| 'Johnny Appleseed' for a Risky Field Doerr's Ambition Paid Off -- at First
 
 By Ariana Eunjung Cha
 Washington Post Staff Writer
 Wednesday, November 13, 2002; Page
 A01
 
 Fourth of six articles
 
 REDWOOD CITY, Calif.
 
 The company was born, as were
 so many in Silicon Valley in the
 1990s, with a single conversation.
 
 "I have an idea for you," John
 Doerr said to a group of cable
 television executives he wanted as
 partners for a company he
 envisioned marrying cable and the
 Internet to bring more and as yet
 unimagined sorts of programming
 to consumers. As perhaps the
 most famous of the venture
 capitalists, the financiers who
 seeded the Internet boom, Doerr
 had the money at his disposal to
 make his ideas reality. In this case,
 he even had a name for his new
 venture: At Home.
 
 Over the next three years, Doerr,
 through his firm Kleiner Perkins
 Caufield & Byers and its
 co-investors, pumped several
 hundred millions of dollars into At
 Home Corp. The company
 prospered, quickly attracting
 nearly 300,000 customers who
 paid a monthly fee to get
 super-fast Internet access from
 their houses and apartments, and
 banking several million dollars in
 revenue each quarter.
 
 But Doerr was not satisfied.
 
 By late 1998, nearly the middle of
 the boom, Doerr told some
 company executives that he feared
 At Home wasn't moving fast
 enough. He, along with the
 management team and other
 directors, wanted At Home to ally
 itself with a company that could
 provide the content -- the stories,
 sound clips and video -- it needed
 to become a media venture. And
 the time to do that was while At
 Home's stock was flying high.
 
 The target: Excite Inc., a popular
 online search and directory site
 that also happened to be heavily
 backed by Kleiner Perkins. Excite
 was losing money -- lots of it --
 and that made some investors
 skeptical: Why endanger At
 Home by exposing it to Excite's
 losses? But those concerns were
 swept aside. The $6.7 billion
 merger, the biggest ever between
 two Internet companies, was
 overwhelmingly approved by
 shareholders in 1999.
 
 Kleiner Perkins, however, did not
 wait around for the new company,
 Excite At Home, to succeed.
 Soon after the merger, it took
 company shares worth more than
 $1 billion and distributed them
 privately to its investment partners
 for them to sell if they wished.
 Public investors who placed their
 bets on the company's long-term
 success and held on to their
 shares were not as lucky. Excite At Home went out of business this February,
 and their stock became worthless in one of the New Economy's most
 spectacular failures.
 
 Charles Moldow, a former vice president of At Home who worked on Excite
 At Home's business development, believes At Home took a fatally wrong
 step. "If we hadn't merged with Excite, At Home would still be around today,"
 he said.
 
 But during the boom years, venture capitalists played God, and they largely
 decided which start-up companies lived and which ones died, which
 investment bankers and lawyers got the deals and which ones got rich. Doerr,
 an electrical engineer who became the premier financier of Silicon Valley, did
 all that and something more: He was the public face and ultimate salesman of
 the obsessively ambitious Internet world.
 
 Doerr's imprimatur on a company gave it instant credibility. But any venture
 capital fund's investment began a familiar process, according to Wade
 Randlett, chief executive of San Francisco-based Dashboard Technology.
 First the fund would send money to a start-up. Then, as the start-up picked
 up steam, the fund would distribute some company shares to its investors,
 usually institutions or wealthy individuals. Those private investors would, in
 turn, sell their shares to the general public. If the company ran into trouble,
 Randlett said, "it turned out that the individual investor was the last sucker at
 the table."
 
 To fledgling Internet entrepreneurs, venture capitalists held out badly needed
 start-up funds in one hand. With the other they pushed hard for the companies
 to expand quickly and jump into new areas of business. Now that many of
 these companies are in ruins, outsiders point to the obsession with growth and
 size as a major factor in the dot-com industry's undoing. And Doerr's talk of
 keiretsu -- a Japanese term that became his catchword for a network of
 ventures that led to unions like that of Excite and At Home -- has become an
 epitaph for a bygone era.
 
