Making
Entrepreneurship Contagious
Linda Rottenberg and Chris
Bierly argue in this opinion piece that the best incubator for entrepreneurship
occurs when entrepreneurs form close networks and nurture fellow risk-takers
with their experience and resources. Rottenberg was named one of
“America’s Best Leaders” by U.S. News & World Report and one of TIME’s 100
“Innovators for the 21st century,” and is author of The New York
Times bestseller, Crazy Is a Compliment: The Power of Zigging
When Everyone Else Zags. Chris Bierly is a vice president and director in
Bain’s Boston office, and a leader in its principle investments, media,
education, and consumer and retail areas. Rottenberg is co-founder of Endeavor,
which supports high-impact entrepreneurs. Bierly is a senior advisor at
Endeavor.
Few ideas in business
conjure more vivid images of bold individualism than the do-it-yourself
entrepreneur. Entrepreneurs go it alone, the mythology insists. They are
swashbuckling mavericks, bucking the establishment. The image is irresistibly
romantic and deeply entrenched.
It is also completely
misleading.
We have groundbreaking
evidence that the most vibrant entrepreneurship is developed by high-impact
entrepreneurs when they operate in tight-knit networks, nurturing fellow
risk-takers and trading know-how, capital and tough love. We’ve mapped this
cross-pollination across generations and continents. And we’ve done this not by
looking at the most obvious communities, like Silicon Valley, but at some of
the harshest terrain for innovation.
*****
For years, academics and
civic planners have agreed that entrepreneurship drives economic development,
innovation and job creation.
Yet all too frequently,
government-led initiatives produce lackluster results. We’ve seen this in Kuala
Lumpur, where the $150 million BioValley project has yielded just a handful of
biotech companies. In Moscow, officials have spent over $2 billion without a
major start-up success. Even Santiago, well known for its Startup Chile
program, has put $40 million into more than 800 start-ups, only to have almost
80% of them leave for greener pastures in places like Silicon Valley and New
York City.
The problem in each case:
No local network in which start-ups scale, scale-ups succeed and successful
entrepreneurs infect the next generation with the entrepreneurship bug.
Since 1997, Endeavor, a
non-profit organization in the field of high-impact entrepreneurship, has
successfully worked to spawn “entrepreneurial ecosystems” around the world.
With offices in 25 countries, Endeavor identifies, mentors and co-invests in
entrepreneurs with the biggest ideas, the likeliest potential to build
companies that matter and the greatest ability to inspire others. Endeavor
focuses on this “high-impact” group because we believe that if you give them
the right mix of support, encouragement and tough love, they can act as
multipliers, becoming the role models, mentors and investors who build a local
ecosystem of entrepreneurs from the ground up.
Endeavor’s more than
1,000 entrepreneurs have created over 500,000 jobs globally, generating $8
billion in annual revenues and giving back to the cities where they got their
start. They have succeeded in building vibrant ecosystems in some of the most
inhospitable business environments in the world.
To better understand how
this dynamic works, Endeavor partnered with Bain & Company to study the
multiplier effect in three difficult markets — Buenos Aires, Istanbul and
Mexico City. The research supported what we have long seen on the ground:
Entrepreneur networks don’t start with gleaming facilities or government guarantees,
nor do they spring spontaneously from successful companies.
Instead, a few pioneering
founders get the support they need at a critical early phase of their
development and then actively spread the entrepreneurship fever by mentoring,
inspiring and investing in subsequent generations of entrepreneurs. These
founders aren’t Darwinian, surviving at the expense of others. They see
cross-company collaboration as being good for their businesses and good for the
ecosystem.
Patient Zero
Consider what’s happened
in Buenos Aires amid a history of economic and political strife.
In the early 1990s, when
Wences Casares moved there, the city was a wasteland for start-ups. Casares,
the son of a Patagonian sheep farmer, had dabbled in business as a teenager, starting
a T-shirt company and printing a telephone directory. In college, he had the
idea to start an online brokerage called Patagon.com. Thirty-three local
investors turned him down. “We don’t even have a functioning stock market,” he
was told. He quit school and launched the company anyway.
