How To Make
Wealth
by Paul Graham
May 2004
(This essay was originally
published in
Hackers and Painters: Big Ideas from the Computer Age )
If you wanted to get rich, how would you do it? I think your best
bet would be to start or join a startup. That's been a reliable way
to get rich for hundreds of years. The word "startup" dates from the
1960s, but what happens in one is very similar to the venture-backed
trading voyages of the Middle Ages.
Startups usually involve technology, so much so that the phrase
"high-tech startup" is almost redundant. A startup is a small
company that takes on a hard technical problem.
Lots of people get rich knowing nothing more than that. You don't
have to know physics to be a good pitcher. But I think it could give
you an edge to understand the underlying principles. Why do startups
have to be small? Will a startup inevitably stop being a startup as
it grows larger? And why do they so often work on developing new
technology? Why are there so many startups selling new drugs or
computer software, and none selling corn oil or laundry detergent?
The Proposition
Economically, you can think of a startup as a way to compress your
whole working life into a few years. Instead of working at a low
intensity for forty years, you work as hard as you possibly can for
four. This pays especially well in technology, where you earn a
premium for working fast.
Here is a brief sketch of the economic proposition. If you're a good
hacker in your mid twenties, you can get a job paying about $80,000
per year. So on average such a hacker must be able to do at least
$80,000 worth of work per year for the company just to break even.
You could probably work twice as many hours as a corporate employee,
and if you focus you can probably get three times as much done in an
hour. [1]
You should get another multiple of two, at least, by eliminating the
drag of the pointy-haired middle manager who would be your boss in a
big company. Then there is one more multiple: how much smarter are
you than your job description expects you to be? Suppose another
multiple of three. Combine all these multipliers, and I'm claiming
you could be 36 times more productive than you're expected to be in
a random corporate job. [2]
If a fairly good hacker is worth $80,000 a year at a big company,
then a smart hacker working very hard without any corporate bullshit
to slow him down should be able to do work worth about $3 million a
year.
Like all back-of-the-envelope calculations, this one has a lot of
wiggle room. I wouldn't try to defend the actual numbers. But I
stand by the structure of the calculation. I'm not claiming the
multiplier is precisely 36, but it is certainly more than 10, and
probably rarely as high as 100.
If $3 million a year seems high, remember that we're talking about
the limit case: the case where you not only have zero leisure time
but indeed work so hard that you endanger your health.
Startups are not magic. They don't change the laws of wealth
creation. They just represent a point at the far end of the curve.
There is a conservation law at work here: if you want to make a
million dollars, you have to endure a million dollars' worth of
pain. For example, one way to make a million dollars would be to
work for the Post Office your whole life, and save every penny of
your salary. Imagine the stress of working for the Post Office for
fifty years. In a startup you compress all this stress into three or
four years. You do tend to get a certain bulk discount if you buy
the economy-size pain, but you can't evade the fundamental
conservation law. If starting a startup were easy, everyone would do
it.
Millions, not Billions
If $3 million a year seems high to some people, it will seem low to
others. Three million? How do I get to be a billionaire, like
Bill Gates?
So let's get Bill Gates out of the way right now. It's not a good
idea to use famous rich people as examples, because the press only
write about the very richest, and these tend to be outliers. Bill
Gates is a smart, determined, and hardworking man, but you need more
than that to make as much money as he has. You also need to be very
lucky.
There is a large random factor in the success of any company. So the
guys you end up reading about in the papers are the ones who are
very smart, totally dedicated, and win the lottery. Certainly
Bill is smart and dedicated, but Microsoft also happens to have been
the beneficiary of one of the most spectacular blunders in the
history of business: the licensing deal for DOS. No doubt Bill did
everything he could to steer IBM into making that blunder, and he
has done an excellent job of exploiting it, but if there had been
one person with a brain on IBM's side, Microsoft's future would have
been very different. Microsoft at that stage had little leverage
over IBM. They were effectively a component supplier. If IBM had
required an exclusive license, as they should have, Microsoft would
still have signed the deal. It would still have meant a lot of money
for them, and IBM could easily have gotten an operating system
elsewhere.
Instead IBM ended up using all its power in the market to give
Microsoft control of the PC standard. From that point, all Microsoft
had to do was execute. They never had to bet the company on a bold
decision. All they had to do was play hardball with licensees and
copy more innovative products reasonably promptly.
If IBM hadn't made this mistake, Microsoft would still have been a
successful company, but it could not have grown so big so fast. Bill
Gates would be rich, but he'd be somewhere near the bottom of the
Forbes 400 with the other guys his age.
There are a lot of ways to get rich, and this essay is about only
one of them. This essay is about how to make money by creating
wealth and getting paid for it. There are plenty of other ways to
get money, including chance, speculation, marriage, inheritance,
theft, extortion, fraud, monopoly, graft, lobbying, counterfeiting,
and prospecting. Most of the greatest fortunes have probably
involved several of these.
