致命的困境
致命的困境
2014年12月
许多创业公司在死亡前几个月都会经历这样一个阶段:虽然银行里有相当可观的资金,但每月也在大量亏损,收入增长要么不存在,要么平庸。公司有,比如说,6个月的运营资金。或者更残酷地说,6个月后就要破产。他们期望通过从投资者那里筹集更多资金来避免这种情况。[1]
最后一句话是致命的。
可能没有什么比创始人更容易自我欺骗的事情了,那就是投资者会有多大兴趣给他们额外资金。第一次说服投资者也很困难,但创始人预料到了这一点。第二次困扰他们的是三种力量的汇合:公司现在比第一次筹集资金时花费更多。投资者对已经筹集过资金的公司要求高得多。公司现在开始被视为失败。第一次筹集资金时,它既不是成功也不是失败;问这个问题为时过早。现在可以问这个问题了,而默认答案是失败,因为此时这是默认结果。
我将把第一段描述的情况称为”致命的困境”。我尽量避免创造新词,但为这种情况起个名字可能会让创始人突然意识到自己正处于其中。
致命困境如此危险的原因之一是它是自我强化的。创始人高估筹集更多资金的机会,因此对达到盈利松懈,这进一步降低了他们筹集资金的机会。
既然你知道了致命困境,如何避免它?Y Combinator告诉筹集资金的创始人要表现得好像这是他们最后能得到的资金。因为这种情况的自我强化性质也反方向起作用:你越不需要进一步投资,就越容易获得。
如果你已经陷入致命困境怎么办?第一步是重新评估筹集更多资金的可能性。现在,我将通过惊人的洞察力为你做这件事:可能性是零。[2]
剩下三个选择:你可以关闭公司,你可以增加收入,你可以减少支出。
如果你确信无论做什么公司都会失败,你应该关闭公司。那样至少你可以退还剩余的资金,并省去你本会花费在看着公司倒闭上的几个月时间。
不过公司很少必须失败。我在这里真正做的是给你承认你已经放弃的选择。
如果你不想关闭公司,那就剩下增加收入和减少支出。在大多数创业公司中,支出=人,减少支出=解雇人。[3] 决定解雇人通常很困难,但有一种情况不应该困难:当你已经知道应该解雇某些人但自己不愿承认时。如果是这样,现在就是时候了。
如果这让你盈利,或者能够让你在剩余资金支持下达到盈利,你已经避免了直接危险。
否则你有三个选择:你要么解雇优秀员工,要么让部分或所有员工暂时减薪,要么增加收入。
让员工减薪是一个弱解决方案,只有在问题不太严重时才有效。如果你目前的轨迹几乎无法让你达到盈利,但通过略微减薪可以跨越门槛,你也许能够向大家说明这样做的理由。否则你可能只是在推迟问题,这对那些你提议减薪的人来说会很明显。[4]
剩下两个选择,解雇优秀员工和赚更多钱。在试图平衡它们时,记住最终目标:成为一家成功的产品公司,即拥有大量人使用的单一产品。
如果你的困境源于过度招聘,你应该更倾向于解雇人。如果你在甚至不知道要构建什么之前就雇佣了15个人,你创造了一个有缺陷的公司。你需要弄清楚你要构建什么,而用几个人而不是15个人来做可能更容易。另外,这15个人可能甚至不是你最终构建所需产品的人。所以解决方案可能是先收缩,然后确定成长方向。毕竟,如果你带着这15个人一起将公司开向地面,你并没有为他们做什么好事。他们最终都会失去工作,以及他们在这个注定失败的创业公司上花费的所有时间。
而如果你只有几个人,最好专注于尝试赚更多钱。建议创业公司赚更多钱可能显得轻率,好像可以轻而易举地做到。通常创业公司已经在尽可能努力地销售其产品。我在这里建议的不是更努力地赚钱,而是尝试以不同方式赚钱。例如,如果你只有一个人在销售,其余人在写代码,考虑让所有人都从事销售。当你破产时,更多代码对你有什么用?如果你必须写代码来完成某笔交易,继续做;这源于所有人都从事销售。但只从事能最快获得最多收入的工作。
另一种不同赚钱方式是销售不同的东西,特别是做更多咨询类工作。我说咨询类是因为从制作产品到纯咨询有一个长长的滑坡,你不必走很远就能开始为客户提供真正有吸引力的东西。虽然你的产品可能还不很有吸引力,但如果你是创业公司,你的程序员通常比客户拥有的程序员优秀得多。或者你可能拥有客户不理解的新领域专业知识。所以如果你将销售对话从”你想买我们的产品吗?“稍微改变为”你需要什么愿意付高价的?“你可能会发现突然从客户那里获得收入容易多了。
不过,当你开始这样做时要毫不留情地唯利是图。你正在努力拯救公司免于死亡,所以要让客户大量快速付款。并在尽可能范围内避免咨询的最坏陷阱。理想情况可能是你为客户构建了精确定义的产品衍生版本,否则就是直接产品销售。你保留知识产权,不按小时计费。
在最好的情况下,这种咨询类工作可能不仅仅是生存的手段,而可能成为定义你公司的那个无法扩展的东西。不要期望它会是这样,但当你深入了解个别用户需求时,要留意那些背后有广阔前景的狭窄机会。
通常对定制工作的需求如此之大,除非你真的无能,否则在咨询滑坡的某个点上你总能生存。但我不是偶然使用”滑坡”这个词;客户对定制工作的无止境需求总会将你推向底部。所以虽然你可能生存,但现在的问题变成以最小损失和干扰生存。
好消息是,许多成功的创业公司都经历了濒死体验并继续蓬勃发展。你只需要及时意识到自己濒临死亡。如果你处于致命困境中,你确实濒临死亡。
注释
[1] 有少数公司在前一两年无法合理期望赚钱,因为他们构建的产品需要很长时间。对于这些公司,用”进展”代替”收入增长”。除非你的初始投资者事先同意你是这样的公司,否则你不是这些公司之一。坦率地说,即使是这些公司也希望自己不是,因为”进展”的非流动性使他们任由投资者摆布。
[2] 致命困境有一个变体,你的现有投资者通过承诺投资更多来帮助你。或者说,你将他们解读为承诺投资更多,而他们认为他们只是在提到可能性。如果你有8个月或更少的运营资金,解决这个问题的方法是尝试现在就获得资金。那样你要么得到资金,在这种情况下(直接)问题解决,或者至少防止你的投资者帮助你继续对融资前景保持否认。
[3] 显然,如果你有除了工资外的重要支出可以消除,现在就做。
[4] 当然,除非问题的根源是你们给自己支付高工资。如果通过将创始人的工资削减到所需最低限度,你可以达到盈利,你应该这样做。但如果你需要读这篇文章才意识到这一点,这是个坏迹象。
感谢山姆·奥特曼、保罗·布赫海特、杰西卡·利文斯顿和杰夫·拉尔斯顿阅读草稿。
阿拉伯语翻译
The Fatal Pinch
December 2014
