Showing posts sorted by relevance for query fred wilson. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query fred wilson. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, December 04, 2010

Bubble Talk Goes On: It's An Overshoot

Bono at the Vanity Fair kickoff party for the ...Image via WikipediaFred Wilson: Invest In The Mess
New York Times: A Silicon Bubble Shows Signs Of Reinflating
The Day I Got Called Sean Parker
Did Not Meet Fred Wilson, But Met Mazy Dar
Angel Bubbles: No Bubbles
Bubble, Boom Or Froth?

Fred has said repeatedly that what we are seeing is a bubble. First thing I say is this is not a yes no question. Is this a bubble? If you force ask me, my answer is no. This is not a bubble. This is hyperactivity. Will many angel investors lose money? Sure. But that does not make it a bubble. Even a top notch VC like Fred Wilson expects one third of his portfolio to go down under. And these are companies that he did not invest in on day one knowing they will go down. You think you picked a winner, you give them sufficient money and guidance, you go to bat for them, and they still go down. If Fred Wilson is at peace with a 33% failure rate, there are VCs whose failure rates are 66% and 90%. Most VCs fail. Most entrepreneurs fail. By some estimates as many as 90% of new businesses fail within a year of getting launched. Looks like 10% is all capitalism needs to survive.

Sunday, December 05, 2010

Fred Wilson On Android And HTML5

Fred WilsonImage by Lachlan Hardy via FlickrIf how often I visit a particular blog is the way to measure, Fred Wilson very much continues to be my favorite solo blogger. He does have a home base advantage in that both of us are New Yorkers, but his standing in the blogosphere is obvious. Yesterday his blog post was the top featured story at TechMeme when I visited it, which was in the evening.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Fred Wilson: A DJ

Image of Fred Wilson from TwitterImage of Fred Wilson
Yesterday I called Fred Wilson a DJ. (Fred Wilson: DJ) Today my suspicions have been further confirmed. His blog post today is Nice Analogy. This dude who is the most visible venture capitalist in New York City, and perhaps the most loved VC among all the local entrepreneurs he has never invested in and likely never will since he can only invest in so many per year, this guy is a serious music fanatic.

Shane Snow: Tech StartUps Vs Rock Bands "....I started 3 different bands in college. In each one, we dreamed of making it big, landing a record deal, and having hot Japanese chicks scream our song lyrics at us when we toured Asia.....and having geeky Rails programmers whisper as I pass them in the hall at NerdCon...."
Fred Wilson: Nice Analogy
Harry DeMott: More On The Middle Class
The VC And The Music Industry: Not As Different As You Might Imagine
New York Times: Ticketmaster Joins Live Nation, And An Industry Quakes "....bands are making the bulk of their income from concerts....Alliances shift, backs are stabbed and most people have at least three agendas, only one of which they will discuss candidly....“When the Internet came about the artist realized, well hang on, you can’t steal a ticket for a seat, so we started to lean more toward, I don’t really want a record deal, I want to be aligned with somebody who can help me sell tickets. But then I want a company that can use that music and that seat to get ancillary revenues” — from things like food, beverages and sponsorships — “to help me survive.”" ...... “The ticket was underpriced 40 years ago” ...... Azoff was part of the defiant counterculture but was fluent in the language of contracts and comfortable mixing it up in corporate suites. He also had great intuition about how to psychologically size up both foes and friends, and he could sweet-talk and charm as convincingly as he could erupt in rage..... For years, neither promoter nor ticketer has considered fans as the first priority.....


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Thursday, October 21, 2010

Event At Hunch: Angel, Super Angel, VC

Fred WilsonImage via WikipediaFred Wilson and Chris Dixon remind me of each other, although I met Chris only for the first time yesterday, and it was my second time meeting Fred in person, although it feels like I meet him near daily since he blogs daily, and I drop by when I can. I greeted him at the very outset - "Hello Fred, so very good to see you" - and then pretty much left the space for the crowd. It felt like an AVC community thing to do. We already meet you most days, let others have a go at you now.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Bubble, Boom Or Froth?

Fred Wilson [Brooklyn Beta]Image by placenamehere via FlickrFred Wilson has been calling it a bubble. John Doerr says it's a boom. And that's just two guys, although high flying, legendary types. I think what we are seeing is a froth. Let me explain.

