. As in science, the hard part is not answering questions but asking them: the hard part is seeing something new that users lack. The better you understand them the better the odds of doing that. That’s why so many successful startups make something the founders needed.
- Better to make a few users love you than a lot ambivalent.
Ideally you want to make large numbers of users love you, but you can’t expect to hit that right away. Initially you have to choose between satisfying all the needs of a subset of potential users, or satisfying a subset of the needs of all potential users. Take the first. It’s easier to expand userwise than satisfactionwise. And perhaps more importantly, it’s harder to lie to yourself. If you think you’re 85% of the way to a great product, how do you know it’s not 70%? Or 10%? Whereas it’s easy to know how many users you have.
- Offer surprisingly good customer service.
Customers are used to being maltreated. Most of the companies they deal with are quasi-monopolies that get away with atrocious customer service. Your own ideas about what’s possible have been unconsciously lowered by such experiences. Try making your customer service not merely good, but surprisingly good. Go out of your way to make people happy. They’ll be overwhelmed; you’ll see. In the earliest stages of a startup, it pays to offer customer service on a level that wouldn’t scale, because it’s a way of learning about your users.
- You make what you measure.
I learned this one from Joe Kraus. [3] Merely measuring something has an uncanny tendency to improve it. If you want to make your user numbers go up, put a big piece of paper on your wall and every day plot the number of users. You’ll be delighted when it goes up and disappointed when it goes down. Pretty soon you’ll start noticing what makes the number go up, and you’ll start to do more of that. Corollary: be careful what you measure.
- Spend little.
I can’t emphasize enough how important it is for a startup to be cheap. Most startups fail before they make something people want, and the most common form of failure is running out of money. So being cheap is (almost) interchangeable with iterating rapidly. [4] But it’s more than that. A culture of cheapness keeps companies young in something like the way exercise keeps people young.
- Get ramen profitable.
“Ramen profitable” means a startup makes just enough to pay the founders’ living expenses. It’s not rapid prototyping for business models (though it can be), but more a way of hacking the investment process. Once you cross over into ramen profitable, it completely changes your relationship with investors. It’s also great for morale.
- Avoid distractions.
Nothing kills startups like distractions. The worst type are those that pay money: day jobs, consulting, profitable side-projects. The startup may have more long-term potential, but you’ll always interrupt working on it to answer calls from people paying you now. Paradoxically, fundraising is this type of distraction, so try to minimize that too.
- Don’t get demoralized.
Though the immediate cause of death in a startup tends to be running out of money, the underlying cause is usually lack of focus. Either the company is run by stupid people (which can’t be fixed with advice) or the people are smart but got demoralized. Starting a startup is a huge moral weight. Understand this and make a conscious effort not to be ground down by it, just as you’d be careful to bend at the knees when picking up a heavy box.
- Don’t give up.
Even if you get demoralized, don’t give up. You can get surprisingly far by just not giving up. This isn’t true in all fields. There are a lot of people who couldn’t become good mathematicians no matter how long they persisted. But startups aren’t like that. Sheer effort is usually enough, so long as you keep morphing your idea.
- Deals fall through.
One of the most useful skills we learned from Viaweb was not getting our hopes up. We probably had 20 deals of various types fall through. After the first 10 or so we learned to treat deals as background processes that we should ignore till they terminated. It’s very dangerous to morale to start to depend on deals closing, not just because they so often don’t, but because it makes them less likely to.
Having gotten it down to 13 sentences, I asked myself which I’d choose if I could only keep one.
Understand your users. That’s the key. The essential task in a startup is to create wealth; the dimension of wealth you have most control over is how much you improve users’ lives; and the hardest part of that is knowing what to make for them. Once you know what to make, it’s mere effort to make it, and most decent hackers are capable of that.
Understanding your users is part of half the principles in this list. That’s the reason to launch early, to understand your users. Evolving your idea is the embodiment of understanding your users. Understanding your users well will tend to push you toward making something that makes a few people deeply happy. The most important reason for having surprisingly good customer service is that it helps you understand your users. And understanding your users will even ensure your morale, because when everything else is collapsing around you, having just ten users who love you will keep you going.
Notes
[1] Strictly speaking it’s impossible without a time machine.
[2] In practice it’s more like a ragged comb.
[3] Joe thinks one of the founders of Hewlett Packard said it first, but he doesn’t remember which.
[4] They’d be interchangeable if markets stood still. Since they don’t, working twice as fast is better than having twice as much time.