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The parable of Bug House. The world's toughest chess variation.

July2007-2_-_version_2

I love chess.  I love everything about it.  My Dad gave me a small, hand-carved chess set when I was 8 year old.  We would play up at the condo in the mountains on snowy evenings.  We played on vacations.  I always wanted to make sure he was playing his hardest.  God forbid he would let his 8 year old son beat him...

While I was going through my quarter-life crisis, travelling all over the world, I started collecting interesting chess sets in foreign countries.  While in Bolivia, I found a hand-carved chess set that was the size of a coffee table.  I had to have it.  I had to carry the base of that table in my lap for most of the 18 hour trip back to the states.  It was so worth it.

More recently, I've been playing Chess With Friends on the iPhone with one of my oldest friends Mike.  We average a little more than a game a month.  We must be 30 games in at this point. Sometimes when my phone buzzes with a new move notification, I get nervous.  I'm worried he's made a move I didn't predict.  Of course, this happens all the time, so my fears are justified.

When we hit the trough of sorrow with FlightCaster, Mike and I played pretty frequently.  There were a few mornings in which half the morning was wasted away thinking through moves.  In what was otherwise a pretty tough time emotionally, playing chess him was a welcomed reprieve.

Chess is comforting to me because it's an exercise in pure rationality.  At my level, still recreational, I can apply pure mental horse power to any problem and do fairly well.  Mike is a better player than me when it comes to strategy and experience with openings, so I often have to win by brute-forcing the visualizations of the moves.  If I do this, he does this, if he does that, I can do this...I've heard Bobby Fischer could think 14 moves ahead.  I can get up to about 7 until veins start popping out of my head.

Mike is also more gifted positioning player.  He understands at a more abstract level how to get his pieces into superior positions, even if it means giving up pieces in the process.  It's often a joy to watch...and incredibly frustrating.  If you play chess, you know the feeling.

 

***

 

Sometimes, while daydreaming, I wonder how similar chess is to startup life.  I've determined it's not.  I think there may be a lot of neat similarities to chess and entrepreneurship, but ultimately chess is too controlled.  One of the defining aspects of surving and thriving in startups is managing entropy.  Chess is calculated, predictable, strategic.  Chess is how startups look after they've already been successful and Harvard Business Review is writing cases about how the crystal clear vision of the genius founder translated into market domination.

But I've found a variation of chess that is a true equivalent to the chaos that is startup life.  It's called Bug House.  You're going to love it.

Bug House is a way to play team chess.  That's right.  Team chess.  4 people, 2 teams, 2 boards, 2 timers.  I was over at Dropbox with Ivan Kirigin and they introduced me to it.  No surprise, by the way, that those genius Dropbox guys are playing this insane game. They started playing a lot more recently after Makinde Adeagbo left Facebook and joined Dropbox, bringing the heat.  Just wait, Bug House may be to 2012 what Settlers of Catan was to 2010. (okay probably not, but still...)

275px-bughouse_game

 

Here's how you play.

I played with Ivan as my partner.  Ivan played white versus his opponent.  I played black versus my opponent.  The win in Bug House goes to the team the logs the first victory, on either board, against that board's respective opponent.  So, if I beat my opponent, Ivan and I as a team would win.  Each game is separately timed with 5 minutes per side.

So we both start playing our games independently.  No interaction for the first few moves on each board.  However, when Ivan captured a pawn from his opponent (remember his opponent was playing black since Ivan was playing white), Ivan handed the white pawn to me!  I could now choose to move my normal turn or place the pawn anywhere on the board.

Take a second and visualize the craziness that began to ensue.    Here's a random youtube video of some guys playing.

Every time, I thought through a strategy even a few moves into the future, it would totally fall apart if my opponent magically received a rook or a bishop from his partner.   Half a dozen times, I faced certain checkmate when Ivan magically saved me with captured pieces.  At our best, Ivan and I would communicate our needs to each other.  But with that fucking timer, there was just no time so I would just capture pieces and give them to him.  There was no planning, no control, no time.

As time went down on both boards, we made incredibly fast moves.  I've used to regular speed chess.  I can see the board and make quick decisions.  That totally fell apart when the whole context of the game shifted dramatically move to move.  Veins were popping out of my head left and right.  I realized at one point that I had been holding my breath for too long.  Right, of all things, I also needed to remember to breathe.