We have come to think of
Casares as “patient zero” in the spread of entrepreneurship in Argentina. While
getting his business started in 1997, he met others burning with this strange
passion. These included Andy Freire and Santiago Bilinkis, alums from Procter
& Gamble who founded an online office-supply company called Officenet. Not
long after, a pair of Stanford MBAs, Marcos Galperin and Hernán Kazah, returned
to the country to form MercadoLibre, an eBay-style online retailer.
These neophytes created
an informal support network –- a breeding ground for entrepreneurship — fueled
by shared information, rivalry, co-investment and the conviction that they were
pioneers. This network was buttressed by a novel consortium of local business
leaders and outside mentors brought together by Endeavor. Even with this
support, the young founders still felt misunderstood. Bilinkis told us, “When
Andy and I decided to become entrepreneurs, the word ‘entrepreneur’ didn’t
exist in Argentina.”
From this isolation, a
fever of entrepreneurship overtook Buenos Aires, fed in large measure by the
success of these three companies. In the span of a few years, Casares sold
Patagon to Banco Santander for $750 million; Officenet sold to Staples; and
MercadoLibre went public on the NASDAQ, reaching a market capitalization of
$5.5 billion in 2014.
Today, Buenos Aires is in
the midst of an entrepreneurship epidemic. Two decades after MercadoLibre,
Patagon, and Officenet got their start, the city is the leading hub for tech
entrepreneurship in Spanish-speaking Latin America. These three firms alone
have influenced more than 200 second-, third-, and fourth-generation
businesses. Their founders have launched new companies, VC funds, and even a
popular TV show about entrepreneurship (“El Emprendedor del Millón”).
Whereas Argentine
entrepreneurs once felt isolated and mistrusted, now anyone with a dream can
tap into a thriving ecosystem of support. There are conferences, meetups, bars
where founders congregate, dance clubs where they mingle, even a soccer league
where each team is named after a start-up. Entrepreneurship has become a
national obsession.
Entrepreneurship Is Contagious
How did this happen? To
find out, Endeavor and Bain surveyed more than 200 Argentine entrepreneurs
(some affiliated with Endeavor, many not) and asked them a number of questions,
including: “Who inspired you? Who invested in your company? And who mentored
you?”
We then followed up with
dozens of in-depth interviews to identify specific ways in which entrepreneurs
benefited from, or offered assistance to, others.
We found that nearly 80%
of today’s tech companies in Buenos Aires trace their roots to Patagon,
Officenet and MercadoLibre. We consider these first-generation entrepreneurs
the super-carriers of the entrepreneurship virus. While their companies were
individually successful, the firms had their biggest impact on the network by
mentoring new entrepreneurs, investing capital in their companies, supplying
experienced talent, and starting new ventures themselves. Our results show that
from 1990 through 2006, the number of technology start-ups in the Argentine
capital grew by 5% a year. But over the next five years, that rate accelerated
to 20% annually.
The best way to visualize
this phenomenon is on a social network map (see Figure 1). The bubbles
represent companies and the multicolored arrows represent different types of
connections. We placed companies on a series of concentric circles, like rings
on a tree, based on their founding year. The size of each bubble corresponds to
the number of connections it has made. The bigger a company’s bubble, the more
influence that company and its founders have had on the rest of the network.
The role that these
super-carriers play in creating and accelerating the growth of an
entrepreneurial ecosystem is not unique to Buenos Aires. We repeated our
analysis in Istanbul and Mexico City,
and the results were essentially the same — a few very successful entrepreneurs
spawn others and the effect multiplies over time. We then conducted 700
interviews in New York City to see if the phenomenon carries over to more
mature economies. Starting with early pioneers like DoubleClick, connections
there skyrocketed between 2003 and 2013, fueling a corresponding explosion in
start-up activity. Today, over 2,000 tech companies in New York have attracted
$14 billion in investment and employ 53,000 people.
How Entrepreneurship Spreads
The pattern of contagion
in each of these markets is remarkably similar. The first phase is what we call
the role-model effect, where the success of early pioneers like Casares
inspires others. Pablo Orlando, the co-founder of GoodPeople, a rapidly expanding
online community for action sports lovers based in Buenos Aires, remembers
hearing about Casares’ $750 million Patagon exit when he was still a teenage
skateboarder. It convinced him that being an entrepreneur could be a “real,
sustainable career — a life choice,” Orlando said. “I thought, ‘If Wences could
do it, I could do it too.’”