 As the history of the boom is being rewritten, so is Doerr's.
 
 He has gone from being known as the "Johnny Appleseed" of Silicon Valley
 (Time Digital 1999) to being compared to Henry Blodget (Barron's, 2002),
 the Wall Street analyst who hyped shaky stocks and now finds himself being
 questioned by government regulators.
 
 Like many other prominent financiers of the boom, Doerr has found himself
 caught up in all the scandals that have beset the corporate world in the
 aftermath of the bubble. A few of the companies he funded and on whose
 boards he served are fighting off investigations by the Securities and Exchange
 Commission and shareholder lawsuits that allege wrongdoing including insider
 trading and accounting fraud. Attorneys for Doerr, who declined repeated
 requests to speak on the record for this story, have vigorously denied the
 allegations.
 
 Doerr's failures -- Excite At Home, HomeGrocer -- are now as well known
 as his successes -- Amazon, Intuit, Sun, Netscape. But those failures don't
 necessarily mean that Doerr's insights about the future of technology were
 wrong. Dot-com-era businesses such as online retailing have found a loyal
 consumer base. People really do download music from the Web. And the
 number of homes paying for the use of high-speed Internet that Excite At
 Home promoted has been increasing steadily.
 
 On the other hand, he helped create a climate in which people thought the
 potential riches were so large many made foolish investments and ended up
 losing lots of money. "The Internet is the greatest legal creation of wealth in
 the history of the planet," Doerr said on numerous occasions. "It's
 underhyped," he said. "It may hit 30 on a Richter scale."
 
 Paul Kedrosky, a University of British Columbia business professor who is
 writing a book about venture capitalists, said venture capitalists -- and Doerr
 in particular -- created a romanticized vision of the world that was hard to
 resist.
 
 "He was a blue-eyed believer but his proclamations were so full of hyperbole
 that there was no good that could come of them. . . . He made a lot of people
 lose a lot of money," Kedrosky said.
 
 Doerr's defenders argue that he was sincere in his belief in the future of all the
 companies he financed and that it's unfair to blame him for the greed of others.
 They note that Doerr backed up his words with actions: He never sold a
 single share of his personal stakes in companies for which he served on the
 board of directors.
 
 "It is in the nature of technological innovations for inventors and the people
 closest to them to be be excited by what they see. . . . That John Doerr's
 enthusiasm was infectious is not John Doerr's fault," said Paul Saffo, director
 of the Institute for the Future, a think tank based next door to Kleiner Perkins.
 
 The Origins of Hype
 
 The Internet bubble began with a relatively simple transaction, repeated
 hundreds of times. A fledgling Internet entrepreneur whose company often
 consisted of no more than a 10-page "business plan" received seed money. In
 return, the venture capitalists, located along fabled Sand Hill Road in Menlo
 Park, Calif., or some other tech hub around the country, got a stake in the
 company.
 
 But the venture capitalists were more than regular investors. In contrast to
 investment banks that rarely got involved in the day-to-day activities of the
 ventures they funded, venture capitalists nurtured their companies, recruiting
 top management, drafting contracts and negotiating deals. It wasn't unusual for
 them to take jobs as executives within the businesses.
 
 Kleiner Perkins and the companies it funded were Silicon Valley's elite ruling
 party during this time, Doerr their leader. In a reversal of the usual practice,
 investors were chosen by the firm, which often demanded an initial
 commitment of at least $1 million to get in, according to several limited
 partners. Among the groups that placed money in Kleiner were some of the
 nation's most prestigious universities and pension funds.
 
 Venture capitalists were known as the long-term guys, the ones who kept
 their investments in companies for a decade or more, until they had a chance
 to grow into stable enterprises with robust earnings. But all that changed in
 1995 with the initial public offering of Doerr-backed Netscape
 Communications Corp.
 
 Netscape, co-founded by whiz kid Marc Andreessen, the inventor of the
 Web browser, and backed by Doerr, had no profit and only a vague idea of
 how it would make money. But its stock jumped 107 percent on its first day
 of trading, giving the fledgling company a market value of $2.2 billion.
 