A bubble is something waiting to burst. As soon as people wake up, they hunker down, and then where are you? The whole thing collapses like a ponzi scheme. There are some bubble aspects to what is going on. Do you think all startups that are getting funded will grow the money for their investors? That has never happened. Even a seasoned VC like Fred assumes one third of his investments will go down. But are too many flaky companies getting funded? The question is are more than the usual number of empty shell startups getting funded?

Tuesday, March 08, 2011

Two AVC MeetUps Two Days In A Row

Fred Wilson [Brooklyn Beta]Image by placenamehere via FlickrAVC MeetUp Tomorrow

I thought I was headed to an AVC MeetUp tonight. I thought so yesterday. I still think so. But then I have an email this morning about an AVC MeetUp that is scheduled for a different day - tomorrow - and a different venue, although still near Union Square.

I did some digging. I have come to find out there are two AVC MeetUps two days in a row, and I don't think Fred Wilson is coming to either of them, which I believe is fine. The guy puts plenty of time churning out blog posts, and reading every single comment left at his blog.

So here's the update.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011 7:00 PM

Olives @ W Hotel - Union Square
201 Park Ave. South
(@ 17th St.)
Gramercy

Wednesday, March 9, 2011 8:00 PM

Smyth Tribeca
85 W Broadway (Chambers St 1/2/3)
New York, NY 10007

Friday, April 16, 2010

Managing Al, Brad, Fred: An Opportunity To Jump For

x

"I am interested in understanding why you chose the title General Manager. It does not seem that you need one person to manage the small and largely self-motivated team." 

Union Square Ventures: We Are Hiring "we have envisioned an Investment Analyst and a General Manager of the Union Square Ventures Network"

Albert Wenger, Brad Burnham (@BradUSV) (Tumblr), Fred Wilson.

Fred Wilson: Talent Overload

Fred Wilson and USV first put out a post weeks back saying Farewell Andrew Parker, or something along those lines. And someone commented, in all earnesty, who died? He did not say who died, he said I came over here huffing and puffing hoping noone had died or anything like that. Oh no, Andrew is thankfully alive and well, Fred had to respond.

And now this even more earnest comment on the management position. These two comments have so far stood out as the hiring process rolls on at USV.

Albert Wenger
Brad Burnham
Fred Wilson

Andrew Parker
Dorsey Stinson
Eric Friedman

USV Investments
  1. 10gen
  2. Adaptive Blue
  3. AMEE
  4. Boxee
  5. Bug Labs
  6. Clickable
  7. Covestor
  8. Disqus
  9. Etsy
  10. Foursquare
  11. Heyzap
  12. Indeed
  13. InfoNgen
  14. Meetup
  15. Oddcast
  16. Outside.in
  17. Pinch Media
  18. Return Path
  19. Simulmedia
  20. Targetspot
  21. Tracked
  22. Tumblr
  23. Twitter
  24. Wesabe
  25. Zemanta
  26. Zynga
The USV Focus
Union Square Ventures Job Opening: I Am Applying
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Saturday, January 22, 2011

250K Or 500K: How Much To Raise?

Union Square Ventures logoImage via WikipediaI am in mind to raise 250K from Union Square Ventures. That would be my first choice. I can guarantee you I can get Fred Wilson to give me 15 minutes of his time any day for me to able to pitch him. That much I know. But the deal is up in the air. I am not going to assume it will happen. That part is not in my control. What is in my control is I am going to leave no stone unturned to get him. My part is in my control.
Serenity Prayer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Another idea that is being floated by some people on my team is that I raise 500K, but without giving equity. It would be like I get 500K, and in my next round - which could happen in as little as six months - I give that money a 600K valuation. I would be very open to that.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

A Moment Of Appreciating Disqus

Image representing DISQUS as depicted in Crunc...Image via CrunchBaseFred Wilson put out this blog post earlier today: Social Media's Secret Weapon - Email. Brad Feld wrote a reply post within hours: Implementing Social Media’s Secret Weapon. Fred Wilson showed up in Brad Feld's comments section for the post like Brad Feld had showed up earlier in Fred Wilson's comments section for his post. I read the two posts and all their comments. The little back and forth the two had at Brad's blog is really something. I am like, thank you Disqus. How else could I have become privy to this?