The advantage of creating wealth, as a way to get rich, is not just
that it's more legitimate (many of the other methods are now
illegal) but that it's more straightforward. You just have to
do something people want.
Money Is Not Wealth
If you want to create wealth, it will help to understand what it is.
Wealth is not the same thing as money. [3]
Wealth is as old as human history. Far older, in fact; ants have
wealth. Money is a comparatively recent invention.
Wealth is the fundamental thing. Wealth is stuff we want: food,
clothes, houses, cars, gadgets, travel to interesting places, and so
on. You can have wealth without having money. If you had a magic
machine that could on command make you a car or cook you dinner or
do your laundry, or do anything else you wanted, you wouldn't need
money. Whereas if you were in the middle of Antarctica, where there
is nothing to buy, it wouldn't matter how much money you had.
Wealth is what you want, not money. But if wealth is the important
thing, why does everyone talk about making money? It is a kind of
shorthand: money is a way of moving wealth, and in practice they are
usually interchangeable. But they are not the same thing, and unless
you plan to get rich by counterfeiting, talking about making
money can make it harder to understand how to make money.
Money is a side effect of specialization. In a specialized society,
most of the things you need, you can't make for yourself. If you
want a potato or a pencil or a place to live, you have to get it
from someone else.
How do you get the person who grows the potatoes to give you some?
By giving him something he wants in return. But you can't get very
far by trading things directly with the people who need them. If you
make violins, and none of the local farmers wants one, how will you
eat?
The solution societies find, as they get more specialized, is to
make the trade into a two-step process. Instead of trading violins
directly for potatoes, you trade violins for, say, silver, which you
can then trade again for anything else you need. The intermediate
stuff-- the medium of exchange-- can be anything that's rare
and portable. Historically metals have been the most common, but
recently we've been using a medium of exchange, called the dollar,
that doesn't physically exist. It works as a medium of exchange,
however, because its rarity is guaranteed by the U.S. Government.
The advantage of a medium of exchange is that it makes trade work.
The disadvantage is that it tends to obscure what trade really
means. People think that what a business does is make money. But
money is just the intermediate stage-- just a shorthand-- for
whatever people want. What most businesses really do is make wealth.
They do something people want. [4]
The Pie Fallacy
A surprising number of people retain from childhood the idea that
there is a fixed amount of wealth in the world. There is, in any
normal family, a fixed amount of money at any moment. But
that's not the same thing.
When wealth is talked about in this context, it is often described
as a pie. "You can't make the pie larger," say politicians. When
you're talking about the amount of money in one family's bank
account, or the amount available to a government from one year's tax
revenue, this is true. If one person gets more, someone else has to
get less.
I can remember believing, as a child, that if a few rich people had
all the money, it left less for everyone else. Many people seem to
continue to believe something like this well into adulthood. This
fallacy is usually there in the background when you hear someone
talking about how x percent of the population have y percent of the
wealth. If you plan to start a startup, then whether you realize it
or not, you're planning to disprove the Pie Fallacy.
What leads people astray here is the abstraction of money. Money is
not wealth. It's just something we use to move wealth around. So
although there may be, in certain specific moments (like your
family, this month) a fixed amount of money available to trade with
other people for things you want, there is not a fixed amount of
wealth in the world. You can make more wealth. Wealth has
been getting created and destroyed (but on balance, created) for all
of human history.
Suppose you own a beat-up old car. Instead of sitting on your butt
next summer, you could spend the time restoring your car to pristine
condition. In doing so you create wealth. The world is-- and you
specifically are-- one pristine old car the richer. And not just in
some metaphorical way. If you sell your car, you'll get more for it.
In restoring your old car you have made yourself richer. You haven't
made anyone else poorer. So there is obviously not a fixed pie. And
in fact, when you look at it this way, you wonder why anyone would
think there was. [5]
Kids know, without knowing they know, that they can create wealth.
If you need to give someone a present and don't have any money, you
make one. But kids are so bad at making things that they consider
home-made presents to be a distinct, inferior, sort of thing to
store-bought ones-- a mere expression of the proverbial thought that
counts. And indeed, the lumpy ashtrays we made for our parents did
not have much of a resale market.
Craftsmen
The people most likely to grasp that wealth can be created are the
ones who are good at making things, the craftsmen. Their hand-made
objects become store-bought ones. But with the rise of
industrialization there are fewer and fewer craftsmen. One of the
biggest remaining groups is computer programmers.
A programmer can sit down in front of a computer and create
wealth. A good piece of software is, in itself, a valuable
thing. There is no manufacturing to confuse the issue. Those
characters you type are a complete, finished product. If someone sat
down and wrote a web browser that didn't suck (a fine idea, by the
way), the world would be that much richer. [5b]
Everyone in a company works together to create wealth, in the sense
of making more things people want. Many of the employees (e.g. the
people in the mailroom or the personnel department) work at one
remove from the actual making of stuff. Not the programmers. They
literally think the product, one line at a time. And so it's clearer
to programmers that wealth is something that's made, rather than
being distributed, like slices of a pie, by some imaginary Daddy.