 Over the next five years, nearly 1,000 other companies would go public in the
 hopes that they could duplicate Netscape's performance in the stock market.
 
 In the not-so-distant past, venture capitalists would often take months or
 years to mull over investments, doing careful market studies about
 competitors and even surveys of potential customers. In the go-go days of the
 late 1990s, however, some venture capitalists say it wasn't unusual for a
 company to be funded almost on the spot, on the New Economy idea that
 whoever got the customers first would dominate a sector.
 
 So much money was flowing into venture capital funds so fast that often
 companies in the same or similar businesses began to multiply, especially in
 e-commerce. Pets.com, Petsmart.com, Petopia.com and Petstore.com, for
 instance, all offered pet food and other products for animals. DellaJames.com,
 WeddingChannel.com and TheKnot.com offered wedding advice and gifts.
 Wine.com, WineShopper.com, WineCountryGiftBaskets.com,
 eVineyard.com and VirtualVineyards.com, obviously enough, sold wine.
 
 E. Floyd Kvamme, a Kleiner Perkins partner emeritus who wasn't actively
 investing during the dot-com years, said that as an outsider he saw this
 haphazard investing style as one of the biggest contributors to the shakiness of
 the New Economy.
 
 "For whatever reason due diligence kind of got put aside," Kvamme said.
 "Looking at the amount of dollars being thrown at things, it was clearly a
 strange time, and the bubble shouldn't necessarily have happened."
 
 Geoff Yang, a partner with Redpoint Ventures, who, along with Vinod
 Khosla, one of Doerr's partners at Kleiner, was an initial investor in Excite,
 believes that the emphasis venture capitalists placed on size also was a
 mistake. To be sure, the land-grab strategy of trying to become the
 ubercompany worked for some ventures, such as Amazon.com, Yahoo and
 eBay, but those turned out to be the exceptions.
 
 "Clearly in retrospect if we had thought smaller -- 'I will do rational pricing, I
 won't worry about being the uberbrand' -- clearly, I think that would have
 been better," Yang said.
 
 That, however, wasn't Doerr's style.
 
 During the late 1990s, Doerr always seemed to be multi-tasking,
 simultaneously trying to manage beeps on his two cell phones, laptop and
 pager as he sought to carry on a conversation. He rarely drove, instead riding
 in a chauffeured van where he could fiddle with his electronics in the back
 seat, invariably dressed in a dark suit with a blue tie.
 
 Sun Microsystems Inc. chief executive Scott G. McNealy described the
 rail-thin Doerr as "the Energizer Bunny on steroids."
 
 Louis John Doerr III, the eldest of five children who grew up in a middle-class
 area of St. Louis, studied electrical engineering at Rice University, went to
 business school at Harvard and then took a marketing position at chipmaker
 Intel Corp. Six years later, he joined Kleiner.
 
 Doerr was an almost instant success, funding a string of successful companies
 in the late 1980s and early 1990s before the general public knew what a
 venture capitalist was. But his real fame didn't come until the dot-com years.
 
 Between 1991 and 1993, author Michael Lewis noted in "The New New
 Thing," Doerr promoted "pen" computing, a technology that would allow
 people to enter data with a stencil on a tablet instead of typing on a keyboard.
 When that didn't work out, he started talking about the future of interactive
 television that would allow purchasers to watch shows and do things like chat
 online at the same time. A few years later, he hit the right trend, promoting the
 riches that were sure to come from the commercialization of the Internet.
 
 A sampling of Doerr's other predictions:
 
 "All Silicon Valley homes will be connected at high speeds by 2001 -- and
 still want more."
 
 "By 2001, I believe set-top computers will be as important as PCs, only cost
 about $300 to make, and may even be subsidized by the cable companies.
 They'll allow users to not only view programs but pay bills and purchase
 products as well."
 
 "Much sooner than a PC on every kid's desk, we'll have a handheld in every
 kid's pocket."
 