 

By the way, Bug House is British slang for insane asylum.

And this my friends, is the perfect parable for startups.  

 

Happy Thanksgiving everyone...

 

 

Find discussion of this post on Hacker News

***
 
 

And please come check out my new startup, 42Floors

We're fixing commercial real estate.  Forever.

Sign-up to learn more at 42floors.comand like us on Facebook, and follow us on AngelList, and follow us on Twitter.

 

******************
I'm Jason Freedman.  
I've got a sweet-ass new company: 42Floors.  
Previously, I did FlightCaster.
I welcome connections on Linkedin,  FacebookAngelList and Twitter.

 

 

A new approach to minimum viable product

290910073914minimumviableproduct

 

Startup buds!  Listen up...We're starting to get some flak for going a bit over zealous on the minimum viable product strategy.  Robert Scoble just ripped into us for approaching him with too many poorly-constructed concepts that are not ready for the light of the day.  Dismiss his criticism at your own peril.  I think he was right. 

Reid Hoffman's Rule #6 is "Launch early enough that you are embarrassed by your first product release."  He's also right.

 

What's an entrepreneur to do?

 


They're both right.  We need to be presenting far better first versions to the world AND we need to be launching much much earlier.  I wanted to give you a little view into how we tackle this issue at 42Floors.  If you go to 42Floors right now, you won't be impressed.  Sorry.  We're not ready to show what we're building to the whole internet world yet.  We have, however, been showing our product to lots of people in the commercial real estate industry.  They contact us on AngelList and we give them access to a private site and get their feedback.   Here's a frontpage that we've heavily tested with commercial real estate professionals:

Front-broker

We built this front-end and showed it to the real estate community.  We didn't scream "This is only a mockup!".  In fact, we alluded to quite the opposite.  We did everything possible to not show that we hadn't even started the back-end yet.  This is not beta testing, it's not even alpha testing.  It's fake website design testing.


Good customer development is filming the trailer and then deciding whether to make the movie.


We got tons of awesome feedback.  Brokers liked some aspects but not others.  Tenants had very different impressions.  We told them to be brutally honest with their feedback and they certainly were.  And we, in turn, were not emotionally attached to our product in the slightest.  This was full-blown hypothesis-testing mode for us.  Want to know the best test of whether you're actually in hypothesis-testing mode or simply going through the motions?  

 

Good customer development means throwing away code.  


And oh, man, have we thrown away code.  This front-end failed our tests.  The front-end above is not at all what 42Floors will be doing as a company.  It's actually from earlier this year when we were still searching for our product.  We threw it away.  When we iterate early on as a startup, we don't hesitate to try new things and that means throwing away old things.  It's soooo much easier to throw away code when you don't have a full-blown code base.  The emotional attachment to that sunk cost is very real.  

It's also very tough on morale to throw away something that's fully built.  One of the reasons we've iterated so quickly is that we never built the back-end.  We're now deep into our latest iteration and it's the one we'll launch with...soon!   When we do show you all what we've built, I'm certain it'll blow you away.  I can say that with such confidence because I have real data from all of our hypothesis-testing.  Paul Graham tells Y Combinator companies to launch when they provide a full quantum of utility.  When we launch, we will only be doing 1% of what we have planned, but that 1% will make some people in commercial real estate very very happy...so happy that they'll pay us money on day one.

If you're into commercial real estate, contact us now and we'll share it with you.  For everyone else, go ahead and follow us on AngelList and we'll keep you updated.  

 

Find discussion of this post on Hacker News

***
 
 

Please come check out my new startup, 42Floors

We're fixing commercial real estate.  Forever.

Sign-up to learn more at 42floors.comand like us on Facebook, and follow us on AngelList, and follow us on Twitter.

 

******************
I'm Jason Freedman.  
I've got a sweet-ass new company: 42Floors.  
Previously, I did FlightCaster.
I welcome connections on Linkedin,  FacebookAngelList and Twitter.

 

 

 

Don't. Waste. Time.

