re: Silicon Alley Webcos, avoiding burnout in web space, turning away capital...
From a NY Times Roundtable discussion whose participants included:
- Kevin O'Connor the Chief executive of DoubleClick; - Fernando F. Espuelas, Chief executive of StarMedia Network; - Candice Carpenter, Chief executive of iVillage; - Stephan J. Paternot, Co-chief executive of Theglobe.com.
"Online Pioneers: The Buzz Never Stops"
nytimes.com
The entire article is rather long. A snippet from it follows, below.
Enjoy, Frank Coluccio
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NEW YORK -- Speed. Sleep. Greed. Recruiting. Role models like Thomas Edison and Ayn Rand. Losing money, yet turning away capital. New-found wealth and an ensuing change in lifestyle -- or not.
Those were some of the topics on the table when four chief executives from dot.com companies -- Candice Carpenter: of iVillage, a women's Web site; Fernando J. Espuelas: of StarMedia Network, a Spanish- and Portuguese-language service; Kevin O'Connor: of DoubleClick, an online advertising network, and Stephan J. Paternot: of Theglobe.com, a shopping, news and business information site -- gathered late one afternoon early this month at The New York Times for a wide-ranging discussion about managing in the Internet age.
These pioneers from Silicon Alley, an area in the Flatiron district of Manhattan that is populated by many fledgling Internet companies, were joined in the two-hour discussion by Saul Hansell, Patrick J. Lyons and Judith H. Dobrzynski of The Times.
As founders of young companies, each executive had experienced the adrenaline highs and the growing pains that accompany the transformation of an idea into a business and then into a publicly traded company. They don't worry about nonexistent earnings in a topsy-turvy environment where not producing a profit is, for the moment, a virtue. For them, the bigger pressure is to build organizations -- fast -- before opportunities slip away.
Following are excerpts from the conversation.
Q. What's the difference between running the kind of company you run and running a big company?
Carpenter: Speed. Leading in conditions in which speed is a very big factor. It puts a lot of additional pressure on all the systems. And you have a lot of very young people, and you're teaching them to be managers at a very accelerated pace without a lot of formal programs.
Paternot: Tying into that is just the idea of keeping your entrepreneurial spirit. Things are shifting fast enough that you need to be able to jump into any new idea, shift your company into it and move at light speed.
Espuelas: I would say the absence of a road map. Not that any business is particularly easy, but when there's nothing that you can follow except your instincts and the little bit of data you're able to gather in this context of a lot of speed, I think there's a lot of intuition that goes into these kinds of very fast-moving environments.
O'Connor: In large corporations, you need to spend a lot of time quantifying what the market's going to look like and how you're going to go about it and what the expenses are going to be.
And here it's very much speed, it's intuition, it's trying to figure out, "Is this a big market or a small market?" If it's a big market, you go after it. You spend a tremendous amount of money and you go after it quickly.
Q. What's the first thing that's sacrificed in the name of speed?
O'Connor: Facts.
Carpenter: Sleep. We're trying to really come up with graded solutions to burnout caused by exhaustion. We have people who have been at this for four years in our company and we have to figure out a way to get them to learn how to completely refresh themselves in short increments of time.
I've stood at the elevator with people going on vacation and actually taken the laptop and the cell phone out of their hands and said, "Great, now you can actually have a vacation." The only way to truly regenerate yourself enough to be truly creative and inventive again is to be unwired at times in the year and to be in the other part of the world.
Q. Do any of you have programs for dealing with burnout?
Paternot: Sometimes it's frequent rotation of some of your stars. You'll often find that in your company you have a few stars, and if you leave them in the same position too long they'll burn out. And, quite frankly, you don't want to lose them.
Carpenter:
We're starting a sabbatical program. It's for people who've been there three years who would love to be there 20. We're giving them a month to go and just do whatever they want. Sleep probably will be at the top of most people's list.
Espuelas: Are you going to take it yourself?
Carpenter: Yeah, I am. I have to, otherwise no one else will take it.
O'Connor: We have a very strong policy that people can move to wherever they want to move. Any job in the company's open. So we try to force rotation, because doing the same thing, day in and day out, tends to cause burnout.
Consciously Reaching Out
Q. Tell us a little bit more about how you're managing growth so far.
Espuelas: I travel all the time. And I try to talk to as many people as possible. We do monthly all-hands meetings and we actually Web-cast them simultaneously and have people call in and try to have an ongoing dialogue. And now we're doing things which I never thought we'd ever do. We're going to create an employee newsletter. We're doing a lot of things that I used to scoff at when I worked at other companies.
