The art of speed – a panel facilitated by Tim Ferriss
How to do big things in the shortest time possible.
Mike Cassidy – serial entrepreneur [and very rich man].
Kelly Lewis – geekbrief TV host
Evan Williams – Founder of blogger, twitter
Tim Ferriss - author The four hour work week. the book hit the tipping point at SXSW last
year….
Key learnings: Do usability testing; pre-plan your key days with VC / hires; ask advice of the more experienced and do what they suggest; Tim's advice on how to reach influencers is SPOT ON for biz dev; as is the question at the bottom about finding a mentor, how to run a daily to do list
Speed as the primary startup
strategy – what does fast mean?
MC – get all the decision makers in one room when you meet a
VC to reduce delays. Try to have all the
VC meetings on one day and ask for a term sheet
on the same day. Go in with
everything lined up, a customer quote “the if…then” contract.
Hiring – reference checks with other hiring managers while
the hiring interviews are going on. Make
the offer at end of day and ask for acceptance within 1 day….
Product developments – rapid with incremental releases –
quickly and new releases fortnightly enforcing the discipline of user feedback
and adapting making a discipline within the company.
TF – time perception is key.
The importance of what you do and how it’s seen by your audience.
EW – why has Twitter moved so fast . A self-expression tool means others find out
about it quickly. Critical mass was key
for Twitter – they grow most quickly from this point e.g. SXSW last year it was
6 months old and a group at the conference used it and it created a ‘have to be
on’ movement. Take this into account in
your planning – see where it’s working and go towards that market where it’s
working well. Facebook did this
brilliantly by launching in colleges. They
got twitter onto the screens at SXSW last year – there were existing users, on screens,
the event suited the utility of the product and the good luck that the big
names in technology were using it. REM is a recent
new joiner @remhq !
TF – following the market that is responding is really
important. The pinpoint of information
overload was so acute among techhies so he created "the low information diet"….was
launched. Personal outsourcing also
picked it up early I pushed by outsourcing my online dating….
KL – what contributed to your success of podcast downloads
and video? Community and passion. We build an audience is about getting out
there, shaking hands and meeting people (in a virtual world) and letting their
WOM follow. You are the expert in your
world and so go out and involve yourself in forums and don’t go out and shout I
am an expert, come to me. But present
yourself and answer questions that you can because you are an expert and put
your signature to include your website, name and what you do. Just be discrete. Being that expert that people go to. Passion, be focused so that there was no if,
ands and buts. Make it happen. It has to be real.
What propelled you early on?
Community, love your viewers, meet and talk in many ways – my forums,
twitter, other places, force the conversation into many media. A meshing with your audience.
TF – the audience isn’t about reaching the most people. I spent a lot of time with a small number and
developed a close bond with them. Deep
interaction and enthusiasm. I didn’t
find the influencers directly but if I email Scoble or Mike Arrington –
I am competing in the biggest channel. In
person is the emptiest channel – don’t be a traffic bigot but chose the
thought leaders. Brian Oberkirk
is friends of the A listers…. he is read by many of the other traffic
leaders. His endorsement led to others
picking it up.
MC – start with a very clean simple feature set and don’t
spend 6 months doing an elaborate spec from within a cave…. launch with a
simple set and watch what people like and use.
Xfire fortnightly release and user feedback led to product updates. Usability testing – we do it but most don’t
really do it. Use a random person and
ask them to talk out loud as they use it for the first time. Listen clearly and invite your engineering
team along.
MC – common mistakes that slow you down? Building the team is the tough nut because it
is critical. For a strong person pay
them more – passionately recruit them. I
invite new hires over to dinner with their partners, send them flowers
welcoming them. Put lots of energy into
getting key people. Don’t hurry. What happens on day 1? Have the pc and email account ready for them –
we get all the paperwork out of the way before they join and have everything
ready, phone number, project list all waiting for when you show up. Set a tone for the pace…. by showing
projected timelines ready to roll.
EW – how do you do product development and facilitating distribution of
products. Features….
brainstorming. Chaotic. Everyone thinks of features and sometimes
engineers sneak them in. We don’t want
process to get in the way – the nice thing about Twitter is you can ask users
what they want and what would solve the problem for me. Get as
much feedback as possible – we hear a lot from our users (verbose to begin with
and they can let you know what they want LOUDLY!). Get people in a room and I write in order to
work out whether it’ll work. Don’t get
too hung up on how the current user base / community wiull react – this makes
you hesitate to make changes and it can make you vulnerable to competition and
fast followers.
KL – top concrete to do list for new starters? Stop talking and just do it. I often tell people what to do when they send
me emails asking for a and 3 months later I speak to them and they haven’t
done it! Ask questions. I answer my email. I have advice pages on my website. Everyone in new media is here to help
others. This helps us all grow and push
podcasting forward. Mistakes – promote too
early. The first 10 shows will be bad when you look back on them. Get the show under way and test it and get
kinks out.
TF – I had a wordpress site I played with for a few weeks
without even promoting it anywhere. Lifestyleexperiments
blog.
MC – are there certain things you shouldn’t do quickly? “John Wooden – move quickly but don’t hurry”. Beware
of internal team morale issues. A small
team with high morale is hard to defeat.