Timesink


Stuff we startups do that doesn't delight users:

Office space
Launch parties
Health insurance plans
Salary negotiations
Founder equity splits
Series F stock
Office Food
Team-building activities
CRM systems
Bookkeeping
Head count
Working in SOMA
Convertible debt caps
Valuations
TechCrunch
Karma scores
ISOs
Powerpoint
Business Cards
Banks
Lawyers
Desks
1099s
Bug Trackers
Agile Processes
Advisory Boards
Hiring
Cap Tables
Payroll
Meetups
Meetings


Of course, much of this stuff still needs to get done.  At some point.  And some of it really is important to the process that eventually creates delight for users.  But none of it directly delights users.  They're all inputs.  None of it is product.  When you build a great product, one that delights users and achieves product-market fit, you'll have lots of time to work on all these things and optimize them to your heart's content.  When your product is not even built yet, none of this stuff matters.  But your startup, in the pre-product phase, is basically a ticking time bomb.  The only thing that can prevent it from exploding is user delight.  User delight attracts funding, enhances morale, builds determination, earns revenue...Until you get to user delight, you're always at risk of running out of money or, much more likely, losing a key engineer to something more interesting.  Time is your most precious resource.

Don't. Waste. Time.

Paul Graham mentors startups to avoid these time sinks: "The most dangerous way to lose time is not to spend it having fun, but to spend it doing fake work."


Meeetings


Some strategies for not wasting time on fake work


Delay it

Anything that can be postponed should be.  If your startup never makes money, you won't care about setting up that bookkeeping system.  In fact, you'll wish you had that 10 hours back to talk to more users.  It's not even the hours that matter though, it's the mental focus.  You want your only two top-of-mind subjects to be your product and your users.  Just about everything can be fixed later.

Fix things once they break

The best bookkeeping solution is a shoebox.  I swear by it.  At FlightCaster, we didn't leave our shoebox system until we had acquisition interest.  When they asked for a balance sheet, we paid a bookkeeper and CFO to quickly fix everything.  A couple thousand dollars later, everything was totally organized.  


Solve problems quickly, even if only partially

When you incorporate, there will be 347 options you can think about.  Founder provisions, stock structures, by-laws, etc.  Don't worry about them.  Just solve this task as fast as possible with the simple defaults.  In general, just try to do whatever a bunch of other high quality startups have done.  Don't even bother to understand the options until later.  When you're ready to raise an equity round, take a few days with your advisors and lawyers and amend all your documents to get it right.  The only thing that can't be changed later is the 83B--get that done correctly within 30 days of incorporation.


Outsource all over the place

I've purchased health care plans so many times now I know exactly what I'm looking for.  I still use an insurance broker though.  I have Raj from Expert Quote take care of everything for me.  Yeah, he gets a commission, but if it saves me a bunch of annoying calls with Anthem, then it's worth it.  It's one less thing for me to think about.


Later on, hire a good part-time CFO

A part time CFO will do all your administrative tasks for you, either themselves or by hiring someone to do it for them.  It's awesome.  Yeah, you probably think you want to learn all this stuff in order to be a better informed founder, but seriously, you don't.  Whether you understand, at this point in your career, how city and state taxes work is simply not important.  Give up some control, stay focused on product and users.


Don't obsess over vanity stuff

We still haven't made business cards for 42Floors.  Why?  Because we just haven't gotten around to it yet.  I prefer Bump anyways.  Or I use old business cards. Or I just grab the other person's card  and snap a photo of it using CardMunch.


There is a good time to learn all this stuff by the way.  When you're not actively doing a startup, go learn this stuff.  Read these books.  Make it a casual hobby.  Just don't think that getting good at this stuff will make you significantly more likely to build a great product. 

If you just HAVE to work on any of this stuff, click on any of the items in my laundry list at the top.  Each link is a snippet of help that should help you solve your problem quickly, though probably not perfectly.

That should be good enough.  For now.

 

 

 

Find discussion of this post on Hacker News

***
 
 

And please come check out my new startup, 42Floors

We're fixing commercial real estate.  Forever.

Sign-up to learn more at 42floors.comand like us on Facebook, and follow us on AngelList, and follow us on Twitter.

 

******************
I'm Jason Freedman.  
I've got a sweet-ass new company: 42Floors.  
Previously, I did FlightCaster.
I welcome connections on Linkedin,  FacebookAngelList and Twitter.

 

 

 

We're going to the mats.

Ob-nh295_godfat_d_20110329193614

Clemenza:  That Sonny's runnin' wild. He's thinking of going to the mattresses already.

Sonny:  No, no, no! No more! Not this time, consiglieri. No more meetings, no more discussions, no more Sollozzo tricks. You give 'em one message: I want Sollozzo. If not, it's all-out war: we go to the mattresses.