These two dudes go way back. They are old friends. I once saw a picture of the two of them in a group photo. It is from way back. And these two also made it onto a list of the top 100 venture capitalists in the world a few weeks back, I don't know if it was Fortune, or Forbes, it was one of those. Long before I saw that list I have admired the excellence of their minds. Both of them also happen to have great blogs. They do a good job of giving you a front row seat to their action if you drop by often enough.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

A Moment Of Despair


http://bit.ly/fintech

During the wee hours of Friday morning when the rest of the world was asleep I sent out an email to Fred Wilson. I felt ready. I was proud to have a deck that had only three slides. Not only that, the email had no attachment. Instead it was a Google Doc web address, one simple line. T-h-i-s will impress AVC, I thought.

Instead I got put into place. We don't invest in companies pre-incorporation, but I'd be glad to have a Skype conversation with you, he said.

Monday, September 06, 2010

Mobile Web: For Real

Fred Wilson - The Naked TruthImage by Randy Stewart via Flickr
A few days ago Fred Wilson linked to a blog post of mine, and now TechCrunch has linked to that blog post by Fred Wilson.

If you know Fred Wilson, and if you know TechCrunch, this is a good thing.

There is a clear distinction between the mobile web and the big screen web. Some people don't think there is. Them you get to ask, where have you been these past few years?
TechCrunch: The Real Social Network: Your Mobile Contacts: the best indicator of who I actually interact with socially the most in real life are the calls I make and the texts I send — it’s all mobile interaction. ...... location is the bridge between social networks and actual social life
I have talked about location and more specifically FourSquare many times at this blog. All you have to do is conduct a search in this blog's search box to find out.

Mobile web is for real. Location is key. Location is the starting point to the mobile web experience. And that is why a company like FourSquare will beat companies for whom location is not the starting point of the experience.

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Friday, May 28, 2010

Redesigning My Blog

For the longest time I thought that was Google's responsibility. My blog is hosted by Blogger. Google owns Blogger. So it is Google's responsibility. Then weeks back I read this post by Fred Wilson: AVC Redesign. I left the longest, most detailed comment of anyone there. Mostly I disagreed with the basic thrust of what he was saying. Your blog looks good as is, let it be, I said. But a few days later I found myself working on the redesign of my blog.

The number one desire I discovered was I wanted my blog to load as fast as possible. I was surprised that I took out the things I took out. I got rid of the code for Google Analytics. More recently I got rid of Google Ads. I reduced the number of posts on the front page to two from three. I got rid of a whole bunch of things from the right hand column. I got rid of the Amazon ads. I got rid of the Amazon search box. I got rid of the Amazon music box. People don't come to my blog to listen to music. I don't think so. What was I thinking? I was surprised by how much I was able to get rid of.

And the blog started loading faster. It was noticeable. Every split second counts.

Finally today Fred Wilson has done it as well. His blog is now one lean machine. Because fast is not fast enough.



See you on June 6, Fred Wilson, will be my first time meeting in person. After having read so many of your blog posts by now I think I have a right to meet you. And congratulations on winning the Lincoln-Douglas debate at TechCrunch Disrupt. Felt like a trophy for the hometown. (TechCrunch Disrupt, Fat Can Work, But Lean More Often Does)

A New Look For AVC
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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Contents 2010

