A hearty congratulations to Rob Hayes and the First Round team, Jeff Clavier, and Mark Goines–three friends, three great investors, who got a great result from their investment in Mint (acquired today by Intuit for $170 million).
Lost in the hoopla around the announcement was this very telling quote from Rob about the Mint team, which I want to highlight:
I can’t emphasize this enough. I often work with inexperienced entrepreneurs who seem to believe that there’s a right answer, and that they’ve figured it all out.
When these entrepreneurs encounter a skeptic, be it a VC or a business partner, their reaction is to dig in their heels and prove that they’re right and the skeptic is wrong.
This is a terrible strategy. It’s unlikely you’ll change their mind, and they’ll simply write you off as a rookie. (This is not to say that you don’t correct investors when they are clearly wrong; you need to stand up for yourself. But acknowledge that in life, unlike problem sets, the answers are debatable)
The proper reaction is that of Mint CEO Aaron Patzer. When you say, “I don’t know” and “Here are a couple of ways this could play out,” you’re establishing three important things:
- You are aware of the limitations of your knowledge
- But because you know your stuff, you have already thought through the possibilities
- And you are confident enough in your judgment to expose your thinking to the investor
This is the kind of entrepreneur I want to invest in–knowledgeable, thorough, transparent.
(Cross-posted @ Adventures in Capitalism)