It's also obvious to programmers that there are huge variations in
the rate at which wealth is created. At Viaweb we had one programmer
who was a sort of monster of productivity. I remember watching what
he did one long day and estimating that he had added several hundred
thousand dollars to the market value of the company. A great
programmer, on a roll, could create a million dollars worth of
wealth in a couple weeks. A mediocre programmer over the same period
will generate zero or even negative wealth (e.g. by introducing
bugs).
This is why so many of the best programmers are libertarians. In our
world, you sink or swim, and there are no excuses. When those far
removed from the creation of wealth-- undergraduates, reporters,
politicians-- hear that the richest 5% of the people have half the
total wealth, they tend to think injustice! An experienced
programmer would be more likely to think is that all? The top
5% of programmers probably write 99% of the good software.
Wealth can be created without being sold. Scientists, till recently
at least, effectively donated the wealth they created. We are all
richer for knowing about penicillin, because we're less likely to
die from infections. Wealth is whatever people want, and not dying
is certainly something we want. Hackers often donate their work by
writing open source software that anyone can use for free. I am much
the richer for the operating system FreeBSD, which I'm running on
the computer I'm using now, and so is Yahoo, which runs it on all
their servers.
What a Job Is
In industrialized countries, people belong to one institution or
another at least until their twenties. After all those years you get
used to the idea of belonging to a group of people who all get up in
the morning, go to some set of buildings, and do things that they do
not, ordinarily, enjoy doing. Belonging to such a group becomes part
of your identity: name, age, role, institution. If you have to
introduce yourself, or someone else describes you, it will be as
something like, John Smith, age 10, a student at such and such
elementary school, or John Smith, age 20, a student at such and such
college.
When John Smith finishes school he is expected to get a job. And
what getting a job seems to mean is joining another institution.
Superficially it's a lot like college. You pick the companies you
want to work for and apply to join them. If one likes you, you
become a member of this new group. You get up in the morning and go
to a new set of buildings, and do things that you do not,
ordinarily, enjoy doing. There are a few differences: life is not as
much fun, and you get paid, instead of paying, as you did in
college. But the similarities feel greater than the differences.
John Smith is now John Smith, 22, a software developer at such and
such corporation.
In fact John Smith's life has changed more than he realizes.
Socially, a company looks much like college, but the deeper you go
into the underlying reality, the more different it gets.
What a company does, and has to do if it wants to continue to exist,
is earn money. And the way most companies make money is by creating
wealth. Companies can be so specialized that this similarity is
concealed, but it is not only manufacturing companies that create
wealth. A big component of wealth is location. Remember that magic
machine that could make you cars and cook you dinner and so on? It
would not be so useful if it delivered your dinner to a random
location in central Asia. If wealth means what people want,
companies that move things also create wealth. Ditto for many other
kinds of companies that don't make anything physical. Nearly all
companies exist to do something people want.
And that's what you do, as well, when you go to work for a company.
But here there is another layer that tends to obscure the underlying
reality. In a company, the work you do is averaged together with a
lot of other people's. You may not even be aware you're doing
something people want. Your contribution may be indirect. But the
company as a whole must be giving people something they want, or
they won't make any money. And if they are paying you x dollars a
year, then on average you must be contributing at least x dollars a
year worth of work, or the company will be spending more than it
makes, and will go out of business.
Someone graduating from college thinks, and is told, that he needs
to get a job, as if the important thing were becoming a member of an
institution. A more direct way to put it would be: you need to start
doing something people want. You don't need to join a company to do
that. All a company is is a group of people working together to do
something people want. It's doing something people want that
matters, not joining the group. [6]
For most people the best plan probably is to go to work for some
existing company. But it is a good idea to understand what's
happening when you do this. A job means doing something people want,
averaged together with everyone else in that company.
Working Harder
That averaging gets to be a problem. I think the single biggest
problem afflicting large companies is the difficulty of assigning a
value to each person's work. For the most part they punt. In a big
company you get paid a fairly predictable salary for working fairly
hard. You're expected not to be obviously incompetent or lazy, but
you're not expected to devote your whole life to your work.
It turns out, though, that there are economies of scale in how much
of your life you devote to your work. In the right kind of business,
someone who really devoted himself to work could generate ten or
even a hundred times as much wealth as an average employee. A
programmer, for example, instead of chugging along maintaining and
updating an existing piece of software, could write a whole new
piece of software, and with it create a new source of revenue.
Companies are not set up to reward people who want to do this. You
can't go to your boss and say, I'd like to start working ten times
as hard, so will you please pay me ten times as much? For one thing,
the official fiction is that you are already working as hard as you
can. But a more serious problem is that the company has no way of
measuring the value of your work.