My Gmail Prayers Heard: Multiple Inboxes
FoodSpotting Is The Next FourSquare
Mike Arrington Is A Sexist Pig: Say PeeeeG!
Finally TechCrunch "Gets" Disqus
Real Time Search: Where Google Can "Get" Social
Paying For Phone Calls Was Always Ridiculous
I Was In Chicago? Facebook Places Messing Up
Dennis Crowley, Facebook, And The Location Ecosystem
Esther Dyson On The Future Of Search
The Web Not Yet Ready For The Video Format
The Web Lifestyle And Company Cultures
A Ridiculously Good Blog Search Engine
Facebook Doing Location Is Like Google Doing Social, Almost
Hulu Still Struggling With Business Model
China Is The Reason Google Did Verizon
Google Does Not Need Social Envy
Whatever Happened To Google Wave?
Amazon's Amazing Cloud
Post Wintel
Social, Gaming, Email
YouTube: 15 Minutes Are Much Better
Digital Dumbo 18: The Dumbo Loft
Disney's Playdom Purchase
Zoho
News: July 27
This Blog's Design Inspired By Google, Craig's List
The Art Of Reading Headlines
The Economy: Uncharted Waters
News: July 26
Seth Godin On Failure
Zynga: The Google Of Games?
News: July 25
$35 PC
Chrome OS: Round The Corner?
Ghajini: Tu Meri Adhuri Pyas
iGuide.travel (Ad)
News: July 20
I Am Big In Canada
Go Outside: Cults
News: July 17 (2)
News: July 17
Reclaiming My Twitter Account
A 4 AM Traffic Peak, Mostly From Canada
Google's Metaweb Acquisition
Tech, Women, Diversity
Darren Rowse's Seven Links Challenge
Traffic: Canada Top Country, 2 AM Peak
Is The iPhone 4 In Trouble?
News: July 14
Shopping Around For Iran
Seed Money
What Just Happened? 3,000 Page Hits
Slow Motion: Panda Bear
You Can Create An Android App Too, Anyone Can
To Iran, With Love (3)
My Tumblr Style
World Cup: Spain Deserved To Win
Andy Grove On Creating Jobs
Right On: The Roots And Joanna Newsome
North To Alaska
To Iran, With Love (2)
Droid X Vs. iPhone 4
Parenting
The Social Network: The Movie
To Iran, With Love (1)
Larry Ellison's Personal Life
Spain: The Octopus Was Right, I Was Wrong
A NY Tech MeetUp For Sindre Aarsaether
Brad Feld
Rome - Phoenix W/ Devendra Banhart
To: Brad Feld, Subject: Iran And Me (Digital Ninja/Commando)
The Germans Called Me Robin Hood
Happy July 4 Fred Wilson, Brad Feld
An Offer To FourSquare
Argentina Was Not A Team
Soraya Darabi
Blogger Stats
Brazil: The Overconfidence Of A Soccer Superpower
FourSquare: $20 Million At $95 Million Valuation
Soccer And Latin America
Brazil
July 1 Digital Dumbo: Do Not Miss
Walking On The Moon
The Al Qaeda, Internet, Globalization
Lionel Messi (2)
News June 26
Lionel Messi
Young Folks
Walk In The Park
My Secret Sauce
Rich People's Kids
Swype: Type On Your Smartphone At Laptop Speed
Freehand Exercise: 1,000 Push-Ups, 1,000 Squats, 1,000 Crunches
Saavn's Great Business Model For Movies
Brazil And Argentina: My Choices And Those Of My Favorite Actor
Towards Threaded Conversations On Twitter
How To Monetize Tumblr?
Twitter: The Obvious Missing Features
Indian Railways
OpenVBX: To Manage Your Office Phones
The Eyes Of Truth
Verdict: The iPhone Is Not Open, Flash Is Not Cutting Edge
Fred Wilson: An Unassuming Kind Of Guy
"Where Was This Google All This Time?"
Hey Now, Hey Now
Employment Authorization Card: It's Here
Tomorrow
Firing Founders: Mostly A Bad Idea
Venmo Me For My Charm
Randi For Reshma
Buzzd Party Thursday
Finally Google Has Figured Out A Way To Keep Up With My Blog
Scott Contrarian Heiferman Does It Again
The Highlight Of My Internet Week
Not MeetUp
Women In Tech-Media Event At JP Morgan: Internet Week
Paul Graham, Brad Feld, Me, BBC
Zuckerberg Has Stature
Meeting Fred Wilson In Person
Naveen Selvadurai, Vin Vacanti
Slow Gmail: Short Term Help
Slow Gmail
After Entry Level Jobs, An Internship
Internet Week: Going To Three Events So Far
Lady Liberty Whispers
This Is Not Happening: King Dennis
How To Date An Indian: Andrea Miller
Sree In A Candy Shop
The Mashable Success Story
Reshma 2010, Square, And Pro.Act.Ly
Top Web Properties
Larry Ellison's 1995 Network Computer Vision
The Biggest NY Tech MeetUp Ever?
Buzzd
Immigration Status
One Programming Language
India Broadband Spectrum Bids
Google's Advertising Business
Redesigning My Blog
Paul English Writes Back
Kayak, Paul English, Africa, Free Wireless Internet
Kayak, Paul English, Africa, Free Wireless Internet
The Dumbo Loft Digital Dumbo
Indaba Music: NY Tech Talks MeetUp
Entry Level Jobs
Apple: Remarkable
TechCrunch Disrupt
Ann Curry Commencement
Job Search
ChatVille Is Live Now: "What ChatRoulette Should Have Been
The Far Future Of Databases At The Dropio Offices
Google New York
Google Is Having A TechCrunch Day
Chrome Operating System
Chatfe: Audio, Interest Based Random Connections On Skype?
Has Google Been Able To Scale Well?
TED Talks
Seth Godin, Jack Dorsey, Marc Andreessen
Me @ BBC
Patent Absurdity
A Time Warner Vacation
Venmo Could Make Moves
Adam Smith And The Inbox Space
Paul Carr's Frank Talk On Race
Direct Messages From Ann Curry, Steve Case, Robert Scoble
Who Is Chetan Bhagat? 2010 Time 100
A Day In The Life Of New York City
Jon Stewart: Appholes
Venmo And Frictionless Payments
Could 2011 Be Venmo's Year?
Reimagining The Inbox The Simple Way
Dropio's Indian Cofounder Darshan
The FourSquare Appeal For Me
What Are You Doing Monday? Come Meet Al Wenger
FourSquare Must Cut A Deal With Yahoo
Manhattan?
Digital Dumbo: Here I Come
The Jack Dorsey Story
FourSquare Office, Dropio Technology
4:16 PM @ FourSquare
I Have Been Quoted In Fast Company
Not Union Square Ventures
2010: Location, Random Connections, The Inbox, Frictionless Payments
Fred Wilson: A DJ
Farmville Has Not Been Loading For Me
Selling FourSquare Would Be A Mistake, Partnering Would Be Genius
Fred Wilson: DJ
Graphic Reality