 Things didn't turn out exactly the way Doerr imagined. But he was so
 successful at making others believe in his ideas that former Netscape chairman
 James H. Clark once declared, "As a salesman, he's so good he can sell you
 just as easily on bad concepts."
 
 Artificial Demand
 
 No idea was more associated with Doerr, and Kleiner Perkins, than keiretsu,
 a Japanese term that refers to a network of interdependent ventures that help
 each other. Some critics now see it as a not-insignificant cause of the dot-com
 bubble.
 
 During the late 1990s the Kleiner keiretsu companies, which included
 e-retailers, optical-networking toolmakers and software companies, would
 sometimes get their initial revenue from online ads, equipment and services
 they bought from each other.
 
 SportsLine, for instance, had a deal with Excite At Home to provide the Web
 site's users with up-to-the-minute game statistics and news; Excite At Home
 partnered with Healtheon/WebMD to create a 24-hour 'virtual health center';
 fine-jewelry retailer BlueNile had a home on the merged
 WeddingChannel/DellaJames site; and WeddingChannel promoted
 WineShopper.com's selection of chardonnay and merlot.
 
 The result, some critics say, was an artificial demand for the companies'
 products that was deceptive because it wouldn't have existed without the
 involvement of Kleiner partners.
 
 Eric Von der Porten, a money manager with Leeward Investments LLC in
 Silicon Valley, says that while there is nothing inherently wrong with the
 keiretsu way of doing business, there are questions about whether it was
 abused, producing an "illusion of prosperity without the economic substance
 to match."
 
 "During the bubble, [keiretsu] partnerships were one of the most certain ways
 to 'get big fast.' Many partnerships created enormous amounts of temporary
 stock market value, but it's not clear that many created lasting economic
 value," Von der Porten said.
 
 Doerr was at the center of many of these cross-promotional deals.
 
 Managers at Kleiner-funded companies say it wasn't unusual for them to
 wake up to find e-mails from Doerr sent in the middle of the night making
 introductions between two companies and suggesting why they might make
 good partners.
 
 It wasn't a demand exactly, says one entrepreneur, but it wasn't a casual
 invitation, either. "You knew you had better respond," said Peter Sisson, chief
 executive of the now-defunct WineShopper.com.
 
 "There was pressure" to work with a keiretsu company, Sisson said, but he
 added that he was never overruled when he chose a non-Kleiner company as
 a partner over a Kleiner company. "The partners always respected the CEO's
 final decision to do what was best for the company."
 
 From Merger to Meltdown
 
 In an era defined by the spectacular implosion of one upstart after another,
 Excite At Home's was arguably the biggest.
 
 Within a few months of the merger's close, the company found itself on
 precarious ground as it used up the last of its cash, $350 million, to purchase
 an online greeting-card company even as its losses were mounting. Within two
 years, Excite At Home filed for bankruptcy protection. Within three years, the
 company closed its doors, its assets sold at fire sales, its 2,500 employees left
 without jobs.
 
 But when Excite and At Home merged in 1999, the $6.7 billion stock-swap
 deal was celebrated as marking a new era in the development of the Internet.
 Excite was just a portal -- an Internet directory and search engine -- at the
 time, but people like Doerr had grand visions that it would become an
 incubator for new multimedia content that would allow a computer to act as
 television, radio and stereo at the same time. With At Home's extensive
 distribution network, the combined company would be able to control what
 the country watched and listened to.
 
 Doerr was far from alone in his belief that the convergence of entertainment
 systems would throw into upheaval the way Hollywood did business. He
 measured the new company's value not only by paid subscribers but by
 "eyeballs," the number of visitors to its Web site each day. Visitors were
 assumed to be a proxy for revenue, an idea that became the basic premise of
 the New Economy.
 
 "John is not afraid to try to do things that are significant," said Milo Medin, a
 former NASA scientist who helped design the At Home network. "He likes to
 do things that make a difference. If it's incremental, he's not interested." At
 Home was a hybrid between New Economy and old-line companies -- it had
 a young, big-thinking management team that defined the era but had to clear
 many of its moves with the old-line cable companies that were its partners.
 Excite in many ways typified the "dot-com." The search-engine company was
 financed by Vinod Khosla, Doerr's partner, and founded by six Stanford
 University buddies. Lots of people were visiting the site, but the company
 hadn't quite figured out how to bring in revenue.
 
