Consider all the amazing founders who never tried to leverage the internet to find their cofounder because they were set on finding one exclusively within traditional means (college, last job, etc) twitter.com/amasad/status/…
Seeing VCs/CEOs hire a CoS for 1-2 yrs and then commit to investing their companies (at special terms) afterwards. Compelling. Also compelling is the model where a CEO can work for a decade w/ the same CoS & make it increasingly interesting to do so (e.g Jeff Weiner/@brianrumao)
Thought experiment: If you were CEO of AngelList, what would your strategy be for maximizing equity value of the business over the next decade? For the sake of the thought experiment, you still own the venture business, the talent business, & Product Hunt under the same umbrella
Another thought experiment: If you were CEO of YC, what would your strategy be for maximizing equity value of the business over the next decade? Would you do exactly as they're doing (if it ain't broke, don't fix it)? Would you add additional products/biz lines? Something else? twitter.com/eriktorenberg/…
ODF has had 2,000 fellows so far—We're now building services/marketplaces on top of ODF to help founders: - Hiring/cofounder matching - Angel/VC intros - Customer intros - Deck help - Idea maze - GLG We are hiring owners for all the above. Email erik@beondeck.com if that's you.
Probably an unpopular opinion but I think in the day and age of social media/personal branding...too often founders focus on being celebrated & not enough time being heads down & scaling some revolutionary shit. We're hopping on panels, doing interviews, etc before real success.
What's the best way to grow as a founder? 🌱 According to @Everette it's about being real. "I think the best way to grow is just being genuine and true to who you are because people are going to see through it." Listen to more advice on his episode: producthunt.com/radio pic.twitter.com/LTr92FFXtr
From a homeless 17-year-old to Artsy’s CMO, @Everette, shares what he’s learned throughout his extraordinary marketing career and his key to success with LinkedIn's News' @cschweitz: lnkd.in/eCG_7Ri
I found this research really interesting. The three factors that have played the biggest role in CEO's COVID-19 responses: Glass half full vs half empty, Costs vs people, and short term vs long term thinking. bit.ly/32r5Pym
Extending my congratulations to @cristianoamon for taking the helm as CEO of Qualcomm. It’s been great working with you, looking forward to continued collaboration on #5G! twitter.com/cristianoamon/…
Adding this to my reading list! cnb.cx/383qKtr
The future is bright, and our IDM 2.0 vision for @intel’s future ensures this great company will be a continuous source of innovation delivered with agility and scale for years to come. My annual shareholder letter: intc.com/intel-online-a…
I’m thrilled for @VMware, Raghu as its new CEO and the board for a great selection. Cheering you on to even greater success and impact! twitter.com/vmwarenews/sta…
A little story about Anthony Casalena, founder of @squarespace, which went public today at $10B+ valuation. I met Anthony when he was a precocious 15 year old programmer +hired him as 2nd employee at my 1st startup,WebOS. Anthony part of a team of top JS/DHTMl developers in world twitter.com/business/statu…
The proof on betting on Founder-led companies… twitter.com/qcapital2020/s…
The Compounded Brain: I look for founders with powerful mental frameworks that have been compounded by experimentation and execution of ideas to epic reality or to noble failure. Compounded Brains can often bend space and time.
I’ve never seen a new leader like @PGelsinger step into a new company like he has at $INTC and take charge with such clear vision and articulated strategy. Looking forward to its execution. twitter.com/PGelsinger/sta…