Chatroulette Is For Real
Dennis, Fred, Scott: Tweet Boom Tweet Boom
A Soft Spot For Mike Arrington
Chris Dixon On Twitter: Not Impressive
4/16: I Found Myself A Party: Tonight's Gonna Be A Good Night
Managing Al, Brad, Fred: An Opportunity To Jump For
Real Time Is Real Time, Today Or Last Year
Why Will Facebook Itself Not Do Facebook Enterprise
Twitter Has To Scale The Signals
Twitter Does The Deed: Ads
On Disqus And Disqussions
If The Tweet Is The Atom, What Is Location?
The Inbox Could See New Life This Year
Union Square Ventures Job Opening: I Am Applying
Twitter Acquires Tweetie: The Drama
The iPad Is No Laptop Killer
Breaking The Glass Ceiling With Ann Curry
Vint Cerf, Craig Mundie, Steve Wozniak
Charlie Rose: Technology
Larry Ellison, Sergey Brin
Twitter Need Get Work Done
April 2010 NY Tech MeetUp
Fred Wilson's Gift To Me
Net Neutrality Is The Internet's DNA
Twitter Needs To Eat Into Its Ecosystem
Andreessen, Conway, Hornik
The iPad
Farmville Farmer's Market: My Idea
Startups And Immigrants
Links: April 2
News: March 30
Sergey Brin's Is The Right Stand
Fat Can Work, But Lean More Often Does
Who Is Andrew Parker?
Measuring Your Twitter Influence
I Share Mark Cuban's Passion On The FCC Broadband Plan
Pierre Omidyar
The New York City Subway
The iPhone, Nexus One, Or Droid?
AnyClip.com: More Thoughts
Facebook And Twitter Suck When It Comes To Searching Their Own Sites
AnyClip.com: Second Thoughts
Broader Broadband
Bollywood Needs To Conquer
AnyClip Is Live Now
Tumblr: Casey, Nina, David, Fred
Broad Broadband
Silicon Valley Vs. New York City
Lady Gaga
Biggest Open Source Company: Oracle, Google Or Red Hat?
Fred Wilson's Insight
Happy Holi
Fred Wilson: VC
Ignite, Set It On Fire
The Foursquare Rap: Badges Like Us
Twitter Visualization: Reading Many Tweets At Once
A MeetUp Has Me Excited: Y + 30
Robert Scoble Retweeted Me
A Buddhist Like Richard Gere
Call Out The Sexism
Location! Location! Location!
An Immigrant Story For Brad Feld
Fred Wilson: A VC
I'll Be Gone
Online Dating Newsflash: Race And Religion Matter
Paul Graham: Y Combinator
News: February 11
One Gig Per Sec: This Is What I Am Talking About
Buzz Takes Gmail To A New Level
My Favorite Super Bowl Ad
Sergey Brin: Google Buzz, China, Clean Energy
Social Media Week: The Best NY Tech MeetUp Ever
Mark Cuban
iPad
Bill Gates
NY Tech MeetUp: Europe Edition
Jazz
She Wolf
My Name Is Khan And I Am Not A Terrorist
Presenting At The Dot Com Hatchery
Salute, Google
Netizen VigLink Pre-Sales Report
Mark Zuckerberg, Mike Arrington
Jason Calacanis
Craig Newmark, Dennis Crowley, Jennifer 8 Lee: Koreatown
Deep Sherchan: Social Media To Discuss Mental Health
JyotiConnect: Executive Summary
Book Of Eli
Anu Shukla Has Found The New Frontier In Advertising
Marriage From Hell: AOL, Time Warner
Orgasm
Blogger + Amazon = Wonderful Things
I Just Became Friends With Anu Shukla
Twitter For The Masses
Empire State Of Mind

