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The Art of the Start: The Time-Tested, Battle-Hardened Guide for Anyone Starting
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The Art of the Start: The Time-Tested, Battle-Hardened Guide for Anyone Starting Anything Hardcover - 2004

by Guy Kawasaki

What does it take to turn ideas into action? What are the elements of a perfect pitch? How do you win the war for talent? How do you establish a brand without bucks? These are some of the issues everyone faces when starting or revitalizing any undertaking, and Guy Kawasaki, former marketing maven of Apple Computer, provides the answers.

The Art of the Start will give you the essential steps to launch great products, services, and companies whether you are dreaming of starting the next Microsoft or a not-for-profit that's going to change the world. It also shows managers how to unleash entrepreneurial thinking at established companies, helping them foster the pluck and creativity that their businesses need to stay ahead of the pack. Kawasaki provides readers with GIST Great Ideas for Starting Things including his field-tested insider's techniques for bootstrapping, branding, networking, recruiting, pitching, rainmaking, and, most important in this fickle consumer climate, building buzz.

At Apple, Kawasaki helped turn ordinary customers into fanatics. As founder and CEO of Garage Technology Ventures, he has tested his iconoclastic ideas on real-world start-ups. And as an irrepressible columnist for Forbes, he has honed his best thinking about The Art of the Start.


Summary

A new product, a new service, a new company, a new division, a new organization, a new anything—where there’s a will, here’s the way.
 
It begins with a dream that just won’t quit, the once-in-a-lifetime thunderbolt of pure inspiration, the obsession, the world-beater, the killer app, the next big thing. Everyone who wants to make the world a better place becomes possessed by a grand idea.

But what does it take to turn your idea into action? 
 
Whether you are an entrepreneur, intrapreneur, or not-for-profit crusader, there’s no shortage of advice available on issues such as writing a business plan, recruiting, raising capital, and branding. In fact, there are so many books, articles, and Web sites that many startups get bogged down to the point of paralysis. Or else they focus on the wrong priorities and go broke before they discover their mistakes.
 
In The Art of the Start, Guy Kawasaki brings two decades of experience as one of business’s most original and irreverent strategists to offer the essential guide for anyone starting anything, from a multinational corporation to a church group. At Apple in the 1980s, he helped lead one of the great companies of the century, turning ordinary consumers into evangelists. As founder and CEO of Garage Technology Ventures, a venture capital firm, he has field-tested his ideas with dozens of newly hatched companies. And as the author of bestselling business books and articles, he has advised thousands of people who are making their startup dreams real.
 
From raising money to hiring the right people, from defining your positioning to creating a brand, from creating buzz to buzzing the competition, from managing a board to fostering a community, this book will guide you through an adventure that’s more art than science—the art of the start.

From the publisher

A new product, a new service, a new company, a new division, a new organization, a new anything where there s a will, here s the way.

It begins with a dream that just won t quit, the once-in-a-lifetime thunderbolt of pure inspiration, the obsession, the world-beater, the killer app, the next big thing. Everyone who wants to make the world a better place becomes possessed by a grand idea.


But what does it take to turn your idea into action?

Whether you are an entrepreneur, intrapreneur, or not-for-profit crusader, there s no shortage of advice available on issues such as writing a business plan, recruiting, raising capital, and branding. In fact, there are so many books, articles, and Web sites that many startups get bogged down to the point of paralysis. Or else they focus on the wrong priorities and go broke before they discover their mistakes.

In The Art of the Start, Guy Kawasaki brings two decades of experience as one of business s most original and irreverent strategists to offer the essential guide for anyone starting anything, from a multinational corporation to a church group. At Apple in the 1980s, he helped lead one of the great companies of the century, turning ordinary consumers into evangelists. As founder and CEO of Garage Technology Ventures, a venture capital firm, he has field-tested his ideas with dozens of newly hatched companies. And as the author ofbestselling business books and articles, he has advised thousands of people who are making their startup dreams real.

From raising money to hiring the right people, from defining your positioning to creating a brand, from creating buzz to buzzing the competition, from managing a board to fostering a community, this book will guide you through an adventure that s more art than science the art of the start.