Many startups go through a point a few months before they die where although they have a significant amount of money in the bank, they’re also losing a lot each month, and revenue growth is either nonexistent or mediocre. The company has, say, 6 months of runway. Or to put it more brutally, 6 months before they’re out of business. They expect to avoid that by raising more from investors. [1]
That last sentence is the fatal one.
There may be nothing founders are so prone to delude themselves about as how interested investors will be in giving them additional funding. It’s hard to convince investors the first time too, but founders expect that. What bites them the second time is a confluence of three forces: The company is spending more now than it did the first time it raised money. Investors have much higher standards for companies that have already raised money. The company is now starting to read as a failure. The first time it raised money, it was neither a success nor a failure; it was too early to ask. Now it’s possible to ask that question, and the default answer is failure, because at this point that is the default outcome. I’m going to call the situation I described in the first paragraph “the fatal pinch.” I try to resist coining phrases, but making up a name for this situation may snap founders into realizing when they’re in it.
One of the things that makes the fatal pinch so dangerous is that it’s self-reinforcing. Founders overestimate their chances of raising more money, and so are slack about reaching profitability, which further decreases their chances of raising money.
Now that you know about the fatal pinch, how do you avoid it? Y Combinator tells founders who raise money to act as if it’s the last they’ll ever get. Because the self-reinforcing nature of this situation works the other way too: the less you need further investment, the easier it is to get.
What do you do if you’re already in the fatal pinch? The first step is to re-evaluate the probability of raising more money. I will now, by an amazing feat of clairvoyance, do this for you: the probability is zero. [2]
Three options remain: you can shut down the company, you can increase how much you make, and you can decrease how much you spend.
You should shut down the company if you’re certain it will fail no matter what you do. Then at least you can give back the money you have left, and save yourself however many months you would have spent riding it down.
Companies rarely have to fail though. What I’m really doing here is giving you the option of admitting you’ve already given up.
If you don’t want to shut down the company, that leaves increasing revenues and decreasing expenses. In most startups, expenses = people, and decreasing expenses = firing people. [3] Deciding to fire people is usually hard, but there’s one case in which it shouldn’t be: when there are people you already know you should fire but you’re in denial about it. If so, now’s the time.
