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#113 Sarah Tavel: The Value of Intellectual Rigor

Jun 15, 2021 1h 3m 37 insights
Sarah Tavel has spent the past four years as a general partner at venture capital firm Benchmark, after previously serving in the same role with Greylock Partners and as the first-ever product manager at Pinterest. In this episode Shane and Sarah how studying philosophy helped in her career as a venture capitalist, the value of intellectual rigor, her concept of the net-present value of pain, why every strength has a corresponding weakness, where executive boards go wrong, assessing the performance of a CEO, lessons of rapidly scaling at Pinterest, and so much more. -- Want even more? Members get early access, hand-edited transcripts, member-only episodes, and so much more. Learn more here: https://fs.blog/membership/   Every Sunday our Brain Food newsletter shares timeless insights and ideas that you can use at work and home. Add it to your inbox: https://fs.blog/newsletter/   Follow Shane on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/ShaneAParrish
Actionable Insights

1. Embrace Vulnerability & Growth

Be vulnerable and understand you are a work in progress to constantly grow, evolve, and push your abilities, which is critical for scaling a company.

2. Admit Lack of Knowledge

Be willing to admit when you don’t know something to yourself and others, allowing for crucial learning moments that prevent you from holding yourself back and enable scaling.

3. Cultivate a Growth Mindset

Adopt a growth mindset by being vulnerable, accepting you are a work in progress, and actively seeking ways to constantly learn, evolve, and push your abilities through reading, mentorship, or coaching.

4. Address Pain Points Immediately

Apply the ’net present value of pain’ concept by addressing difficult decisions, especially people-related issues, immediately rather than procrastinating, as delayed pain compounds and becomes harder to resolve.

5. Avoid Hiring “7s”

Do not hire or retain “7s” (mediocre performers) because they kill companies by occupying seats that could be filled by high performers, and their presence brings down the execution of the entire team.

6. Let Go of Non-Scaling Employees

When an employee isn’t scaling in their role, let them go rather than transferring them internally, as this avoids making them someone else’s problem and prevents a ’non-confrontational weakness'.

7. Hire High Performers

Understand that ‘A’s hire A’s’; hiring high performers (8s, 9s, 10s) creates a positive cascading effect, attracting and retaining other top talent.

8. Acknowledge Strength-Weakness Duality

Understand that every strength has a corresponding weakness; accept this duality in yourself and others, and build a great team by surrounding yourself with people whose strengths complement your weaknesses.

9. Master Business Numeracy

Founders must deeply understand the numbers of their business and be willing to face the ‘brutal facts’ on the ground, rather than relying on belief or vague assumptions.

10. Choose Right Metrics (OKRs)

Ensure your company’s objectives and key results (OKRs) are based on meaningful metrics, not vanity metrics, to avoid optimizing for the wrong things and wasting resources.

11. Align Org Chart with Strategy

Regularly review and adjust your organizational chart to ensure it aligns with your company’s strategy, preventing execution attacks and streamlining operations.

12. Strive to Escape Competition

Focus on building a business that can escape direct competition, as these companies ultimately achieve high profitability and generate significant cash for shareholders.

13. Aggressively Invest in Growth

If you have an efficient machine that generates high returns on investment, burn as much money as you can efficiently to distance yourself from competitors and dominate the market.

14. Invest for Long-Term Profitability

Accept upfront burn in marketing or sales if it leads to acquiring customers who will become very profitable over a longer period, creating a positive return on investment.

15. Seek Early Margin Expansion Evidence

Look for early evidence that contribution margins will expand or customer acquisition costs will decrease over time, indicating a clear path to customer-level profitability.

16. Prioritize Network Effects

When building a company, prioritize developing strong network effects, as they are the most powerful mechanism for escaping competition and tipping a market.

17. Maximize for Market Tipping

When choosing a market, prioritize picking one that is ’easy to win’ or tip, as achieving this tipping point is crucial for long-term success and dominance.

18. Tip Market for Organic Growth

Focus on tipping the market to make your value proposition so superior that organic growth explodes, reducing the need to spend on customer acquisition.

19. Target Overlooked, Easier-to-Tip Markets

Instead of competing in saturated areas, target overlooked markets (like DoorDash in the suburbs) where it’s easier to achieve a high market percentage and tip the market before competitors.

20. Dominate Weaker Competition Markets

Strive to be the ‘A plus person’ in a market with weaker competition, as this strategy generates the most contrast and value, making it easier to be obviously better than any substitute.

21. Start Small for Product-Market Fit

Counteract ambition by picking a small starting place to execute rigorously and achieve incredibly strong product-market fit, rather than tackling a huge problem with a blunt product.

22. Target Underestimated Markets

Seek out and target markets that are underestimated by others, as this reduces competition and allows you to build a dominant position before others recognize the opportunity.

23. Exploit Vulnerabilities with Specialization

Identify and exploit vulnerabilities in large, horizontal platforms by creating specialized, vertical-focused products with unique features and strong policies that incumbents cannot easily replicate.

24. Avoid Lowest Common Denominator

Be wary of becoming a horizontal platform that tries to be everything for everyone, as this often leads to a ’lowest common denominator product’ that is vulnerable to specialized competitors.

25. Forge Habits in Constraint

Start with a low-margin or resource-constrained business to forge strong company DNA and habits, which creates benefits when you later add higher-margin products or operate in easier conditions.

26. Inject Founder DNA

Actively recruit and integrate individuals with ‘founder DNA’ (risk-loving, responsibility-seeking, action-oriented, high urgency) throughout your company’s lifecycle to foster growth.

27. Ensure Mission Alignment

When integrating high-impact individuals like founders, ensure their identity and mission are deeply aligned with your company’s goals to maximize their commitment and success.

28. Align Board Members with Vision

Select board members who are deeply aligned with the company’s vision, mission, and future direction to avoid execution taxes and ensure productive strategic conversations.

29. Seek Board Members for Brutal Facts

Choose board members who are not just cheerleaders but will show you the ‘brutal facts’ while still marching in the same strategic direction, offering critical, aligned feedback.

30. Avoid Board Micromanagement

Board members, especially ex-operators, should avoid micromanaging or digging into functional details, as this acts as a crutch for the CEO and prevents them from hiring the necessary internal talent.

31. Maintain Trust with Board

Foster and maintain trust between the founder and the board, as distrust prevents important conversations and hinders the board’s ability to perform its strategic duties effectively.

32. Deliver Bad News Quickly

To maintain trust with your board, deliver bad news as quickly as possible, rather than waiting for scheduled meetings, to prevent feelings of being blindsided.

33. Build Mental Models

Actively synthesize information and build mental models or frameworks to reason from, which provides a higher-resolution understanding of the world and aids in making better decisions.

34. Apply Philosophical Rigor

Break down problems into premises, use thought experiments to imagine corner cases, and preempt objections to strengthen your arguments and decision-making.

35. Apply Opportunity Cost to Time

When making commitments, especially significant ones like investments or board seats, evaluate not just the direct return but also the opportunity cost of where else your valuable time could be spent.

36. Leverage Bundling & Unbundling

Understand that value creation often comes from either bundling disparate services or unbundling existing platforms, a key dynamic in creative destruction for startups.

37. Adapt to Evolving Habits

Recognize that prolonged societal shifts (like remote work) create strong new habits; adapt your strategies to these evolving behaviors, as they are unlikely to fully revert to old patterns.