—The Godfather

 

It's time for 42Floors to go to the mats.  We're hunkering down.  It's go time.  My loving girlfriend has approved this.  My friends understand.  My family is supportive.  Getting a startup off the ground takes an almost superhuman effort.  It takes obsessiveness.  It takes 100% time commitment.  It takes tremendous focus.

For the past 9 months, I've been living the good life in San Francisco.  I've been working hard on 42Floors, but not obsessively hard to be honest.  I actually lead a fairly balanced life with a daily workout, reasonable hours and weekends mostly off.  That's not bad.  I've done a few extracurricular activities, most important of which was helping create NFTE Launch.  During this time, I've gotten my broker's license and learned a ton about my industry.  I've met with 100s of entrepreneurs and spoken by phone to almost everyone that contacted me through this blog.  It's a been wonderful time.

 

But it's time to go to the mats.

 

When we started FlightCaster and Openvote before that, we had to live with each other...because we didn't have enough money to afford separate rent.  We look back fondly at those times when 5 of us were living in a 3 bedroom apartment.  Yeah, we had no space.  Yeah, some of us slept on the floor.  Man, we worked our asses off during that time.  There's something magical that happens when you devote yourself to something with such intense focus that the rest of the world is forgotten.  It's not sustainable.  It may not be healthy.  But it's the single best way to launch a company.

So, the 42Floors crew talked this over and we all agreed that we wanted to go to the mats.  We're moving out of our respective apartments.  We're all switching to a Maker's Schedule.  We rented a house in Redwood City for 5 months for all of us to live in and work out of.  

We can't fucking wait.  While it'll be hard work and the intensity will get to us at times, we also know what makes going to the mats so special.  It's really an opportunity to perform at our absolute highest levels.  When's the last time you've done your best work?  How many times in your life have you worked at peak capacity?  How many hours a day are you really productive?  This will be the most productive time in our lives.  It's pretty cool.

You know what else is cool?  Our sweet-ass startup house!

When I saw this place on Craigslist, I knew that it was just made to be a startup house.  Check it out:

(download)

(download)

Pretty sweet, eh?!  Startup life may be really hard...but that doesn't mean it can't also be fun.

 

Find discussion of this post on Hacker News

***
 
 

And please come check out my new startup, 42Floors

We're fixing commercial real estate.  Forever.

Sign-up to learn more at 42floors.comand like us on Facebook, and follow us on AngelList, and follow us on Twitter.

 

******************
I'm Jason Freedman.  
I've got a sweet-ass new company: 42Floors.  
Previously, I did FlightCaster.
I welcome connections on Linkedin,  FacebookAngelList and Twitter.

 

Use AngelList for customer development...and then raise money.

When I first heard about AngelList, I thought it would never work.  They had grabbed some of the top investors in the tech world and put them on a distribution list for entrepreneurs to spam?  How could that possibly work? 

And then we started hearing about a startup here and there getting a little funding from someone off of AngelList.  I couldn't tell whether it was bad startups finding dumb money or just personal connections orchestrated personally by Nivi and Naval.  Either way, I didn't take it that seriously.  I was in the middle of our FlightCaster acquisition; raising a round of funding was the last thing on my mind.  Whenever people asked me for fundraising advice, I was never down on AngelList, but I never remembered to bring it up.  It just wasn't relevant yet.

It is now.  Mark my words, 2012 will be the year AngelList explodes with traction.

AngelList is for real.  It's here to stay.  And it's going to totally change the way we all raise money.  I don't know if Nivi and Naval planned it this way from the beginning, but they've turned AngelList into Facebook for startups.  It's not just a funding list, it's a full blown social network specifically designed for social credibility in startups.

Before I explain, I'll give you the super quick primer on AngelList for those of you that haven't use it.

Startups go on AngelList and create a profile for each entrepreneur and for their startup.  The startup profile includes a very brief screenshot section, a place to post advisors, current investors, and some financial information that has privacy toggle settings.  Investors can create a profile that post their previous investments, their areas of expertise, and what types of investments they like to make.

So far, pretty simple stuff.  Well-executed and clear.  There are a bunch of other little features on the profiles like status updates, references, etc.  But overall, it's still very similar in content to Crunchbase.