Salesmen are an exception. It's easy to measure how much revenue
they generate, and they're usually paid a percentage of it. If a
salesman wants to work harder, he can just start doing it, and he
will automatically get paid proportionally more.
There is one other job besides sales where big companies can hire
first-rate people: in the top management jobs. And for the same
reason: their performance can be measured. The top managers are held
responsible for the performance of the entire company. Because an
ordinary employee's performance can't usually be measured, he is not
expected to do more than put in a solid effort. Whereas top
management, like salespeople, have to actually come up with the
numbers. The CEO of a company that tanks cannot plead that he put in
a solid effort. If the company does badly, he's done badly.
A company that could pay all its employees so straightforwardly
would be enormously successful. Many employees would work harder if
they could get paid for it. More importantly, such a company would
attract people who wanted to work especially hard. It would crush
its competitors.
Unfortunately, companies can't pay everyone like salesmen. Salesmen
work alone. Most employees' work is tangled together. Suppose a
company makes some kind of consumer gadget. The engineers build a
reliable gadget with all kinds of new features; the industrial
designers design a beautiful case for it; and then the marketing
people convince everyone that it's something they've got to have.
How do you know how much of the gadget's sales are due to each
group's efforts? Or, for that matter, how much is due to the
creators of past gadgets that gave the company a reputation for
quality? There's no way to untangle all their contributions. Even if
you could read the minds of the consumers, you'd find these factors
were all blurred together.
If you want to go faster, it's a problem to have your work tangled
together with a large number of other people's. In a large group,
your performance is not separately measurable-- and the rest of the
group slows you down.
Measurement and Leverage
To get rich you need to get yourself in a situation with two things,
measurement and leverage. You need to be in a position where your
performance can be measured, or there is no way to get paid more by
doing more. And you have to have leverage, in the sense that the
decisions you make have a big effect.
Measurement alone is not enough. An example of a job with
measurement but not leverage is doing piecework in a sweatshop. Your
performance is measured and you get paid accordingly, but you have
no scope for decisions. The only decision you get to make is how
fast you work, and that can probably only increase your earnings by
a factor of two or three.
An example of a job with both measurement and leverage would be lead
actor in a movie. Your performance can be measured in the gross of
the movie. And you have leverage in the sense that your performance
can make or break it.
CEOs also have both measurement and leverage. They're measured, in
that the performance of the company is their performance. And they
have leverage in that their decisions set the whole company moving
in one direction or another.
I think everyone who gets rich by their own efforts will be found to
be in a situation with measurement and leverage. Everyone I can
think of does: CEOs, movie stars, hedge fund managers, professional
athletes. A good hint to the presence of leverage is the possibility
of failure. Upside must be balanced by downside, so if there is big
potential for gain there must also be a terrifying possibility of
loss. CEOs, stars, fund managers, and athletes all live with the
sword hanging over their heads; the moment they start to suck,
they're out. If you're in a job that feels safe, you are not going
to get rich, because if there is no danger there is almost certainly
no leverage.
But you don't have to become a CEO or a movie star to be in a
situation with measurement and leverage. All you need to do is be
part of a small group working on a hard problem.
Smallness = Measurement
If you can't measure the value of the work done by individual
employees, you can get close. You can measure the value of the work
done by small groups.
One level at which you can accurately measure the revenue generated
by employees is at the level of the whole company. When the company
is small, you are thereby fairly close to measuring the
contributions of individual employees. A viable startup might only
have ten employees, which puts you within a factor of ten of
measuring individual effort.
Starting or joining a startup is thus as close as most people can
get to saying to one's boss, I want to work ten times as hard, so
please pay me ten times as much. There are two differences: you're
not saying it to your boss, but directly to the customers (for whom
your boss is only a proxy after all), and you're not doing it
individually, but along with a small group of other ambitious
people.
It will, ordinarily, be a group. Except in a few unusual kinds of
work, like acting or writing books, you can't be a company of one
person. And the people you work with had better be good, because
it's their work that yours is going to be averaged with.
A big company is like a giant galley driven by a thousand rowers.
Two things keep the speed of the galley down. One is that individual
rowers don't see any result from working harder. The other is that,
in a group of a thousand people, the average rower is likely to be
pretty average.
If you took ten people at random out of the big galley and put them
in a boat by themselves, they could probably go faster. They would
have both carrot and stick to motivate them. An energetic rower
would be encouraged by the thought that he could have a visible
effect on the speed of the boat. And if someone was lazy, the others
would be more likely to notice and complain.
But the real advantage of the ten-man boat shows when you take the
ten best rowers out of the big galley and put them in a boat
together. They will have all the extra motivation that comes from
being in a small group. But more importantly, by selecting that
small a group you can get the best rowers. Each one will be in the
top 1%. It's a much better deal for them to average their work
together with a small group of their peers than to average it with
everyone.