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Details

  • Title The Art of the Start: The Time-Tested, Battle-Hardened Guide for Anyone Starting Anything
  • Author Guy Kawasaki
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition 1st
  • Pages 240
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Portfolio, New York, New York, U.S.A.
  • Date September 9, 2004
  • Illustrated Yes
  • ISBN 9781591840565 / 1591840562
  • Weight 0.96 lbs (0.44 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.48 x 6.47 x 0.85 in (24.08 x 16.43 x 2.16 cm)
  • Ages 18 to UP years
  • Grade levels 13 - UP
  • Library of Congress subjects New business enterprises, Entrepreneurship
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2004044773
  • Dewey Decimal Code 658.11

Excerpt

Read Me First

The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not ôEureka!ö (I found it!) but ôThatÆs funny....ö
ùIsaac Asimov

There are many ways to describe the ebb and flow, yin and yang, bubble-blowing and bubble-bursting phases of business cycles. HereÆs another one: microscopes and telescopes. In the microscope phase, thereÆs a cry for level-headed thinking, a return to fundamentals, and going ôback to basics.ö Experts magnify every detail, line item, and expenditure, and then demand full-blown forecasts, protracted market research, and all-encompassing competitive analysis.

In the telescope phase, entrepreneurs bring the future closer. They dream up ôthe next big thing,ö change the world, and make late-adopters eat their dust. Lots of money is wasted, but some crazy ideas do stick, and the world moves forward.

When telescopes work, everyone is an astronomer, and the world is full of stars. When they donÆt, everyone whips out their microscopes, and the world is full of flaws. The reality is that you need both microscopes and telescopes to achieve success.

The problem is that this means gathering information that is spread among hundreds of books, magazines, and conferences. It also means talking to dozens of experts and professionalsùif you can get, and afford, an audience. You could spend all your time learning and not doing. And doing, not learning to do, is the essence of entrepreneurship.

The Art of the Start alleviates this pain. My goal is to help you use your knowledge, love, and determination to create something great without getting bogged down in theory and unnecessary details. My presumption is that your goal is to change the worldùnot study it. If your attitude is ôCut the crap and just tell me what I need to do,ö youÆve come to the right place.

You might be wondering, Who, exactly, is ôyouö? The reality is that ôentrepreneurö is not a job title. It is the state of mind of people who want to alter the future. (It certainly isnÆt limited to Silicon Valley types seeking venture capital.) Hence, this book is for people in a wide range of startup endeavors:

ò guys and gals in garages creating the next great company
ò brave souls in established companies bringing new products and services to market
ò saints starting schools, churches, and not-for-profits

Great companies. Great divisions. Great schools. Great churches. Great not-for-profits. When it comes to the fundamentals of starting up, they are more alike than they are different. The key to their success is to survive the microscope tasks while bringing the future closer. LetÆs get started.

Guy Kawasaki
Palo Alto, California
Kawasaki@garage.com

CHAPTER 1
The Art of Starting

Everyone should carefully observe which way his heart draws him, and then choose that way with all his strength.
ùHasidic saying

GIST (GREAT IDEAS FOR STARTING THINGS)

I use a top-ten list format for all my speeches, and I would love to begin this book with a top-ten list of the most important things an entrepreneur must accomplish. However, there arenÆt tenùthere are only five:

1. MAKE MEANING (inspired by John Doerr). The best reason to start an organization is to make meaningùto create a product or service that makes the world a better place. So your first task is to decide how you can make meaning.
2. MAKE MANTRA. Forget mission statements; theyÆre long, boring, and irrelevant. No one can ever remember themùmuch less implement them. Instead, take your meaning and make a mantra out of it. This will set your entire team on the right course.
3. GET GOING. Start creating and delivering your product or service. Think soldering irons, compilers, hammers, saws, and AutoCADùwhatever tools you use to build products and services. DonÆt focus on pitching, writing, and planning.
4. DEFINE YOUR BUSINESS MODEL. No matter what kind of organization youÆre starting, you have to figure out a way to make money. The greatest idea, technology, product, or service is short-lived without a sustainable business model.
5. WEAVE A MAT (MILESTONES, ASSUMPTIONS, AND TASKS). The final step is to compile three lists: (a) major milestones you need to meet; (b) assumptions that are built into your business model; and (c) tasks you need to accomplish to create an organization. This will enforce discipline and keep your organization on track when all hell breaks looseùand all hell will break loose.

MAKE MEANING
I have never thought of writing for reputation and honor. What I have in my heart must come out; that is the reason why I compose.
ùLudwig van Beethoven

Many books about entrepreneurship begin with a rigorous process of self-examination, asking you to determine if you are truly up to the task of starting an organization. Some typical examples are

ò Can you work long hours at low wages?
ò Can you deal with rejection after rejection?
ò Can you handle the responsibility of dozens of employees?

