http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2012-07-14/news/32675029_1_serial-entrepreneur-investors-or-venture-capitalists-success
This article got published in Economic Times (link above)
Serial entrepreneur?? ….Who? Me?
When I was asked to write about my experience as a serial entrepreneur, I realized that I had never given the label, its definition and implications too much thought.
So, I first decided to find the definition – and this is what I got (across multiple sources): “A serial entrepreneur is one who continuously comes up with new ideas and starts new businesses”
Note that it doesn’t talk about success. Only about starting new businesses. Maybe success is assumed.
And here’s a definition that one of my entrepreneur buddies gave me many years ago: “A serial entrepreneur is very often a euphemism for a failed businessman!”
I started my 2nd venture – SportzVillage - because my first one – QSupport - did not work out in 2002. And then people started referring to me as a “serial entrepreneur”.
In 2003, the only promise I made to myself was that whatever I start next, I will not give up till it is successful. So, the choice of what to start next was extremely critical.
As I started SportzVillage, I found that there was very little leverage of my past network, learnings and expertise. So, I had to work much harder since I chose to start a new venture in an unrelated field but one that I was passionate about.
The risk with “serial entrepreneurship” is that the market can be spooked into thinking that, if the going gets tough, you might just give up on this one and start another venture if something exciting catches your fancy. I guess it is like job hopping. Kind of.
Success in business requires you to be at the right place at the right time with the right product/service/team. Too many moving parts that have to fall in place just right. If you are there already, just stay there! Don’t go searching in the dark again!
If things start working out, here’s how it comes at you: “Mr. Founder: Now that you have built a team, raised funding, got early customers, it is time for you to hire a CEO and move on to the next venture” Congratulations! You just became a serial entrepreneur.
This might make sense occasionally – but only if you feel that you have built all that you could – and have monetized the value of your efforts so far.
I also found that as a venture starts to get early success and then grow, it is important for the entrepreneur to hold back all his other new ideas – and focus on the one that is working.
In the last 8 years of SportzVillage, we have tried multiple business lines (corporate sports, sports travel, sports technology, sports infra, school sports) in order to build a profitable, scalable business – as long as it was in Sports. We had to try multiple lines because many of the early ones did not work out.
EduSports today delivers on the original SportzVillage raison d’ĂȘtre by working with nearly 200 schools and getting 1,50,000 kids to play through a structured in-school sports program.
SportzConsult is a leading Sports Management business that works with corporates and brands.
So, no compromise on the core vision of building a business in Sport – but extremely flexible tactically in order to survive and then grow.
I am told this approach is called “pivot” nowadays!
In most cases, if a business is – or looks like becoming - really successful (Wipro, Microsoft, Ranbaxy…), most founders stay with it and build it. Why would you leave a successful business and start another one with a 98% mortality risk?
Unless of course, they have sold it and made lots of money. Or their business is on an auto-pilot mode and they have lots of cash to invest. In such cases, most entrepreneurs typically turn into angel investors/VCs.
Very rarely do successful entrepreneurs start another business from scratch the way they did their earlier business (and the exceptions are statistically irrelevant). If they do, they quickly become the “Chairman” and hire an Executive team to do the day-to-day work. The only exception I have found to this rule is if the next venture happens to be a “second try” at one of the earlier failed ventures – and if the entrepreneur still believes that it is a good idea (in the current market context). In this case, I believe the willingness to rough it out is significantly higher as you want to prove a point.
So, here’s my take on serial entrepreneurship. Most entrepreneurs turn serial entrepreneurs because their earlier venture did not work out. And then, it is hunger that makes them start a new business. The hunger for success; the hunger to relive the excitement of a new venture; the hunger to make a “dent in the Universe”; the desire to prove to yourself – and then, maybe the world at large, that you can spot an opportunity, build a business and make it successful.
That said, investors clearly value an entrepreneur who has had a failure “under his belt” – as one of my VC friends put it – and is therefore hungry for success.
If QSupport had worked out, I’d be running it today– or I’d have sold it, turned angel investor, playing golf and maybe I’d have still started a business in Sports. Many friends pointed out that if QSupport had worked out, I’d never have got a chance to start SportzVillage! That’s the other bit about serial entrepreneurship. The “what if….” keeps coming back frequently!
It has been a great ride. Maybe, in the next few years, I will graduate from being a serial entrepreneur to a “Sports Businessman”!
5 lessons only a serial entrepreneur can provide:
1. Having battle scars is good. Leverage your past but don’t let it bog you down.
2. The market responds (to your venture) when it is ready. Not when you are.
3. Some ideas work out. Many don’t. Just keep giving it your best shot.
4. Stay true to the core vision. And then “pivot” on multiple paths till you hit one that works. And then commit.
5. Find the sources of positive energy that recharge you. A daily game, a book, a walk – whatever. And schedule it into your life.
Things most startups overlook:
1. Building a business takes 10-12 years. Not 3-5 years.
2. Money helps – but it is neither necessary nor sufficient for success.
3. Persistence beats everything else. Just don’t give up.
4. Go out and meet people.
5. The world is willing to help. But you need to ask.
Current designation: Co-founder & MD - EduSports
Companies founded: Learn@Home, QSupport, SportzVillage, EduSports
Name and very short description of company 1: QSupport – 24*7 online remote tech-support for personal computing devices.
Name and very short description of company 2: SportzVillage – Providing opportunities for kids to play.
One thing I would do differently if I were to start my first company now: I would not give up.
The most exciting space to launch a new business today: Indian consumer space