Words of wisdom from Naval Ravikant

Back in 2012, I was kicking around ideas for a new startup, and a mutual friend introduced me to Naval Ravikant because he was “a pro at finding holes in ideas.” We spent an afternoon chatting about startups, being a founder, and the work he was doing at AngelList. I enjoyed our conversation and even seriously considered abandoning starting my own company and applying to work with at AngelList[1]. One particular piece of advice he shared stuck with me, and I continue to share it with aspiring entrepreneurs to this day:

Don’t start a company unless you’re willing to work on it for 10 years.

A succinct way to sum up the level of commitment you should have before starting a company. Startups aren’t a fast-track to riches. Most fail, and even those that succeed take 7+ years on average to exit[2]. If spending a significant portion of your career on your current idea doesn’t excite you, it might not be the one for you.

Notes
[1] I ended up co-founding HeartThis, but we did use AngelList to help with our fundraising.

[2] See CrunchBase Reveals: The Average Successful Startup Raises $41M, Exits at $242.9M

Words of wisdom from Neil Joglekar

This past weekend I was out celebrating Neil Joglekar‘s birthday. Neil’s an old friend from Stanford and the co-founder and CEO of Reel Surfer. Neil spent a number of years bootstrapping the company and paying the bills by tutoring on the side before going through YC and raising VC funding. I figured he must have learned a lot along the way, so I asked him to share a few tips as I take my first shot at starting a company. Neil got very serious for a moment (a rarity) and gave me the following advice:

Manage your emotions, and hang out with people who don’t care that you’re running a company.

I thought that was some of the best advice I’ve received thus far when it comes to entrepreneurship.