The magic comes in how the social dynamics of AngelList are managed.  AngelList uses Twitter-style following instead of Facebook-style friending.  Anyone that wants to follow a startup or an investor can follow them.  We've seen this show before.  On Twitter, your follower count is a pretty significant indicator of social proof.  On Angel List, it works the same way. 

Screen_shot_2011-11-09_at_8
Screen_shot_2011-11-09_at_8

 

Having a few hundred followers is a way to signal that there is pent-up demand for information about your startup.  I think of it as priming the pump.  It's not as powerful as the social proof that comes with telling the world that some A-List investor just put money into your startup, but it's the signal that comes out earlier.  

In the pre-AngelList days, we used to accomplish this feat by creating buzz amongst investors.  As anyone that has done the Sandhill Shuffle will tell you, startup investing is an incredibly small and social community.  When we raised for FlightCaster, almost every VC with whom we met knew our story before we got to them.  Like most entrepreneurs, we stacked our meetings all at once so that our name popped up multiple times in VC chatter.  We met with 50+ investors during our pitch process...in two weeks.  It was the busiest week of my life.  It was also incredibly inefficient, very distracting to product development, and very risky to us.  We had no way of knowing if the timing was right, no insight into our level of buzz, no feedback loop on our accomplishments.

Now, with AngelList, you can show that pent-up demand online, through your follower count.  We put 42Floors on AngelList before we had even firmly decided on our product.  When we first posted our profile, we had only figured out our problem, fixing the broken process of commercial real estate, but we hadn't yet nailed a minimum viable product. Our profile is still super empty. All we really say is the problem we're solving.

42_floors_angellist


We're not currently fundraising, but I'm having lots of great conversations with investors right now.  And this has become the most surprising additional perk of AngelList.

 

Screen_shot_2011-11-09_at_3

AngelList is a massive source of great customer development.

In building our commercial real estate product, we've needed to talk to lots of brokers, landlords tenants, real estate investors, etc.  Some of these people are hard to reach.  I keep posting to AngeldList each of my 'needs'.  As I've said before, investors are great at providing valuable introductions.  One, they like helping out and two, it's a way for them to prove their value-add as an investor without having to commit to cash.  

Screen_shot_2011-11-09_at_8


When we finally start fundraising, I'll use AngelList to broadcast who our early investors are to the rest of the investor community.   By that time, we'll have hundreds follows that have learned about our progress from day one.  This is how we answer Suster's call to invest in lines, not dots.

All of this means you need to start now!  If you wait until you're actually raising, you won't have time to build up a following and it won't work as well.  You don't have to have your investment deck ready yet.  You don't have to have your advisors ready yet.  Set-up your profile as fast as you throw your Launchrock page up.  As always on this blog, here are a few suggestions to get you started.  More to come as we experiment...


AngelList Reading

Thoughts on AngelList, "Social Proof", "Spray & Pray", & The Network Effects of Large Scale Investing — Dave McClure

"AngelList Fucking Rocks. Period.  it's the single greatest innovation in our industry in the last 5 years (aside from LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, & Quora) and it's great for almost all participants. and while social proof can be abused / misused, so can gasoline... doesn't mean you shouldn't fill up your gas tank and go back to riding horses."

 

Venture Capitalists Actually (Slightly) More Active Than Angels on AngelList — All Things D

"AngelList counts about half of the investors in each category as active participants. Active seed fund investors have taken 5.6 AngelList intros on average, active multi-stage VCs have taken 5.4, and angels have taken 5.

Of the VC firms, General Catalyst Partners has the most intros, at 64 spread among five partners. The rest of the top five are Atlas Venture, Bessemer Venture Partners, First Round Capital and Charles River Ventures."

 

Why would a seasoned entrepreneur use AngelList? — Quora

"It's the difference between going door-to-door to sell vacuum cleaners and placing an ad on Google. One approach is a pain in the ass. The other is fast, easy, efficient.

Or think of it like this: you do everything else online, why wouldn't you raise your money online? You put your code on GitHub. You put your servers on Amazon. You buy customers on Google. You market on Twitter. And you can raise your money on AngelList."


Is AngelList technically violating the general solicitation rules of Regulation D by sending out mass emails requesting investment? — Quora

"(i) AngelList is not soliciting investors in violation of Regulation D because they have a “substantial and pre-existing relationship” with all of the investors; and (ii) AngelList is not a “broker” requiring registration because they are not receiving a commission or being compensated for their assistance."