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Binary Investments, The Middle Kingdom, And Super Exits

Fred Wilson: The Fallacy Of Bimodal Returns: startup returns are not bimodal. They exhibit more of a power law curve. There will certainly be one or two venture deals every year that generate 100x or more. And there will certainly be quite a few total busts. But there are a lot of outcomes in the middle of those two.
Binary is the term used by Ron Conway, the guy in Silicon Valley who invests like he had perennial diarrhea. I read him using the term in a TechCrunch blog post a few weeks back. Binary works for him. It works because he has a track record over almost two decades, or at least a decade and a half, of not having missed out on any good deal in the Valley. He has been in all the top companies. He has also managed to get into FourSquare. And he keeps spreading the love far and wide. This past year I think he put 60% of his money into New York companies.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Firing Founders: Mostly A Bad Idea

steve jobs co founder of apple computerImage by Annie Bannanie 09 via Flickr
Because-I-can is not a wise use of power.

My first disagreement with Fred Wilson, expressed at some third party blog, about a year ago, was with his assertion that there was too much money in the venture capital business. I find tremendous overlap between his and my thought processes most of the time, and I respect him as a person through our disagreements, and I sure admire his work, but I think I just came across my second major disagreement with Fred.

Fred Wilson: Parting Ways With A Founding Team Member

Fat Can Work, But Lean More Often Does

I am going to paraphrase my summary statement from an earlier debate where I was on Fred's side: firing a founder can sometimes become necessary, but that has to be the exception rather than the norm. Fred seems to think that has to be the norm.
If I look back at our most successful investments over the almost 25 years that I have been in the venture capital business, almost every single one of them has seen a founder or critical founding team member shown the door as the company scaled. It's almost inevitable.
And here Chris Dixon and I seem to stand shoulder to shoulder. I have disagreed with Chris before, fundamentally: Chris Dixon On Twitter: Not Impressive.
(W)ow, Fred, I've never disagreed with one of your posts as much as I do (with) this one. (U)nless a cofounder is deliberately underperforming or engaging in terrible behavior etc you should never fire him/her. (P)ut them in a different role or something if they can't manage/scale.
There are a few things Fred is right about. One, that letting go of an early team member is not easy. And he has put in a lot of sense into how to do it. If you do have to let go a cofounder, do it right. Do it fast, and be generous in the process.
I am in favor of vesting more stock than is contractually obligated to be vested. And severance so the person can take some time and decompress is another way to be generous. Most of all, be generous with the way you talk about the person's contributions. Call them a founder if they are a founder. Recognize their contributions both internally and externally and continue to do so. And help them find another situation where they can work their magic again.
What he has not talked about enough although he has touched upon it is the circumstances in which the cofounder has to let go. He makes it sound like this has to be routine practice, and I find that alarming.
Fred, I guess I see your point to an extent, I can see some instances where a cofounder might need to go. But I'd see your side better if you were to also talk of instances where a founder's departure was a really bad idea. Famous example: Steve Jobs and Apple. A recent example and close to your home: Etsy. Sometimes a charismatic cofounder might be "did in" just because he/she was not adept at the smoke room politics of a big team.
And he has not talked about the alternate which Chris Dixon touches upon. There are alternatives to let go. You could create a new, smaller role for that early team member.

