The 10 Things I’d Tell My Younger CEO Self to Do Better Next Time
What are the Top 10 things I’d tell myself to do better, if I could go back in time?
My top list:
- Slow down big decisions — when you aren’t sure. You have to move fast and break things, but if the pit in your stomach says “maybe don’t do that” — slow that decision down. My biggest mistakes have been where I quickly said “roll the dice”, but my gut wasn’t sure the downside risk was worth it.
- Budget an extra 6–12 months beyond the longest timeframe you have budgeted. We raised 18 months of seed money. We needed 30, or at least, 24 months to get to a true business. It always takes longer. More here.
- Slow down the initial team formation phase if you don’t have it right. Fire fast doesn’t work so well with co-founders. No one has a perfect team to start, or ever. But if the initial team’s goals aren’t aligned … that never gets fixed. It’s OK to wait another 3 months to say GO if that means the team is stronger.
- Charge from Day 1. Free users and “free customers” provide terrible, distracting feedback. Not always, but almost always. More here.
- Pay Up. Even when cash is tight, paying an extra $20k a year or more for a resource that is 2x-5x better is the best investment you will ever make.
- Charge more. Your product either has value, or it doesn’t. Charging 20%-50%-100% more than you’d planned will help you learn that faster, and get to a viable business faster. Don’t charge less to get the ball rolling. That only helps with commodities. More here.
- Fire anyone that isn’t 100% customer-centric. Later, not everyone has to care about customers. But in the early days, everyone has to. They will let the whole company down in SaaS if they aren’t.
- Resolve founder conflict. Founder conflict kills start-ups, though often slowly. You gotta fix this early.
- Pay yourself as soon as you can. Working for free is OK in the early days, but later, it gives you an excuse to just “do your best”. Your best isn’t good enough. Winning the market is good enough. More here.
- Get better mentors — and pay them. You haven’t done it all before, at least not everything. And even if your mentors are centimillionaires — pay them (at least in equity). A so-so mentor or advisor is in the end a waste of time. But 1 or 2 folks that can truly help you think through the tough decisions — they are worth their weight in gold. More here.
And learning what everyone would do better next time at this year's SaaStr Annual here :)
A highly modivated, results-driven professional, driving transformation delivering consumer and employee centric solutions.
7 年Be prepared for everything, and more.
Self Employed at ETMDrywallseverises
7 年Hindsight is always 2020 we always know tomorrow the decisions you make today work that good but yesterday they were the best we could make him open with what we knew yesterday there every day and make a greater tomorrow
Valuer of Time, Human Observer and General Kibitzer ? Retired Marketer, Business Developer and Manager? #valuetime #drewehrlich
7 年Very nice list, Jason M. Lemkin. I personally would quibble with a line in #7, though. "Later, not everyone has to care about customers," is, in my opinion, an untrue statement. Everyone, in every organization, should ideally care about how the individual work they do affects their prospects, customers and clients. The organization itself ceases to be customer-centric when any of its employees/staff are allowed to not be. From how they speak about the customers outside of work, to how they describe their customers, internally, this is a mindset that needs to be maintained at all times, or the organization loses its focus and mission as it becomes larger. We've seen this way too many times... and that's when the scandals and PR nightmares begin.
Founder @ Zeroth Group Specializing FSCA License Acquisition | Compliance | Business Management
7 年This is so powerful , thank you so much for sharing
Business Growth Specialist | Business Community Leader| Business Connector
7 年Great list, Jason. Thanks for sharing.