 

 I tried to go after cold money and make it warm. Instead, I should have gone after warm money and made it hot. — Jen McCabe

"AngelList is amazing. Worth it. Worth it. Well worth it. Do it. Be ready. Take time to prep and maximize your opportunity. Study how to hack the system, like any other."

 

 

 

Find discussion of this post on Hacker News

***
 
 

And please come check out my new startup, 42Floors

We're fixing commercial real estate.  Forever.

Sign-up to learn more at 42floors.comand like us on Facebook, and follow us on AngelList, and follow us on Twitter.

 

******************
I'm Jason Freedman.  
I've got a sweet-ass new company: 42Floors.  
Previously, I did FlightCaster.
I welcome connections on Linkedin,  FacebookAngelList and Twitter.

 

Obliterate Startup Depression

Frowningdog

One of my favorite parts of the startup community is that we generally all acknowledge that we're not playing a zero sum game.    We create value by creating new markets and disrupting old, inefficient markets.  Sure, we compete against each other as well, but in general, the communal spirit of entrepreneurship is a rising tide that lifts all boats.

We need to do an even better job of supporting each other though.  And more so than just with introductions, helpful blog posts, advisorships.  We need to support each other on a personal level.  We need to acknowledge that almost every entrepreneur goes through startup depression at some point.  And most of us go through startup depression quite regularly.  

I go through it all the time.  During FlightCaster, it hit me several times.  The worst of it was 12 months into the company.  As a team, we were struggling on lots of fronts.   Our business development was going slowly, our complex prediction system kept breaking, and our team was starting to argue.  We weren't getting enough users to our site.  Paul Graham warns all YC companies that this period will come.  He calls it the Trough of Sorrow:


Photo

Oh man, it was the worst.  I fought with my cofounders, who also happen to be some of my closest friends.  We had heated meetings with our investors, trying to explain why things were not going smoothly.  Not only could I not fix everything, many of the problems were my own fault.  I could feel my team starting to doubt my leadership.  I couldn't blame them, I was too.

On the inside, I didn't just feel bad or sad or stressed.  Worse, I felt empty.  Startup depression is like running an ultra marathon on no sleep.  It's the lack of energy that is so tough to overcome.  It sucks.  I didn't approach each day with creativity and endless passion.  It was just hard.  And it was so so tempting to give up.

And I would give up.  I remember those mornings  when I came into work late.  I would wake up at normal time and just not get out of bed.  Maybe I'd watch reruns of the Office or mindlessly browse Reddit.  I'd mope around my apartment wanting anything but to go to work.

This is startup depression.  It happens.  It happens to all of us.  We get it and deal with it in different ways, but we all get it.  There's no way to avoid it in this line of work.  Entrepreneurs choose this life and the rollercoasters are very real.

I have emerged from every one of my startup depressions just fine.  Sometimes, it lasts days and sometimes it lasts just a few hours.  I always come away stronger and I've learned a lot in the process.  I want to share a few of the things I've learned.  


How to Obliterate Startup Depression

Get help from your cofounder
Max Levchin of Paypal and Slide fame just spoke at Y Combinator's Startup School.  He talked fondly of the time Peter Thiel, his cofounder at Pay Pal, told him straight up that everything would be fine.  They were in the midst of a funding round going south and Max was losing faith.  With a few timely comments and rock solid confidence, Peter put Max on his shoulders that day.  That's what cofounders do.  I would never have made it through FlightCaster without my cofounders' support.  Cofounders need to support each other during the down times.  It's perhaps the single most important task your cofounder can do for you.

Get a startup advisor
In a previous post, I talked about the difference between a strategic advisor that helps you raise money by lending credibility and a startup advisor that helps you navigate all the small shit.  A startup advisor that is only 12-18 months in front of you on the path will know exactly how you feel.  He'll be able to tell you honestly whether everything will be alright.  Sometimes it will be, sometimes it won't.  But you need an outside perspective to help you see the difference. Want to know whether you have a great startup advisor?  If you haven't gone to them during your down moments, than you don't have one.  Get one.

Invest in your own health
The single greatest perk of the company that bought FlightCaster was the health program. They had a nutritionist on staff that bought all healthy foods and an on-site gym that had an incredible communal workout program.  Check out the video I made for them while there.  You may not be able to afford an on-site gym for your startup, but you can still invest in health. Create good habits when things are going well and stick to them when things go south.  Right now, I go climbing every Tuesday and Thursday morning with an old friend.  No meeting is ever scheduled during that time.  It's perhaps the most important standing commitment on my schedule.