That's the real point of startups. Ideally, you are getting together
with a group of other people who also want to work a lot harder, and
get paid a lot more, than they would in a big company. And because
startups tend to get founded by self-selecting groups of ambitious
people who already know one another (at least by reputation), the
level of measurement is more precise than you get from smallness
alone. A startup is not merely ten people, but ten people like you.
Steve Jobs once said that the success or failure of a startup
depends on the first ten employees. I agree. If anything, it's more
like the first five. Being small is not, in itself, what makes
startups kick butt, but rather that small groups can be select. You
don't want small in the sense of a village, but small in the sense
of an all-star team.
The larger a group, the closer its average member will be to the
average for the population as a whole. So all other things being
equal, a very able person in a big company is probably getting a bad
deal, because his performance is dragged down by the overall lower
performance of the others. Of course, all other things often are not
equal: the able person may not care about money, or may prefer the
stability of a large company. But a very able person who does care
about money will ordinarily do better to go off and work with a
small group of peers.
Technology = Leverage
Startups offer anyone a way to be in a situation with measurement
and leverage. They allow measurement because they're small, and they
offer leverage because they make money by inventing new technology.
What is technology? It's technique. It's the way we all do
things. And when you discover a new way to do things, its value is
multiplied by all the people who use it. It is the proverbial
fishing rod, rather than the fish. That's the difference between a
startup and a restaurant or a barber shop. You fry eggs or cut hair
one customer at a time. Whereas if you solve a technical problem
that a lot of people care about, you help everyone who uses your
solution. That's leverage.
If you look at history, it seems that most people who got rich by
creating wealth did it by developing new technology. You just can't
fry eggs or cut hair fast enough. What made the Florentines rich in
1200 was the discovery of new techniques for making the high-tech
product of the time, fine woven cloth. What made the Dutch rich in
1600 was the discovery of shipbuilding and navigation techniques
that enabled them to dominate the seas of the Far East.
Fortunately there is a natural fit between smallness and solving
hard problems. The leading edge of technology moves fast. Technology
that's valuable today could be worthless in a couple years. Small
companies are more at home in this world, because they don't have
layers of bureaucracy to slow them down. Also, technical advances
tend to come from unorthodox approaches, and small companies are
less constrained by convention.
Big companies can develop technology. They just can't do it quickly.
Their size makes them slow and prevents them from rewarding
employees for the extraordinary effort required. So in practice big
companies only get to develop technology in fields where large
capital requirements prevent startups from competing with them, like
microprocessors, power plants, or passenger aircraft. And even in
those fields they depend heavily on startups for components and
ideas.
It's obvious that biotech or software startups exist to solve hard
technical problems, but I think it will also be found to be true in
businesses that don't seem to be about technology. McDonald's, for
example, grew big by designing a system, the McDonald's franchise,
that could then be reproduced at will all over the face of the
earth. A McDonald's franchise is controlled by rules so precise that
it is practically a piece of software. Write once, run everywhere.
Ditto for Wal-Mart. Sam Walton got rich not by being a retailer, but
by designing a new kind of store.
Use difficulty as a guide not just in selecting the overall aim of
your company, but also at decision points along the way. At Viaweb
one of our rules of thumb was run upstairs. Suppose you are a
little, nimble guy being chased by a big, fat, bully. You open a
door and find yourself in a staircase. Do you go up or down? I say
up. The bully can probably run downstairs as fast as you can. Going
upstairs his bulk will be more of a disadvantage. Running upstairs
is hard for you but even harder for him.
What this meant in practice was that we deliberately sought hard
problems. If there were two features we could add to our software,
both equally valuable in proportion to their difficulty, we'd always
take the harder one. Not just because it was more valuable, but
because it was harder. We delighted in forcing bigger, slower
competitors to follow us over difficult ground. Like guerillas,
startups prefer the difficult terrain of the mountains, where the
troops of the central government can't follow. I can remember times
when we were just exhausted after wrestling all day with some
horrible technical problem. And I'd be delighted, because something
that was hard for us would be impossible for our competitors.
This is not just a good way to run a startup. It's what a startup
is. Venture capitalists know about this and have a phrase for it:
barriers to entry. If you go to a VC with a new idea and ask him
to invest in it, one of the first things he'll ask is, how hard
would this be for someone else to develop? That is, how much
difficult ground have you put between yourself and potential
pursuers? [7]
And you had better have a convincing explanation of why your
technology would be hard to duplicate. Otherwise as soon as some big
company becomes aware of it, they'll make their own, and with their
brand name, capital, and distribution clout, they'll take away your
market overnight. You'd be like guerillas caught in the open field
by regular army forces.
One way to put up barriers to entry is through patents. But patents
may not provide much protection. Competitors commonly find ways to
work around a patent. And if they can't, they may simply violate it
and invite you to sue them. A big company is not afraid to be sued;
it's an everyday thing for them. They'll make sure that suing them
is expensive and takes a long time. Ever heard of Philo Farnsworth?