 At some point in 1998, when their stocks were flying high, both companies
 separately began shopping for merger partners.
 
 At Home began talks with Yahoo and Lycos. Excite looked at Microsoft
 Corp., Yahoo and others. But by early 1999, At Home's management had
 decided it wanted to do the deal with Excite. There were various reasons,
 people involved in the discussions say. They felt Excite's technology was
 superior to its competitors. Plus, it was close by -- its next-door neighbor, in
 fact -- which would make integration easier. The fact that it, too, was a
 Kleiner company was also a big part of their decision.
 
 In retrospect, said Richard Gingras, a senior executive with At Home, "We
 didn't do as thorough of an analysis [of Excite's financials] because they were
 a Kleiner company. . . . They were on a downward slide."
 
 Investors have grumbled on online message boards that Doerr and Khosla
 never really believed in the merits of the merger but orchestrated the deal to
 create enough buzz so the shares of Excite At Home would jump long enough
 for Kleiner Perkins to sell off its holdings.
 
 But several insiders say that just wasn't the case.
 
 Doerr and Khosla, who were members of the boards of directors of their
 respective companies, may have strongly advocated the deal, they say, but
 they did it on the belief that the combined company would thrive.
 
 "Kleiner clearly wanted it to happen. There were folks there that recognized
 that Excite's fortunes were on the downswing. They thought At Home was so
 strong that any negative effect from Excite wouldn't matter. In fact, they felt
 that At Home could better leverage the Excite property," Gingras said.
 
 The day the merger was announced, Doerr hired a plane to fly over the
 companies' Redwood City, Calif., offices with a banner that said
 "CONGRATULATIONS T.J. & GEORGE." T.J. was Thomas A. Jermoluk,
 the chief executive of At Home and now a partner at Kleiner. George was
 George Bell, chief executive of Excite.
 
 Publicly, Doerr continued to promote the benefits of the merger, but privately
 his company quietly "distributed," or handed control, of many of its Excite At
 Home shares to the investors who had put their money in Kleiner's control.
 These limited partners could sell or hold their shares, but the fact that the
 venture capital firm distributed them is often taken as a signal to sell.
 
 Kleiner did not have to disclose the distribution, experts say, because it is
 technically accounted for as a private transfer of ownership of stock and
 doesn't count as a sale under securities law.
 
 Stanley Sporkin, a former head of enforcement for the Securities and
 Exchange Commission, said he believes that there should be more obvious
 disclosure about such moves by venture funds, especially if one or more of
 their partners sits on the board of directors of the company in question. That
 way other shareholders would be able to make better-informed decisions
 about what to do with their own investments.
 
 "If insiders are selling or bailing out either directly or indirectly, they should be
 required to disclose that," he said.
 
 The Excite At Home merger document states explicitly that venture capitalists
 who sit on boards of public companies may have dual loyalties: "When
 considering the recommendations of At Home's and Excite's boards of
 directors, you should be aware that certain At Home and Excite directors and
 officers have interests in the merger that are different from, or are in addition
 to, yours."
 
 The paper, which was mailed out to shareholders, specifically names Kleiner
 Perkins, Doerr and a fellow partner who was also a board member, William
 Randolph Hearst III of the famous newspaper family.
 
 Before the merger was announced, Kleiner's 1.6 million shares of At Home
 were worth $164.2 million; its 1.4 million shares of Excite, $94.5 million. By
 April 26, its At Home stake was worth $258.5 million and its Excite holdings
 $224.7 million.
 
 Securities filings show that Doerr didn't sell any of his personal holdings: He
 had 576,000 shares that were worth around $58.7 million when the merger
 was announced and climbed to $92.4 million by the time the deal was
 completed. But Kleiner's distributions seemed to contradict what Doerr
 himself told everyone about the promise of the company and what he had
 repeatedly told people in the tech community --
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