The truth is, it is impossible to answer questions like this in advance, and they ultimately serve no purpose. On the one hand, talk and bravado are cheap. Saying youÆre willing to do something doesnÆt mean that you will do it.

On the other hand, realizing that you have doubt and trepidation doesnÆt mean you wonÆt build a great organization. How you answer these questions now has little predictive power regarding what youÆll actually do when you get caught up in a great idea.

The truth is that no one really knows if he* is an entrepreneur until he becomes oneùand sometimes not even then. There really is only one question you should ask yourself before starting any new venture:

Do I want to make meaning?

Meaning is not about money, power, or prestige. ItÆs not even about creating a fun place to work. Among the meanings of ômeaningö are to

ò Make the world a better place.
ò Increase the quality of life.
ò Right a terrible wrong.
ò Prevent the end of something good.

Goals such as these are a tremendous advantage as you travel down the difficult path ahead. If you answer this question in the negative, you may still be successful, but it will be harder to become so because making meaning is the most powerful motivator there is.

ItÆs taken me twenty years to come to this understanding.

In 1983, when I started in the Macintosh Division of Apple Computer, beating IBM was our reason for existence. We wanted to send IBM back to the typewriter business holding its Selectric typewriter balls.

In 1987, our reason for existence became beating Windows and Microsoft. We wanted to crush Microsoft and force Bill Gates to get a job flipping fish at the Pike Place Market.

In 2004, I am a managing director in an early-stage venture capital firm called Garage Technology Ventures. I want to enable people to create great products, build great companies, and change the world.

The causation of great organizations is the desire to make meaning. Having that desire doesnÆt guarantee that youÆll succeed, but it does mean that if you fail, at least you failed doing something worthwhile.

MAKE MANTRA
Close your eyes and think about how you will serve your customers. What kind of meaning do you see your organization making? Most people refer to this as the ôWhyö or mission statement of an organization.

Crafting a mission statement is usually one of the first steps entrepreneurs undertake. Unfortunately, this process is usually a painful and frustrating experience that results in exceptional mediocrity. This is almost inevitable when a large number of people are commissioned to craft something designed to make an even larger number of people (employees, shareholders, customers, and partners) happy.

The fundamental shortcoming of most mission statements is that everyone expects them to be highfalutin and all-encompassing. The result is a long, boring, commonplace, and pointless joke.* In The Mission Statement Book, Jeffrey Abrams provides 301 examples of mission statements that demonstrate that companies are all writing the same mediocre stuff. To wit, this is a partial list of the frequency with which mission statements in AbramsÆs sample contained the same words:

ò Bestù94
ò Communitiesù97
ò Customersù211
ò Excellenceù77
ò Leaderù106
ò Qualityù169*

Fortune (or Forbes, in my case) favors the bold, so IÆll give you some advice that will make life easy for you: Postpone writing your mission statement. You can come up with it later when youÆre successful and have lots of time and money to waste. (If youÆre not successful, it wonÆt matter that you didnÆt develop one.)

Instead of a mission statement and all the baggage that comes with it, craft a mantra for your organization. The definition of mantra is

A sacred verbal formula repeated in prayer, meditation, or incantation, such as an invocation of a god, a magic spell, or a syllable or portion of scripture containing mystical potentialities.å

What a great thing a mantra is! How many mission statements evoke such power and emotion?

The beauty of a mantra is that everyone expects it to be short and sweet. (Arguably, the worldÆs shortest mantra is the single Hindi word Om.) You may never have to write your mantra down, publish it in your annual report, or print it on posters. Indeed, if you do have to ôenforceö your mantra in these ways, itÆs not the right mantra.

Following are five examples that illustrate the power of a good mantra:

ò Authentic athletic performance (Nike).ç
ò Fun family entertainment (Disney).?
ò Rewarding everyday moments (Starbucks).||
ò Think (IBM).
ò Winning is everything (Vince LombardiÆs Green Bay Packers).

Compare the Starbucks mantra, ôRewarding everyday moments,ö to the companyÆs mission statement, ôEstablish Starbucks as the premier purveyor of the finest coffee in the world while maintaining our uncompromising principles while we grow.ö Which is more memorable?