He invented television. The reason you've never heard of him is that
his company was not the one to make money from it.
[8]
The company that did was RCA, and Farnsworth's reward for his
efforts was a decade of patent litigation.
Here, as so often, the best defense is a good offense. If you can
develop technology that's simply too hard for competitors to
duplicate, you don't need to rely on other defenses. Start by
picking a hard problem, and then at every decision point, take the
harder choice. [9]
The Catch(es)
If it were simply a matter of working harder than an ordinary
employee and getting paid proportionately, it would obviously be a
good deal to start a startup. Up to a point it would be more fun. I
don't think many people like the slow pace of big companies, the
interminable meetings, the water-cooler conversations, the clueless
middle managers, and so on.
Unfortunately there are a couple catches. One is that you can't
choose the point on the curve that you want to inhabit. You can't
decide, for example, that you'd like to work just two or three times
as hard, and get paid that much more. When you're running a startup,
your competitors decide how hard you work. And they pretty much all
make the same decision: as hard as you possibly can.
The other catch is that the payoff is only on average proportionate
to your productivity. There is, as I said before, a large random
multiplier in the success of any company. So in practice the deal is
not that you're 30 times as productive and get paid 30 times as
much. It is that you're 30 times as productive, and get paid between
zero and a thousand times as much. If the mean is 30x, the median is
probably zero. Most startups tank, and not just the dogfood portals
we all heard about during the Internet Bubble. It's common for a
startup to be developing a genuinely good product, take slightly too
long to do it, run out of money, and have to shut down.
A startup is like a mosquito. A bear can absorb a hit and a crab is
armored against one, but a mosquito is designed for one thing: to
score. No energy is wasted on defense. The defense of mosquitos, as
a species, is that there are a lot of them, but this is little
consolation to the individual mosquito.
Startups, like mosquitos, tend to be an all-or-nothing proposition.
And you don't generally know which of the two you're going to get
till the last minute. Viaweb came close to tanking several times.
Our trajectory was like a sine wave. Fortunately we got bought at
the top of the cycle, but it was damned close. While we were
visiting Yahoo in California to talk about selling the company to
them, we had to borrow a conference room to reassure an investor who
was about to back out of a new round of funding that we needed to
stay alive.
The all-or-nothing aspect of startups was not something we wanted.
Viaweb's hackers were all extremely risk-averse. If there had been
some way just to work super hard and get paid for it, without having
a lottery mixed in, we would have been delighted. We would have much
preferred a 100% chance of $1 million to a 20% chance of $10
million, even though theoretically the second is worth twice as
much. Unfortunately, there is not currently any space in the
business world where you can get the first deal.
The closest you can get is by selling your startup in the early
stages, giving up upside (and risk) for a smaller but guaranteed
payoff. We had a chance to do this, and stupidly, as we then
thought, let it slip by. After that we became comically eager to
sell. For the next year or so, if anyone expressed the slightest
curiousity about Viaweb we would try to sell them the company. But
there were no takers, so we had to keep going.
It would have been a bargain to buy us at an early stage, but
companies doing acquisitions are not looking for bargains. A company
big enough to acquire startups will be big enough to be fairly
conservative, and within the company the people in charge of
acquisitions will be among the more conservative, because they are
likely to be business school types who joined the company late. They
would rather overpay for a safe choice. So it is easier to sell an
established startup, even at a large premium, than an early-stage
one.
Get Users
I think it's a good idea to get bought, if you can. Running a
business is different from growing one. It is just as well to let a
big company take over once you reach cruising altitude. It's also
financially wiser, because selling allows you to diversify. What
would you think of a financial advisor who put all his client's
assets into one volatile stock?
How do you get bought? Mostly by doing the same things you'd do if
you didn't intend to sell the company. Being profitable, for
example. But getting bought is also an art in its own right, and one
that we spent a lot of time trying to master.
Potential buyers will always delay if they can. The hard part about
getting bought is getting them to act. For most people, the most
powerful motivator is not the hope of gain, but the fear of loss.
For potential acquirers, the most powerful motivator is the prospect
that one of their competitors will buy you. This, as we found,
causes CEOs to take red-eyes. The second biggest is the worry that,
if they don't buy you now, you'll continue to grow rapidly and will
cost more to acquire later, or even become a competitor.
In both cases, what it all comes down to is users. You'd think that
a company about to buy you would do a lot of research and decide for
themselves how valuable your technology was. Not at all. What they
go by is the number of users you have.
In effect, acquirers assume the customers know who has the best
technology. And this is not as stupid as it sounds. Users are the
only real proof that you've created wealth. Wealth is what people
want, and if people aren't using your software, maybe it's not just
because you're bad at marketing. Maybe it's because you haven't made
what they want.