As powerful as role
modeling can be, the influence of high-impact entrepreneurs runs much deeper.
Their early success gives them the capital — human, social, financial — to reinvest
in aspiring entrepreneurs. That powers the next generation and inspires those
leaders to invest in the generation after that. The network helps entrepreneurs
in three distinct phases of their careers, periods we call “Get Going,” “Go
Big,” and “Go Home.”
‘Get Going’
Entrepreneurship doesn’t
just spread on its own. It spreads because more experienced entrepreneurs
actively cultivate the growth of those around them. For any young entrepreneur,
a huge gap exists between drawing up an idea on a napkin and bringing it into
the world. First-generation entrepreneurs help aspiring founders recognize the
cracks in their businesses and how to address them with a revamped revenue
model, a customer acquisition plan or an effective human resources strategy.
Casares sets aside an
hour a day to help others, usually in the late afternoon when he’s
transitioning from work to home. The founders of Officenet, Freire and
Bilinkis, set the goal of helping three new companies a year by making
introductions, reviewing business plans and helping with fundraising.
Often what they tell
aspiring entrepreneurs is not what they want to hear. Blunt talk is highly
valued. As young students in Buenos Aires, Frank Bujaldon and Franco Silvetti
sent many unsolicited emails to Officenet’s Bilinkis requesting a meeting.
Eventually Bilinkis accepted, and Silvetti and Bujaldon showed up with a
PowerPoint. “We had a solid presentation prepared,” Silvetti said. “But at the
very start of the meeting, Santi asked us to close our laptops. He wanted us to
tell him about ourselves, our experiences and motivations.”
Bilinkis advised the two
to ditch their plan, finish their degrees, and go work for a company for a year
or two. He met the pair 10 more times before they showed up unannounced one day
and pitched him an idea to start an online restaurant reservation system called
Restorando. Bilinkis liked the concept but not their approach. “They were
young, hungry and smart,” he said. “But they were engineers, so they didn’t
know how to start a company.” He and Freire nonetheless gave them $500,000 in
seed capital to tweak their model and build a prototype.
They also introduced the
pair to Nicolas Szekasy, an early MercadoLibre executive who, with Mercado
Libre co-founder Kazah, had co-founded a $135 million venture capital firm
called Kaszek Ventures. Szekasy in turn introduced the Restorando founders to
Niklas Zennstrom, the co-founder of Skype and leader of the global VC fund
Atomico, who helped them complete a Series A round of more than $3 million – a
rare sum in Latin America.
‘Go Big’
One of the biggest
misconceptions about how entrepreneurship spreads is that it’s all about that
first leg up. That’s critical, of course, but young entrepreneurs also need
help managing the treacherous process of scaling a fast-growing enterprise. Our
research clearly indicates that one reason entrepreneurship has blossomed in
these communities is that older entrepreneurs didn’t just sprinkle some
goodwill and angel investing and then disappear. They stuck around to help
their younger colleagues navigate tricky growth decisions.
Juan Carlos Vera and
Andres Rodriguez were childhood friends from Colombia who started a technology
business that was soon wiped out by the country’s financial crisis. Years
later, after Vera built a mobile solutions firm and Rodriguez helped build
Apple’s Siri, the two reunited in Mexico City and developed a proprietary
technology that helped companies use artificial intelligence to communicate
more efficiently with customers.
Their company, BlueMessaging,
got off to a promising start, growing at more than 100% annually in its first
three years. But when growth slowed, Vera and Rodriguez knew they needed help.
They turned to a community of entrepreneurs around Mexico City who were eager
to lend a hand.
One issue: All the
employees at BlueMessaging were young and green. Alonso Carral, an established
entrepreneur who started Mexico’s first Internet service provider (ISP) and
sold it to CompuServe, told the founders they needed more grown-ups around the
office. “He explained to us we did not have a finance or marketing problem, we
had a people problem,” Rodriguez said. Carral helped the BlueMessaging duo find
a headhunter, and the two hired a CFO, COO and others, including an experienced
hand from Boston Consulting Group.