Be open with your community
Too many of us fall victim to startup bravado.  We always portray our startups as unstoppable successes.  I hear it all the time when I talk to people.  The first 10 minutes of a conversation are about how great everything is going.  If I stick around long enough, we finally let our guards down and admit just how much we're struggling.  Communities like Hacker News and Y Combinator can be daunting because we witness such success from our peers.  It is intimidating.  However, if you're honest within a community like this, you will always be impressed by the response.  Check here, here, and here for great examples.

Be conservative in other parts of your life
With a startup, you tie up most of your net worth in a single, illiquid stock.  That stock is heavily correlated with the stability of your salary, your availability of healthcare, and your mental state.  For this reason, you should not have any risk in the rest of your finances.  I keep all my money in an FDIC-insured bank account.  Sure, I would like to make a better return, but I can't take the risk of compounding my losses if the markets tank.  Startup life is hard enough already, don't lose your money with optimistic investments.  Money troubles is an incredibly efficient way to trigger depression.

Create company rituals
You need some way to break free as a company when you hit the seemingly endless Trough of Sorrow.  One of our traditions at 42Floors is winning or losing each day.  Some days we lose.  We're open about it.  A few weeks ago, we got chewed up by a potential investor.  We were all down on it.  As we were moping around the office, I sent everyone home.  We lost that day.  Tomorrow is a new day.  And we celebrate the fuck out of the days we win.  During my first company, I never celebrated our first term sheet because I didn't want to count my chickens.  That was stupid.  A term sheet was a huge fucking accomplishment!  And by the time we signed definitive documents on that round, we were so chiseled that we felt beaten up.   At 42Floors, we celebrate every day that we win.  Right away.  Whether it be a term sheet, a code push, or a happy user — wins should be cherished.  You never know how long it will take to get another one.

Get your house in order
During FlightCaster, I moved apartments during our funding round.  Wow, that was horrible.  In the midst of gut-wrenching highs and lows, I also didn't have a stable place to live.  Fight the startup battle at full strength.  There's nothing better than going home to great roommates, caring friends, and a loving significant other.  I joined a communal ski house when I moved out to the Bay Area.  My favorite part about my ski house is that no one there cares about technology or startups.  We don't compare investors, we don't talk user traction.  It's awesome.

Talk openly about depression
Don't be afraid of the word.  Depression is not some word to be whispered under your breath or handled with kid gloves.  Getting depressed doesn't make a person weak.  It doesn't mean that someone will be unsuccessful.  We all have depression at some points.  We also all have jubilation at some points.  The high and lows come as a package.  You rarely get one without the other.  I talked extensively with an old colleague about the ways we each dealt with depression.  It's much easier to battle it when you're not hiding it.  And if you need professional help, go get it.   Whatever you do, don't bottle everything up inside.

 

Of course, you can't really obliterate startup depression.  But you need to have the mindset that  it's beatable.  You should treat it just like you would any user acquisition problem or business model challenge.  Create processes to solve it.  If you don't treat it as a tangible problem that needs solving, you'll be like a toy boat floundering in rough waters: helpless to control your own fate.  And with startups, rough waters are always on the horizon.

We're getting closer and closer to the launch of 42Floors.  I can't tell you how excited I am to share what we're doing with all of you.  I really think we have a chance at fixing commercial real estate. I'm also nervous.  I call the period we're in now Delusional Optimism.  All of our ideas look gorgeous in Photoshop.  No customers have left us.  We haven't run out of money.  We haven't faced bad press.  We haven't had users choose the back button over the sign-up button.  No depression, no problems.  Delusional Optimism is the best.  And it can't last. 

Shit's about to get real.  Things will get tough.   Bring it on.  We're ready.

 

 

 

Find discussion of this post on Hacker News

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And please come check out my new startup, 42Floors

We're fixing commercial real estate.  Forever.

Sign-up to learn more at 42floors.comand like us on Facebook, and follow us on Angel List, and follow us on Twitter.

 

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I'm Jason Freedman.  
I've got a sweet-ass new company: 42Floors.  
Previously, I did FlightCaster.
I welcome connections on Linkedin,  FacebookAngel List and Twitter.