If that makes you profitable, or will enable you to make it to profitability on the money you have left, you’ve avoided the immediate danger.
Otherwise you have three options: you either have to fire good people, get some or all of the employees to take less salary for a while, or increase revenues.
Getting people to take less salary is a weak solution that will only work when the problem isn’t too bad. If your current trajectory won’t quite get you to profitability but you can get over the threshold by cutting salaries a little, you might be able to make the case to everyone for doing it. Otherwise you’re probably just postponing the problem, and that will be obvious to the people whose salaries you’re proposing to cut. [4]
Which leaves two options, firing good people and making more money. While trying to balance them, keep in mind the eventual goal: to be a successful product company in the sense of having a single thing lots of people use.
You should lean more toward firing people if the source of your trouble is overhiring. If you went out and hired 15 people before you even knew what you were building, you’ve created a broken company. You need to figure out what you’re building, and it will probably be easier to do that with a handful of people than 15. Plus those 15 people might not even be the ones you need for whatever you end up building. So the solution may be to shrink and then figure out what direction to grow in. After all, you’re not doing those 15 people any favors if you fly the company into ground with them aboard. They’ll all lose their jobs eventually, along with all the time they expended on this doomed company.
Whereas if you only have a handful of people, it may be better to focus on trying to make more money. It may seem facile to suggest a startup make more money, as if that could be done for the asking. Usually a startup is already trying as hard as it can to sell whatever it sells. What I’m suggesting here is not so much to try harder to make money but to try to make money in a different way. For example, if you have only one person selling while the rest are writing code, consider having everyone work on selling. What good will more code do you when you’re out of business? If you have to write code to close a certain deal, go ahead; that follows from everyone working on selling. But only work on whatever will get you the most revenue the soonest.
Another way to make money differently is to sell different things, and in particular to do more consultingish work. I say consultingish because there is a long slippery slope from making products to pure consulting, and you don’t have to go far down it before you start to offer something really attractive to customers. Although your product may not be very appealing yet, if you’re a startup your programmers will often be way better than the ones your customers have. Or you may have expertise in some new field they don’t understand. So if you change your sales conversations just a little from “do you want to buy our product?” to “what do you need that you’d pay a lot for?” you may find it’s suddenly a lot easier to extract money from customers.
Be ruthlessly mercenary when you start doing this, though. You’re trying to save your company from death here, so make customers pay a lot, quickly. And to the extent you can, try to avoid the worst pitfalls of consulting. The ideal thing might be if you built a precisely defined derivative version of your product for the customer, and it was otherwise a straight product sale. You keep the IP and no billing by the hour.
In the best case, this consultingish work may not be just something you do to survive, but may turn out to be the thing-that-doesn’t-scale that defines your company. Don’t expect it to be, but as you dive into individual users’ needs, keep your eyes open for narrow openings that have wide vistas beyond.
There is usually so much demand for custom work that unless you’re really incompetent there has to be some point down the slope of consulting at which you can survive. But I didn’t use the term slippery slope by accident; customers’ insatiable demand for custom work will always be pushing you toward the bottom. So while you’ll probably survive, the problem now becomes to survive with the least damage and distraction.
The good news is, plenty of successful startups have passed through near-death experiences and gone on to flourish. You just have to realize in time that you’re near death. And if you’re in the fatal pinch, you are.
Notes
[1] There are a handful of companies that can’t reasonably expect to make money for the first year or two, because what they’re building takes so long. For these companies substitute “progress” for “revenue growth.” You’re not one of these companies unless your initial investors agreed in advance that you were. And frankly even these companies wish they weren’t, because the illiquidity of “progress” puts them at the mercy of investors.
[2] There’s a variant of the fatal pinch where your existing investors help you along by promising to invest more. Or rather, where you read them as promising to invest more, while they think they’re just mentioning the possibility. The way to solve this problem, if you have 8 months of runway or less, is to try to get the money right now. Then you’ll either get the money, in which case (immediate) problem solved, or at least prevent your investors from helping you to remain in denial about your fundraising prospects.
[3] Obviously, if you have significant expenses other than salaries that you can eliminate, do it now.
[4] Unless of course the source of the problem is that you’re paying yourselves high salaries. If by cutting the founders’ salaries to the minimum you need, you can make it to profitability, you should. But it’s a bad sign if you needed to read this to realize that.
Thanks to Sam Altman, Paul Buchheit, Jessica Livingston, and Geoff Ralston for reading drafts of this.