Sometimes, the most
critical advice is as much about eliminating options as creating them. When
Firat and Fatih Isbecer founded Pozitron, an Istanbul-based mobile money
business, for instance, they met Wences Casares through Endeavor. At the time,
Pozitron had some traction in mobile solutions but was tempted by other
adjacent businesses. “Wences encouraged us to move away from other services we
were offering such as [customer relationship management] and focus solely on
mobile solutions,” Firat said. The advice paid off. The Isbecers sold Pozitron
in 2014 in an exit worth $100 million.
Helping founders decide
when to exit and how to do so gracefully is invaluable. In the mid-2000s,
Globant, one of the fastest-growing IT companies in Buenos Aires, faced a
tricky decision: Sell the company to one of several willing buyers or risk
holding on amid Argentina’s mercurial economic environment.
Globant’s CEO, Martín
Migoya, and his co-founders had been inspired early on by MercadoLibre and turned
once again to the Buenos Aires network for advice. The message was clear: “Your
outlook is strong and you have real prospects for growth. Turn down the money.”
Migoya and his partners wavered, but felt buoyed by the support. “We could have
been millionaires at the age of 30,” he said. “It was very tempting. But we
decided that we should not sell.” Instead they continued to expand and Globant,
which went public on the NYSE in 2014, is now valued at $1.1 billion.
‘Go Home’
One of the more striking
things we found in studying these ecosystems is how willingly entrepreneurs
gave back to the network and their communities once they achieved their own
success. When young entrepreneurs get support from first-generation founders,
the unspoken message is that it’s their duty to pay it forward to others. In
countries without long histories of business collaboration, this shift in
mentality is critical. It helps to create a virtuous cycle in which the
mentored become mentors and the students become teachers.
A growing network of tech
entrepreneurs in Istanbul shows how this cycle works. Equal parts friendship,
business and mentorship bond this group. Members play poker together, go
clubbing together and vacation together. At 39 and 47, Nevzat Aydin and Sina
Afra are the senior members of the group. They met in the 2000s when Aydin was
starting Yemeksepeti, an online food ordering company, and Afra was starting
Markafoni, a flash-sale website similar to Gilt Groupe. In 2011, Naspers, the
South African media giant, acquired Markafoni at a valuation of $200 million,
making Afra an instant rock star in the tech community. Four years later, Aydin
sold Yemeksepeti to Delivery Hero for $589 million, making it the largest tech
exit in Turkey’s history.
Having “gone big,” Aydin
and Afra turned back to Istanbul, the city that helped them get their start. As
trusted advisers, they helped the Isbecer brothers expand and sell Pozitron.
They also became mentors to a new generation of entrepreneurs like Hakan Bas,
the founder of Lidyana, Turkey’s leading online jewelry and accessories
business.
When Bas made headlines
after becoming romantically involved with a model, Aydin called him up. “People
now know you as someone dating a model rather than the CEO of your company.
Your personal life is overshadowing your professional life.” Bas was jolted,
but grateful. “Lots of people give me advice about business; he’s more focused
on coaching me as a leader.” The mentorship isn’t free, however. Bas pays Aydin
back by paying it forward. “Before, I used to say, ‘I will help out if I have
time.’ Now I say, ‘I will make time to help out.’”
*****
This is the virtuous
cycle in action — one generation helping the next for the good of the entire
system. To MercadoLibre’s Galperin, these ecosystems mark a generational change
in how business is done. “They are shifting people’s thinking from a
winner-take-all mentality to one where everyone benefits from the group’s
success.”
But for anyone looking to
create this kind of dynamic climate for business and innovation, it is crucial
to understand that it doesn’t just happen because somebody builds an incubator
or creates a seed-financing fund. It requires seeking out the high-impact
entrepreneurs in a given market and helping them scale through the right mix of
mentorship, investment, connections and resources.
Once a handful of local
scale-ups have succeeded, the multiplier effect can take hold and the ecosystem
can begin to sustain its own growth. That creates a deep reservoir of support
and resources that companies can draw on throughout their life-cycle, from
start-up to maturity.
We’ve seen time and
again, even in the most challenging business environments, that high-impact
entrepreneurs exist in every market. The key is finding them, helping them
scale and encouraging them to let the contagion spread.
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/making-entrepreneurship-contagious/?utm_source=kw_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2015-10-29
No comments:
Post a Comment