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Let’s Celebrate Failure – An Open letter To Indian Startups, Entrepreneurs, VCs & Startup Employees

Hi Folks,

Over the last few weeks, there has been consistent bad press around a few startups in India concerning lay-offs, (ref. TinyOwl, Zomato, Housing.com, Vizury), bad decisions, hostage situations (ref. TinyOwl) and more. The general air has been negative and I had to pen down my thoughts, as someone who belongs to this community. I am disheartened by the negativity and I want to provide some perspective.

I was motivated to write this post after witnessing a general level of negativity over the last few weeks with comments like “This is what you get when you join a startup” and “The whole country is crashing.” etc. doing the rounds. Here are my opinions, perspectives, advice and candid two cents in no particular order for entrepreneurs, employees and VCs:

There Is No Such Thing As Failure

I love how the Valley infact has re-defined failure. They don’t even call it that. They call it a “PIVOT”. Now isn’t that a mighty word? No one ever fails. You simply pivot 🙂 The perfect case in point is the Pinterest story (Check) which was founded during the recession, survived early failures and developed as a company for the long-run.

Let’s Get Some Perspective On The Failure Rate

And Here’s Some Perspective On Past Market Crashes

To the folks who are comparing current times to the 2000 dot com crash and the 2008 financial meltdown, let me point out a few facts.

Yes folks. Those are the numbers. That’s the kind of upheaval the valley and world went through before producing today’s global giants. Any monies lost in India or the downsizing taking place here pales in comparison. It is too early to get pessimistic. Don’t get me wrong. I don’t say this out of lack of empathy. However, in any new market a ton of money and time has to be spent in gaining experience before one can see a growth phase. India is still a fledgling story.

And Some Perspective On Timing And Challenges

Never Give Up

Fellow Entrepreneurs – Keep at it. I often get asked about things that were instrumental in our success. And if there was one thing I can point to in my journey is that I NEVER GAVE UP. Two posts I had written a long time ago are relevant here –

In the words of Michael Jordan – “I can accept failure, everyone fails at something. But I can’t accept not trying” – Michael Jordan

Spend Wisely

Capital has been boundless over the last few years. However, my advice is – spend EACH dollar like you would spend your own. At Directi, we have had an interesting journey. We have never taken on any external debt or investment. As a result, every time we spend money we are spending OUR money. While arguably that has its own constraints, on the other hand we have become VERY good at figuring out how to spend money wisely. We have an unbeatable track record of getting to profitability in the shortest time possible across all our startups. So the next time you get $50 million in funding and want to spend $15 Mn on an IPL campaign – just ask yourself what would you do if that was your hard earned $50 Mn.

Don’t Pay Your Users To Use Your Product

I have been witnessing what I believe is the most unhealthy trend in the industry over the last few years – Paying people to use your product. I just don’t get it. I can maybe understand providing incentives for acquisition. But incentives for engagement never made sense to me. Here is my perspective on this trend –

Paying people to use your product is the quickest way to burn all your cash. The most successful companies in our industry NEVER had to pay people to use their products. Imagine if Google started off by saying I will pay each user to use my search engine. Or Facebook paying for each post. Or Twitter, LinkedIn, Microsoft. Even the handful that did dole out cash incentives (Paypal), did it ONLY for user acquisition and did not continue doling money out for continual usage.

My Priority Order Of Spending Money

I have always followed a strict order on where I like to spend most of the money for each of our businesses. I call it the three P’s of spending –

  1. People – I will spend as much and more money and MOST of my time on hiring, retaining and training the best of the talent in the country.
  2. Product – The simple formula for a successful business is to create a product that provides more value to a user than the amount of money you expect to earn from that user. Spend money on product.
  3. PR – The first order of marketing is PR and not Advertising. And yet most entrepreneurs in the country spend millions of dollars on advertising campaigns while completely neglecting the importance of good PR. Recommended reading – The Fall of Advertising and the Rise of PR by Al Ries -. In fact while you are at it read all his other books too. They are all amazing!
  4. Advertising – If perchance there is any money left over after spending as much as I can on all of the above (and I sincerely hope there isn’t) then I *may* spend it on advertising. Advertising is the biggest sinkhole for cash. Again read Al Ries’ book above for more context.

Some Pointers For Investors

While businesses I have founded at Directi, have never needed capital infusion, I have met several amazing VCs and investors across the industry in the last 18 years. Many I have tremendous respect for. Time and again I believe the following success principles matter when investing –

Some Pointers For Employees

There have been a large number of lay-offs announced over the last few months and I can empathize with the general feeling amongst various employees. Let me offer some advice here:

My intention is to arrest any general pessimism in the industry as a result of a few events. Let’s learn to celebrate failures folks. For without failures there can be no success.

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