Venture capitalists have a list of danger signs to watch out for.
Near the top is the company run by techno-weenies who are obsessed
with solving interesting technical problems, instead of making users
happy. In a startup, you're not just trying to solve problems.
You're trying to solve problems that users care about.
So I think you should make users the test, just as acquirers do.
Treat a startup as an optimization problem in which performance is
measured by number of users. As anyone who has tried to optimize
software knows, the key is measurement. When you try to guess where
your program is slow, and what would make it faster, you almost
always guess wrong.
Number of users may not be the perfect test, but it will be very
close. It's what acquirers care about. It's what revenues depend on.
It's what makes competitors unhappy. It's what impresses reporters,
and potential new users. Certainly it's a better test than your a
priori notions of what problems are important to solve, no matter
how technically adept you are.
Among other things, treating a startup as an optimization problem
will help you avoid another pitfall that VCs worry about, and
rightly-- taking a long time to develop a product. Now we can
recognize this as something hackers already know to avoid: premature
optimization. Get a version 1.0 out there as soon as you can. Until
you have some users to measure, you're optimizing based on guesses.
The ball you need to keep your eye on here is the underlying
principle that wealth is what people want. If you plan to get rich
by creating wealth, you have to know what people want. So few
businesses really pay attention to making customers happy. How often
do you walk into a store, or call a company on the phone, with a
feeling of dread in the back of your mind? When you hear "your call
is important to us, please stay on the line," do you think, oh good,
now everything will be all right?
A restaurant can afford to serve the occasional burnt dinner. But in
technology, you cook one thing and that's what everyone eats. So any
difference between what people want and what you deliver is
multiplied. You please or annoy customers wholesale. The closer you
can get to what they want, the more wealth you generate.
Wealth and Power
Making wealth is not the only way to get rich. For most of human
history it has not even been the most common. Until a few centuries
ago, the main sources of wealth were mines, slaves and serfs, land,
and cattle, and the only ways to acquire these rapidly were by
inheritance, marriage, conquest, or confiscation. Naturally wealth
had a bad reputation.
Two things changed. The first was the rule of law. For most of the
world's history, if you did somehow accumulate a fortune, the ruler
or his henchmen would find a way to steal it. But in medieval Europe
something new happened. A new class of merchants and manufacturers
began to collect in towns. [10]
Together they were able to withstand the local feudal lord. So for
the first time in our history, the bullies stopped stealing the
nerds' lunch money. This was naturally a great incentive, and
possibly indeed the main cause of the second big change,
industrialization.
A great deal has been written about the causes of the Industrial
Revolution. But surely a necessary, if not sufficient, condition was
that people who made fortunes be able to enjoy them in peace.
[11]
One piece of evidence is what happened to countries that tried to
return to the old model, like the Soviet Union, and to a lesser
extent Britain under the labor governments of the 1960s and early
1970s. Take away the incentive of wealth, and technical innovation
grinds to a halt.
Remember what a startup is, economically: a way of saying, I want to
work faster. Instead of accumulating money slowly by being paid a
regular wage for fifty years, I want to get it over with as soon as
possible. So governments that forbid you to accumulate wealth are in
effect decreeing that you work slowly. They're willing to let you
earn $3 million over fifty years, but they're not willing to let you
work so hard that you can do it in two. They are like the corporate
boss that you can't go to and say, I want to work ten times as hard,
so please pay me ten times a much. Except this is not a boss you can
escape by starting your own company.
The problem with working slowly is not just that technical
innovation happens slowly. It's that it tends not to happen at all.
It's only when you're deliberately looking for hard problems, as a
way to use speed to the greatest advantage, that you take on this
kind of project. Developing new technology is a pain in the ass. It
is, as Edison said, one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent
perspiration. Without the incentive of wealth, no one wants to do
it. Engineers will work on sexy projects like fighter planes and
moon rockets for ordinary salaries, but more mundane technologies
like light bulbs or semiconductors have to be developed by
entrepreneurs.
Startups are not just something that happened in Silicon Valley in
the last couple decades. Since it became possible to get rich by
creating wealth, everyone who has done it has used essentially the
same recipe: measurement and leverage, where measurement comes from
working with a small group, and leverage from developing new
techniques. The recipe was the same in Florence in 1200 as it is in
Santa Clara today.
Understanding this may help to answer an important question: why
Europe grew so powerful. Was it something about the geography of
Europe? Was it that Europeans are somehow racially superior? Was it
their religion? The answer (or at least the proximate cause) may be
that the Europeans rode on the crest of a powerful new idea:
allowing those who made a lot of money to keep it.
Once you're allowed to do that, people who want to get rich can do
it by generating wealth instead of stealing it. The resulting
technological growth translates not only into wealth but into
military power. The theory that led to the stealth plane was
developed by a Soviet mathematician. But because the Soviet Union
didn't have a computer industry, it remained for them a theory; they
didn't have hardware capable of executing the calculations fast
enough to design an actual airplane.