What I've also found is that things I said two years ago are now on a plaque, and that people are still acting the same way: "But Fernando said that." Yeah, but that was two years ago.
Q. Is communication a common problem?
Paternot: Absolutely. We've seen ourselves have to increase the rate of communication dramatically. When we started four or five years ago, it was a group of 20 to 25 people. My partner (Todd Krizelman, co-chief executive) and I could just make decisions very quickly, hoping everybody can keep up. But eventually it starts to hurt you more when you get to 200, and people in departments don't understand what's going on. And we've had to deal with a lot of organizational changes over the last year, but everybody understands why we're doing stuff.
O'Connor: We start off with a week of training. It's a week of indoctrination for every employee -- whether you answer the telephone in the German office or you're a vice president, it doesn't matter. You sit, you learn what we do, why we do it, what's the core culture of the company, so everybody's got a good, firm foundation.
Q. How do managers who have worked at large companies fare in your kinds of companies?
O'Connor: On average, they've fared pretty well. You've got to pre-screen them very carefully. You tend to get people who expect to have two assistants. But our first test is, we make them take a pay cut. If they won't take a massive pay cut, you've pretty much got them pegged.
Q. Do they have options, though, on the other end?
O'Connor: Absolutely.
Carpenter: The structure that I've seen be the most successful is a solid infrastructure of senior managers from big companies, very seasoned, very good at creating structure. That gives you room to promote people with less management experience, and have someone to go to when wisdom and time around the track is the issue.
Mountains of Resumes
Q. How hard is it to find employees? Are strangers handing you resumes as soon as they find out who you are?
O'Connor: I probably get 10 resums myself a day. We probably get, as a company, 100 resumes a day. There's a lot of talent that wants to get in, that absolutely wants to get into the dot-com company. To get great, smart people is always tough. But it's relatively easy for a dot-com company.
Espuelas: We have two realities. One is in the U.S., which mirrors that. But in Latin America, it's totally different: There's no such thing as us. There's a lot of big companies that are owned by families, so the best you can hope for is to work for so and so, as opposed to being one of the owners of the company. So in Latin America we're able to really tap into really great people who don't have an equivalent to go to.
Paternot: Even though we get a hundred resumes a day, we're at a point where we're trying to find the perfect person to fit this type of software development. It's easier for us to find people in marketing and sales, because New York has a lot more of these people and they're easy to train.
But finding the right technical person, whether it's for infrastructure or for software, we still find it tough. These people can command huge salaries from the banks. And finding a seasoned database manager, for instance, can mean that you have to pay huge cash, because some of these people want the options and they want the cash, and they're not going to leave their cushy job at Goldman Sachs unless you throw it all at them. The fact is, if you're a well-known dot-com company, it helps immensely over the unknown dot-com companies and over a lot of the other companies.
How to Set Priorities
Q. Do you find that your thinking about the way you run your company changes over time?
Espuelas: For the last two years, I've been thinking about, well, what happens in 10 years and what happens in 20 years? Which is kind of a ridiculous thing to think about on the Internet.
O'Connor: Making that transition from a total entrepreneurial world with no rules or anything to where you've got to have professionalization, you've got to have systems; you've got to have order.
Paternot: You have to learn to delegate. Todd and I were completely attached to the product, had to test everything ourselves. We were the chief QA (quality assurance) guys. Eventually, you have to stop that. As much as I still use the product now, when I have to use it, I want to be able to rely on 50 people who think about this more than I do and who know it better than I do.
O'Connor: On the flip side, I still spend half my time with new products -- because that is the entrepreneurial side and new products are the key to rejuvenating the company, growing the company. We set out to create a big company.
Q. Did you, from the beginning, do something differently than other start-ups might have done, because you were planning for growth?
O'Connor: Definitely. I was fortunate because I started my first company right out of college. So I went through the "how you could have done things differently and better?" We tried to avoid all the mistakes. I was building the human infrastructure, getting the people who could build their own business and leverage. When I look at DoubleClick, we're actually a collection of about 50 companies: People who were running their own thing, whether it's their own country, and there were 22 countries, or we have a bunch of business units with people running their own businesses. The thing we most tend to look for in people is intelligence and -- I call it -- athleticism: people who love to compete, don't like to lose.
Espuelas: I don't think anybody stumbles onto a big company. You have to visualize where you're going. You don't know the path necessarily, but there's a goal. There's something I always think about and try to get people to think about. I'm not a martial-arts guy, but when you break a board with your hand, what they teach you is that if you were able to project the energy, not on the surface of the board, but behind the board, you will break it. And you can break three boards, then four boards. But if you aim it for the surface, you will break your hand. And that's a little bit of what you dream about. You have to make choices accordingly.
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