Imagine that someone asks your parents or your organizationÆs receptionist what you do. Can it get any better than a three-word mantra such as ôAuthentic athletic performanceö?*

A final thought on mantras: DonÆt confuse mantras and tag lines. A mantra is for your employees; itÆs a guideline for what they do in their jobs. A tag line is for your customers; itÆs a guideline for how to use your product or service. For example, NikeÆs mantra is ôAuthentic athletic performance.ö Its tag line is ôJust do it.ö

Get Going
The third step is not to fire up Word to write a business plan, launch PowerPoint to craft a pitch, or boot Excel to build a financial projection. Wrong, wrong, wrong!

My goal in giving you this advice is not to reduce the sales of Microsoft Officeùremember, IÆm off the anti-Microsoft podium. ThereÆs a time for using all three applications, but itÆs not now. What you should do is (a) rein in your anal tendency to craft a document and (b) implement.

This means building a prototype, writing software, launching your Web site, or offering your services. The hardest thing about getting started is getting started. (This is as true for a writer as it is for an entrepreneur.) Remember: No one ever achieved success by planning for gold.

You should always be sellingùnot strategizing about selling. DonÆt test, test, testùthatÆs a game for big companies. DonÆt worry about being embarrassed. DonÆt wait to develop the perfect product or service. Good enough is good enough. There will be plenty of time for refinement later. ItÆs not how great you startùitÆs how great you end up.

The enemy of activation is cogitation, and at this stage, cogitating the ôstrategicö issues of research and development is a problem. Questions like, How far can we leap ahead? What if everyone doesnÆt like what we do? and Should we design for a target customer or make what we would want to use? are beside the point when youÆre getting a new venture off the ground.

Instead, observe these key principles of getting going:

ò THINK BIG. Set your sights high and strive for something grand. If youÆre going to change the world, you canÆt do it with milquetoast and boring products or services. Shoot for doing things at least ten times better than the status quo. When Jeff Bezos started Amazon. com, he didnÆt build a bookstore with a paltry 25,000 more titles than the 250,000-title brick-and-mortar bookstores. He went to 3,000,000 titles in an online bookstore.
ò FIND A FEW SOULMATES. History loves the notion of the sole innovator: Thomas Edison (light bulb), Steve Jobs (Macintosh), Henry Ford (Model T), Anita Roddick (The Body Shop), Richard Branson (Virgin Airlines). History is wrong. Successful companies are started, and made successful, by at least two, and usually more, soulmates. After the fact, one person may come to be recognized as ôthe innovator,ö but it always takes a team of good people to make any venture work.
ò POLARIZE PEOPLE. When you create a product or service that some people love, donÆt be surprised when others hate you. Your goal is to catalyze passionùpro or anti. DonÆt be offended if people take issue with what youÆve done; the only result that should offend (and scare) you is lack of interest.

Car design is a good example of the love-versus-hate reaction; consider the bifurcation of peopleÆs reactions to cars such as the Mini Cooper, Infiniti Fx45, and Toyota Scion xB. People are either devoted fans or relentless critics, and thatÆs good.
ò DESIGN DIFFERENT. Depending on what management fad is hot, you might be tempted to believe that there is only one ideal way to design products and services. This isnÆt true. There is no single best way. Here are four different and valid approachesùand I am sure there are more.

ôI WANT ONE.ö This is the best kind of market researchùthe customer and the designer are the same person. Therefore, the customerÆs voice can reach the designerÆs mind uncorrupted by corporate politics, reliance on the status quo, and market researchers. Example: Ferdinand Porsche said, ôIn the beginning I looked around and, not finding the automobile of my dreams, decided to build it myself.ö*

ôMY EMPLOYER COULDNÆT (OR WOULDNÆT) DO IT.ö Not as romantic as ôI want one,ö but this is a credible path. You already understand the customer base, competition, supply sources, and industry contacts because of your background. You still need to build the product or service and get customers, but many questions are already answered. For example, alumni of Unit 8200 of the Israeli Defense Forces went on to create companies such as Checkpoint after developing security software for the military.

ôWHAT THE HELLùITÆS POSSIBLE!ö This theory isnÆt popular when times are tough, and microscopes are flourishing. At these times, the world has turned conservative and demands that every market be ôproven.ö Markets for curve-jumping, paradigm-shifting leaps are seldom proven in advance. For example, when Motorola invented cellular telephones, no one leaped to buy them. At that time, portable phone was an oxymoron because phones were always attached to places. There was no market for phones that customers could move.