The 6 day war – my favourite business book. If morale is high people can go 5 months
without salary! People waste energy for
internal sniping. Don’t rush over
internal friction if something is happening deal with it face to face. The spiral of anger – “ask if you meant to
say that because I found it offensive”
Take 10 minutes immediately to sort it out and diffuse so the morale
comes up high again.
TF – reaching influencers.
I had a few points of contact at SXSW – don’t skimp on the amount of
time you spend with them. Priority was
meet first, email second – each one took me 1 to 1.5 hours to craft – I read
their stuff and knew them inside out to make my stuff relevant. I got responses from 80 -90% from them. Find one
feature or 5 pages that will be very interesting to that person and make the
connection very clear as you introduce it to them. I never actively asked anyone to review it in
social media. I wanted to explore concepts and trends / phenomena. I offered to write guest posts and explain the
concepts on others blogs.
KL – we partnered with big businesses in order to avoid the business finance
side (VC) and to enable us to create a better show. As a two man team, this was important to us
and for other small businesses.
TF – focus with what you are good at – either add people,
get a lot of money and work out what to do with it or eliminate as much as
possible. Feature on Evan in Inc. Magazine. When building a product you mainly thing about
adding for improvement – also consider subtracting! “Don’t
measure what’s measureable but measure what’s meaningful” Warren Buffett.
Questions:
How to reconcile recruiting talent versus VC meeting? MC – skills of entrepreneurs from a survey found 2 key commonalities – they like to
bring their chair with them when they move company and they did an extraordinary
job of forming a relationship when there was no reason for it to be
beneficial. You can later on use the
network of relationships. He has 6,000 people in outlook
contacts. He keeps a spreadshet of cool people I
meet who I may work with some day.
Talent – do it ahead of time.
Keep your list…. who would I hire.
Keep in touch with them. TF you
don’t want to have to develp the relationships when you need them or ask for money when
you need it without the backing relationship.
If you want a reviewer give them 10 months head start.
What affects your outlook?
Slack by Tom de Marco, he talks about you should not have 100% of your
time filled because you are not flexible.
Have empty spaces in order to respond and do creative things. KL – the millionaire next door inspired me
not to go to college. TF – read books by
people who are the best at what they do even if it is not your industry. Ben Hogan on golf – best little book ever.
The value of focus balanced with personal life? MC gets home
at 6.30 every day and runs at lunchtime every day and so I make myself go
despite crises. There is a strong
correlation between the number or weeknights a family dines together and drug
abuse and children problems. And so I
cme home and eat with my kids at 6.30 and at 8.30 I am back online. TF – determinants of happiness are meals with
family and friends and low expectations.
KL – we work constantly but I do work with my husband!
It is hard to find a mentor to guide me and show me how to
do things – importance? TF – I knew
nothing about social media when I launched my book but it was a card I had to
play which publishers don’t understand.
You need to be very humble and up front about this. Bloggers say TF is interesting because he
asks a lot of questions…. about simple stuff.
Never pretend when you don’t know.
Women find this easier than men.
Make it easy for them to help you.
If you get a referral (don’t say you are friends unless you really are)
Tim will write an email addressed to you subject line "your name via the Friends name: Tim Ferriss" Say
who you are really clearly. 10 minute
update actions with his pa. Answer the question: Who are they and
what do they want from me? Try to enable
them to give you a 2 sentence answer because they are busy people. Exhaust your options before contacting
them. Aim high, you never know they may
be interested in you. How to get hold of
anybody…. you can reach people – Fedex overnight letter to wArren Buffet got
a handwritten reply!
Start ups and inefficiencies briefing people as they
learn. Get people working as soon as
possible. Focus on having lunch with the
team all the time. Spend money in ways
that cause people to hang out together.
They come up to speed quickly.
Bad habits to fall back into that you constantly have to
readjust? TF – checking email when I don’t have to. At SXSW everyone is screen sucking everywhere
and so why shouldn’t I? Key is create a
"not to do" list…. review this more than to do list. Buffett and Schwartzenegger don’t have set
calendars – the freedom to focus on what’s important rather than be pre-committed
to things that make you feel productive.
Choose feeling bored rather than being productive – most pick not to be
bored and so check email first thing on Saturday… schedule something more
compelling. Schedule bracketing
activities that end the work week or end the day….
How do you find users if what you do is ubiquitous? Zipcar – get hyper local. One neighbourhood in NYC and dominate
it. Choose your channel and dominate.
What happens after you launch and other variables pitch in
to your busyness? MC – I keep my to do list
on a spreadsheet and re sort it nightly and prioritise long term and short
term. One trap is the short term things
focus you never get to the long term things.
Short term things you have to do that day… promote long term things to
short term in order to get them done if they are too long on the long term list. TF ask does this matter, does this
matter? Opportunities are
tantalising but very few really matter. Exercise
the "No" muscle. The art of letting bad
things happen – TF most-read blogpost. There is never a good time to do something important….
so do it.
Tags: Tim Ferriss; SXSW;
March 26th, 2008 at 9:35 am
[…] see my mate Mark McGuinness will be there…. he put me onto the talk Tim gave at SXSW which I blogged earlier […]