In that respect the Cold War teaches the same lesson as World War II
and, for that matter, most wars in recent history. Don't let a
ruling class of warriors and politicians squash the entrepreneurs.
The same recipe that makes individuals rich makes countries
powerful. Let the nerds keep their lunch money, and you rule the
world.
Notes
[1] One valuable
thing you tend to get only in startups is uninterruptability.
Different kinds of work have different time quanta. Someone
proofreading a manuscript could probably be interrupted every
fifteen minutes with little loss of productivity. But the time
quantum for hacking is very long: it might take an hour just to load
a problem into your head. So the cost of having someone from
personnel call you about a form you forgot to fill out can be huge.
This is why hackers give you such a baleful stare as they turn from
their screen to answer your question. Inside their heads a giant
house of cards is tottering.
The mere possibility of being interrupted deters hackers from
starting hard projects. This is why they tend to work late at night,
and why it's next to impossible to write great software in a cubicle
(except late at night).
One great advantage of startups is that they don't yet have any of
the people who interrupt you. There is no personnel department, and
thus no form nor anyone to call you about it.
[2] Faced with the
idea that people working for startups might be 20 or 30 times as
productive as those working for large companies, executives at large
companies will naturally wonder, how could I get the people working
for me to do that? The answer is simple: pay them to.
Internally most companies are run like Communist states. If you
believe in free markets, why not turn your company into one?
Hypothesis: A company will be maximally profitable when each
employee is paid in proportion to the wealth they generate.
[3] Until recently
even governments sometimes didn't grasp the distinction between
money and wealth. Adam Smith (Wealth of Nations, v:i)
mentions several that tried to preserve their "wealth" by forbidding
the export of gold or silver. But having more of the medium of
exchange would not make a country richer; if you have more money
chasing the same amount of material wealth, the only result is
higher prices.
[4] There are many
senses of the word "wealth," not all of them material. I'm not
trying to make a deep philosophical point here about which is the
true kind. I'm writing about one specific, rather technical sense of
the word "wealth." What people will give you money for. This is an
interesting sort of wealth to study, because it is the kind that
prevents you from starving. And what people will give you money for
depends on them, not you.
When you're starting a business, it's easy to slide into thinking
that customers want what you do. During the Internet Bubble I talked
to a woman who, because she liked the outdoors, was starting an
"outdoor portal." You know what kind of business you should start if
you like the outdoors? One to recover data from crashed hard disks.
What's the connection? None at all. Which is precisely my point. If
you want to create wealth (in the narrow technical sense of not
starving) then you should be especially skeptical about any plan
that centers on things you like doing. That is where your idea of
what's valuable is least likely to coincide with other people's.
[5] In the average
car restoration you probably do make everyone else microscopically
poorer, by doing a small amount of damage to the environment. While
environmental costs should be taken into account, they don't make
wealth a zero-sum game. For example, if you repair a machine that's
broken because a part has come unscrewed, you create wealth with no
environmental cost.
[5b] This essay was
written before Firefox.
[6] Many people feel
confused and depressed in their early twenties. Life seemed so much
more fun in college. Well, of course it was. Don't be fooled by the
surface similarities. You've gone from guest to servant. It's
possible to have fun in this new world. Among other things, you now
get to go behind the doors that say "authorized personnel only." But
the change is a shock at first, and all the worse if you're not
consciously aware of it.
[7] When VCs asked us
how long it would take another startup to duplicate our software, we
used to reply that they probably wouldn't be able to at all. I think
this made us seem naive, or liars.
[8] Few technologies
have one clear inventor. So as a rule, if you know the "inventor" of
something (the telephone, the assembly line, the airplane, the light
bulb, the transistor) it is because their company made money from
it, and the company's PR people worked hard to spread the story. If
you don't know who invented something (the automobile, the
television, the computer, the jet engine, the laser), it's because
other companies made all the money.
[9] This is a good
plan for life in general. If you have two choices, choose the
harder. If you're trying to decide whether to go out running or sit
home and watch TV, go running. Probably the reason this trick works
so well is that when you have two choices and one is harder, the
only reason you're even considering the other is laziness. You know
in the back of your mind what's the right thing to do, and this
trick merely forces you to acknowledge it.
[10] It is probably
no accident that the middle class first appeared in northern Italy
and the low countries, where there were no strong central
governments. These two regions were the richest of their time and
became the twin centers from which Renaissance civilization
radiated. If they no longer play that role, it is because other
places, like the United States, have been truer to the principles
they discovered.
[11] It may indeed
be a sufficient condition. But if so, why didn't the Industrial
Revolution happen earlier? Two possible (and not incompatible)
answers: (a) It did. The Industrial Revolution was one in a series.
(b) Because in medieval towns, monopolies and guild regulations
initially slowed the development of new means of production.
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