ôTHERE MUST BE A BETTER WAY.ö The organization born of this philosophy is based on the idealistic notion that you can make the world a better place by doing something new. In many cases, the founders had backgrounds with no logical connection to the business. They simply got an idea and decided to do it. Example: eBay. Pierre Omidyar, the founder, wanted to implement a system for a ôperfect marketö for the sale of goods. (The story of his girlfriend wanting to sell Pez dispensers was an after-the-fact PR tale.)
ò USE PROTOTYPES AS MARKET RESEARCH. In the early days of an organization, there is high uncertainty about exactly what you should create and exactly what customers want. In these times, traditional market research is uselessùthere is no survey or focus group that can predict customer acceptance for a product or service that you may barely be able to describe. Would you buy a new computer with no software, no hard disk, and no color that simulates the real worldùincluding a trash can?*

The wisest course of action is to take your best shot with a prototype, immediately get it to market, and iterate quickly. If you wait for ideal circumstances in which you have all the information you need (which is impossible), the market will pass you by.

The expected outcome of the ôget goingö principle is a first release of a product or service. Remember: it wonÆt be perfect. But donÆt revise your product to get prospective customers to love it. Instead, revise it because customers already love it. Let me put it in religious terms: Some people believe that if they change, God will love them. Others believe that since God loves them, they should change. The latter theory is the prototype to keep in mind for how to get going and keep going for startups.

DEFINE YOUR BUSINESS MODEL
You want to make meaning. YouÆve come up with a mantra. YouÆve started prototyping your product or service. The fourth step is to define a business model. To do this you need to answer two questions:

ò Who has your money in their pockets?
ò How are you going to get it into your pocket?

These questions lack subtlety, but they are a useful way to consider the reality of starting an organizationù even, and perhaps especially, not-for-profits, which have to fight for money just to stay alive. You canÆt change the world if youÆre dead, and when youÆre out of money youÆre dead.

More elegantly stated, the first question involves defining your customer and the pain that he feels. The second question centers around creating a sales mechanism to ensure that your revenues exceed your costs. Here are some tips to help you develop your business model:

ò BE SPECIFIC. The more precisely you can describe your customer, the better. Many entrepreneurs are afraid of being ônichedö to death and then not achieving ubiquity. However, most successful companies started off targeting specific markets and grew (often unexpectedly) to great size by addressing other segments. Few started off with grandiose goals and achieved them.
ò KEEP IT SIMPLE. If you canÆt describe your business model in ten words or less, you donÆt have a business model. You should use approximately ten wordsùand employ them wisely by using simple, everyday terminology. Avoid whatever business jargon is currently hip (strategic, mission-critical, world-class, synergistic, first-mover, scalable, enterprise-class, etc.). Business language does not make a business model.* Think of eBayÆs business model: It charges a listing fee plus a commission. End of story.
ò COPY SOMEBODY. Commerce has been around a long time, and by now clever people have pretty much invented every business model thatÆs possible. You can innovate in technology, markets, and customers, but inventing a new business model is a bad bet. Try to relate your business model to one thatÆs already successful and understood. You have plenty of other battles to fight.

My final tip is that you ask womenùand only women. My theory is that deep in the DNA of men is a ôkillerö gene. This gene expresses itself by making men want to kill people, animals, and plants. To a large degree, society has repressed this gene; however, starting an organization whose purpose is to kill another organization is still socially acceptable.

Hence, asking a man about a business model is useless because every business model looks good to someone with the Y chromosome. For example, Sun Microsystems wants to kill Microsoft. When is the last time you bought a computer based on whom the manufacturer wanted to kill?

Women, by contrast, donÆt have this killer gene. Thus, they are much better judges of the viability of a business model than men are. DonÆt agree with me? The book The Darwin Awards provides irrefutable proof of womenÆs greater common sense. These awards commemorate ôthose individuals who have removed themselves from the gene pool in a sublimely idiotic fashion.ö*

For example, in 1998 two construction workers fell to their demise after cutting a circular hole in the floor while they were standing in the middle of the circle.å The Darwin Awards contains nine chapters about the stupidity of men, and one chapter about the stupidity of women. I rest my case.

WEAVE A MAT (MILESTONES, ASSUMPTIONS, AND TASKS)
One definition of mat is ôa heavy woven net of rope or wire cable placed over a blasting site to keep debris from scattering.ö* Preventing scattering is exactly what you need to do as the fifth, and final, step of launching your enterprise. In this case, MAT stands for milestones, assumptions, and tasks.å

The purpose of compiling the MAT is to understand the scope of what youÆre undertaking, test assumptions quickly, and provide a method to find and fix the large flaws in your thinking.