My argument is not that this firing should never happen. I am suggesting this has to be rare, and there has to be a healthy debate as to what the circumstances would be that would warrant such a let go.

Severely diluting angel investors and mercilessly kicking out early team members is not venture capitalism, it is vulture capitalism. All the top tech companies of today have had their founders intact. Sometimes venture capitalists kill or stunt the growth and promise of companies they invest in with their unwise use of power: because-I-can.

Mozart died an early death because he was a creative genius who could not have been adept at the brute force ways of the dumb people around him.

Steve Jobs getting fired by Apple was a terribly bad idea. I have been angry at that Pepsi guy this entire time, and I am someone who has never bought an Apple product. A recent example close at home: why was the Etsy founder brought back? It is a DNA thing. There are people who are good at managing, and good at managing at big scales, and are good at scaling, but they lack the DNA, and that is why they did not start the company they now work for. It is tempting to give all the power to those technocrats, but that can be defeating. You trade muscle for essential DNA.
The Daily Beast: John Sculley On Why He Fired Steve Jobs: “I haven’t spoken to Steve in 20-odd years,” Sculley tells The Daily Beast. “Even though he still doesn’t speak to me, and I expect he never will..."
On that note, I am for a much simpler, transparent formula for the investment climate. That probably is another blog post.

Paul Allen left early for health reasons. Bob Miner was not fired by Larry Ellison, he left on his own. Steve Wozniak, it can be argued, did not scale either. These incidents do not prove Fred Wilson's point, they only disprove another of his pet points, that a company must have a Co-Founder. That is my third major disagreement with Fred. Every historic company has had this one key, indispensable member. That second person was a junior member, an early member, but not a Co-Founder. Companies are not founded by Siamese twins. But, again, that would be another blog post altogether.
Ben Horowitz: Why We Prefer Founding CEOs: The conventional wisdom says a startup CEO should make way for a professional CEO once the company has achieved product-market fit. .... The macro reason: that’s the way most of the great technology companies have been built ..... founding CEOs consistently beat the professional CEOs on a broad range of metrics ranging from capital efficiency (amount of funding raised), time to exit, exit valuations, and return on investment. ..... why are great technology companies so often run by their founders? And why do professional CEOs sometimes succeed? ...... Professional CEOs are effective at maximizing, but not finding, product cycles. Conversely, founding CEOs are excellent at finding, but not maximizing, product cycles. Our experience shows—and the data supports—that teaching a founding CEO how to maximize the product cycle is easier than teaching the professional CEO how to find the new product cycle....... innovation is the most difficult core competency to build in any business. Innovation is almost insane by definition: most people view any truly innovative idea as stupid, because if it was a good idea, somebody would have already done it. So, the innovator is guaranteed to have more natural initial detractors than followers. ........ the founder’s courage to innovate despite the doubters. ....... Comprehensive knowledge .. Moral authority .. Total commitment to the long-term ..... Great founding CEOs tend to have all three and professional CEOs often lack them. ...... This knowledge is nearly impossible to replicate. Without it, thoughtful people lack the courage to bet the company on entirely new directions......eems totally natural that Larry Ellison transformed Software Development Labs from a consulting business into a software company called Oracle ....... An excellent example of existing, invalid assumptions paralyzing a whole set of companies recently played out in the music industry. ...... Despite this dynamic history, modern record company executives badly missed the most sweeping technical innovation—the Internet. How was that possible? By the time the Internet arrived, all of the original founders of the record companies had been bought out, retired, or died. The new, professional CEOs were unwilling to let go of the most basic assumptions driving the cost structure of their businesses........They were proficient at running the current business, but lacked both the courage and the moral authority to jeopardize the old business model by embracing the new technology. ...... Hastings wasn’t married to the old distribution model precisely because he invented it. ...... Any serious innovation requires a heavy investment. Beyond the up-front cash, costs may include lower growth, bad publicity, and internal grumbling as existing features atrophy. Recently, we’ve seen Facebook’s founding CEO Mark Zuckerberg make a series long-term bets........
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