Milestones
For most people a startup looks as if it must achieve a seemingly unlimited number of goals. However, out of these goals are some that stand head and shoulders above the others. These are the organizationÆs milestonesùthey mark significant progress along the road to success. There are seven milestones that every startup must focus on. If you miss any of them, your organization might die.

ò Prove your concept.
ò Complete design specifications.
ò Finish a prototype.
ò Raise capital.
ò Ship a testable version to customers.
ò Ship the final version to customers.
ò Achieve breakeven.

These milestones apply to every kind of business. For example, a new school can prove its concept by seeing if two teachers, working as a team, using a new curriculum, can provide more individualized instruction and improve learning in a test classroom. With this proof of concept, the school can then complete the design of its curriculum, raise funds, roll out the prototype, and start teaching classes.

There are other tasks (weÆll come to them soon) that are also important to the survival of the organization, but none are as important as these milestones. The timing of these milestones will drive the timing of just about everything else you need to do, so spend 80 percent of your effort on them.

Assumptions
Second, create a comprehensive list of the major assumptions that you are making about the business. These include factors such as

ò product or service performance metrics
ò market size
ò gross margin
ò sales calls per salesperson
ò conversion rate of prospects to customers
ò length of sales cycle
ò return on investment for the customer
ò technical support calls per unit shipped
ò payment cycle for receivables and payables
ò compensation requirements
ò prices of parts and supplies
ò customer return on investment

Continuously track these assumptions, and when they prove false, react to them quickly. Ideally, you can link these assumptions to one of the seven milestones discussed above. Thus, as you reach a milestone, you can test an assumption.

Tasks
Third, create another comprehensive listùthis time of the major tasks that are necessary to design, manufacture, sell, ship, and support your product or service. These are necessary to build an organization, though they are not as critical as the seven milestones. They include

ò renting office space
ò finding key vendors
ò setting up accounting and payroll systems
ò filing legal documents
ò purchasing insurance policies

The point of the list of tasks is to understand and appreciate the totality of what your organization has to accomplish, and to not let anything slip through the cracks in the early, often euphoric days.

MINICHAPTER: THE ART OF INTERNAL ENTREPRENEURING
Innovation often originates outside existing organizations, in part because successful organizations acquire a commitment to the status quo and a resistance to ideas that might change it.
ùNathan Rosenberg

A large number of aspiring entrepreneurs currently work for big companies. Like all entrepreneurs, they dream of creating innovative products or services and wonder if this can be done internally. The answer is yes. The purpose of this minichapter is to explain how.

The ôartsö that this book describes are equally appropriate for internal entrepreneursùthey, too, must innovate, position, pitch, write business plans, bootstrap, recruit, raise capital, partner, establish brands, make rain, and be mensches. But there are special recommendations that apply in this case.

Ironically, many independent entrepreneurs envy the employees of big companiesùthey think that these lucky souls have humongous financial resources, large sales forces, fully equipped labs, scalable factories, and established brands, plus medical and dental benefits, at their disposal. How wonderful it would be, guys in garages muse, to invent a new product or service with the luxury of such an infrastructure already in place.

Guess again. Creating a new product or service inside such a beast is not necessarily easier; the challenges are just different. I happen to have been part of a ôbest-caseö scenario: the Macintosh Division of Apple. I can explain the success of this internal entrepreneurial effort in two words: Steve Jobs. His off-the-scale design talents, maniacal attention to detail, and reality-distorting personality (plus co-founder status) made Macintosh successful. Were it not for Steve Jobs, Macintosh would not existùor it would have taken the form of an Apple II with a trash can.

But if it takes a Steve Jobs to innovate within large companies, you are undoubtedly thinking, we might as well give up right now. While that kind of visionary is in short supply in any business, anyone with guts, vision, and political savvy should be able to set up an entrepreneurial outpost in an established business. I collaborated on this minichapter with Bill Meade, a close friend who helped Hewlett-Packard organize its substantial vault of intellectual property. We came up with this list of recommendations for internal entrepreneurs.

ò PUT THE COMPANY FIRST. The internal entrepreneurÆs primary, if not sole, motivation should remain the betterment of the company. Internal entrepreneurship isnÆt about grabbing attention, building an empire, or setting up a way to catapult out of the company. When you have a good idea for a product or service, it will attract a large number of employees, from the bottom up. They will support you if youÆre doing it for the company, but not if itÆs for your personal gain. If you can attract a large number of rank-and-file supporters, you might not be totally dependent on what the ôvice presidentsö say.
ò KILL THE CASH COWS. DonÆt announce this widely, but your charter is often to create the product or service that would put an end to existing products or services. Still, itÆs better that itÆs you whoÆs killing your companyÆs cash cows than a competitor or two guys in a garage. Macintosh killed Apple II. Would it have been better for Apple if a competitor had created Macintosh? No way. This recommendation is another reason why itÆs so important that youÆve put the company first: What youÆre doing is bound to be controversial. But if you donÆt kill the cash cows, someone external will.
ò STAY UNDER THE RADAR. Two guys in a garage should try to get as much attention as they can. Awareness of their efforts makes it easier to raise money, establish partnerships, close sales, and recruit employees. However, the opposite holds true for internal entrepreneurs. You want to be left alone until either your project is too far along to ignore or the rest of the company realizes that itÆs needed. The higher you go in a company, the fewer people are going to understand what youÆre trying to do. This is because the higher you go, the more people want to maintain the status quo and protect their positions.
ò FIND A GODFATHER. In many companies, there are godfather figures. These are people who have paid their dues and are safe from everyday petty politics. They are relatively untouchable and usually have the attention and respect of top management. Internal entrepreneurs should find a godfather to support their projects by providing advice, technical and marketing insights, and protectionùif it comes to the point where you need protection.
ò GET A SEPARATE BUILDING. An internal entrepreneur, sitting in the main flow of a big company, will die by a thousand cuts as each department manager explains why this new project is a bad idea. ôThe new always looks so punyùso unpromisingùnext to the reality of the massive, ongoing business.ö* The Macintosh Division started in a building that was far enough away from the rest of Apple that it stayed out of the daily grind, but was close enough to obtain corporate resources. A separate building will keep your efforts under the radar and foster Tsprit de corps among your merry band of pirates. The ideal distance from the corporate pukes is between one-quarter mile and two milesùthat is, close enough to get to, but far enough to discourage overly frequent visits.
ò GIVE HOPE TO THE HOPEFUL. Inside every corporate cynic who thinks that ôthis company is too big to innovateö is an idealist who would like to see it happen. Good people in big companies are tired of being ignored, forgotten, humiliated, and forced into submission. They may be trampled, but they are not dead. When you show them that youÆre driving a stake in the heart of the status quo, you will attract support and resources. Then your goal is to advance these people from wanting to see innovation happen to helping you make it happen.
ò ANTICIPATE, THEN JUMP ON, TECTONIC SHIFTS. Structural deformations in a company are a good thing for internal entrepreneurs. Whether caused by external factors such as changes in the marketplace or internal factors such as a new CEO, tectonic shifts signal changes and may create an opportunity for your efforts. Effective internal entrepreneurs anticipate these shifts and are ready to unveil new products or services when they occur: ôLook what weÆve been working on.ö By contrast, corporate pukes say, ôNow I see the shift. If you give me permission, six months, and a team of analysts, I can come up with a new product strategy.ö
ò BUILD ON WHAT EXISTS. The downside of trying to innovate within a big company is clear and well documented, but there are also benefits to doing so. DonÆt hesitate to utilize the existing infrastructure to make innovation easierùstart by stealing, if you have to. YouÆll not only garner resources, but also make friends as other employees begin to feel as if they are part of your team. If you try to roll your own solutions (as an extreme example, building your own factory), youÆll only make enemies. The last thing a startup inside a big company needs is internal enemiesùthere will be enough enemies in the marketplace.
ò COLLECT AND SHARE DATA. The day will inevitably arrive when a bean counter or lawyer is suddenly going to take notice of you and question the reasons for your projectÆs existence. If youÆre lucky, this will happen later rather than sooner, but it will happen. Prepare for that day by (1) collecting data about how much youÆve spent and how much youÆve accomplished and (2) then sharing it openly. In big companies, data suppresses antibodies, but it might be too late to get the data once the antibodies appear.
ò LET THE VICE PRESIDENTS COME TO YOU. Quick question: Do you think that your first step should be to get your vice president to sign off on your project? It shouldnÆt be. This is one of the last steps. A vice president will ôownö your idea and support it more if he ôdiscoversö it and then approaches you about sponsoring it. You may have to ensure that a vice president ôaccidentallyö makes that discovery when the time is right, but this is not the same as seeking permission to get started.
ò DISMANTLE WHEN DONE. The beauty of an internal entrepreneurial group is that it can rapidly develop new products and services. Unfortunately, the very cohesiveness that makes it so effective can lead to its downfall later if it remains separate (and usually aloof) from the rest of the organization. Its effectiveness declines further as its members come to believe that only they ôknowö what to do, and the entrepreneurial group creates its own, new bureaucracy.* If the product or service is successful, consider dismantling the group and integrating it into the larger organization. Then create a new group to jump ahead again.
ò REBOOT YOUR BRAIN. Many internal entrepreneurs will find that the rest of this book prescribes actions that are contrary to what theyÆve experienced, learned, and maybe even taught in big companies. The reality is that starting something within an existing company requires adopting new patterns of behaviorù essentially, rebooting your brain. The following table will prepare you for whatÆs to come:

FAQ (FREQUENTLY AVOIDED QUESTIONS)
Q. I admit it: IÆm scared. I canÆt afford to quit my current job. Is this a sign that I donÆt have what it takes to succeed? Am I not truly committed?

A. You should be scared. If you arenÆt scared, something is wrong with you. Your fears are not a sign that you donÆt have the right stuff. In the beginning, every entrepreneur is scared. ItÆs just that some deceive themselves about it, and others donÆt.

You can reduce these fears by diving into the business and making a little progress every day. One day youÆll wake up and you wonÆt be afraid anymoreùor at least youÆll have a whole new set of fears.

No matter what, never admit that youÆre scared to other employees. A CEO can never have a bad day. But donÆt go overboard, either, and act as if you have no concerns, because then they will know youÆre scared stiff.

Q. Should I share my secret ideas with anybody other than my dog?
A. The only thing worse than a paranoid entrepreneur is a paranoid entrepreneur who talks to his dog. There is much more to gainùfeedback, connections, opened doorsùby freely discussing your idea than there is to lose. If simply discussing your idea makes it indefensible, you donÆt have much of an idea in the first place. (See the FAQ section of Chapter 7, ôThe Art of Raising Capital,ö for a detailed discussion of nondisclosure agreements.)
Q. How far along should I be before I start talking to people about what IÆm doing?
A.
Start right away. By doing so youÆll be constantly mulling over your ideaùas both a foreground and background task. The more people you talk to, the richer your thoughts will be. If itÆs just you staring at your navel, all youÆll see is lint building up.
Q. How do you know if itÆs time to give up rather than continuing to pursue a doomed venture?
A.
The old platitude is that good entrepreneurs never give up. This is fine for books and speeches, but not for the real world. If three close friends tell you to give up, you should listen. As the saying goes, when three people tell you youÆre drunk, you should take a cab home. ItÆs okay to fail as long as you try again.
Q. I think that I have a great idea, but I donÆt have a business background. What should I do now?
A.
First, if all youÆve done is come up with a great ideaùfor example, ôa new computer operating system thatÆs fast, elegant, and bug freeöùbut you canÆt implement it, then you have nothing. In this case, donÆt waste anyoneÆs time until youÆve found other people who can do the engineering.

Assuming that you can implement, there are two kinds of people you can recruit. First, you can get a mentor. This would be an older person who is willing to coach you from time to time but never actually do any work. Second, you could get a business partner. This is someone whoÆs willing to work side by side with youùeven on a part-time basisùwhose skill set complements yours. Either kind of person can make a big difference in your business.
Q. When should I worry about looking like a real business, with business cards, letterhead, and an office?
A.
Make business cards and letterhead immediately. Spend a few bucks and get them designed by a professional or donÆt do them at all. Ensure that the smallest type size is twelve points. An office isnÆt necessary until customers are coming to see you, or you run out of space for the team.

Q. Do I need a Web site?
A. Yes, particularly if youÆre going to raise money, serve lots of customers, change the world in a big way, and achieve liquidity. Customers, partners, and investors will look for your Web site from the very start.

RECOMM: ED READING
Christensen, Clayton. The InnovatorÆs Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Grate Films to Fail. New York: HarperBusiness, 1997.
Drucker, Peter F. Innovation and Entrepreneurship: Practice and Principles. New York: Harper & Row, 1985. Hargadon, Andrew. How Breakthroughs Happen: The Surprising Truth About How Companies Innovate. Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2003.
Kuhn, Thomas. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962.
Shekerjian, Denise. Uncommon Genius: How Great Ideas Are Born. New York: Penguin Books, 1990.
Ueland, Brenda. If You Want to Write. St. Paul: Graywolf Press, 1987.
Utterback, James M. Mastering the Dynamics of Innovation: How Companies Can Seize Opportunities in the Face of Technological Change. Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 1994.

"

Media reviews

“A successful entrepreneur requires three things: a garage, an idea, and this book—Guy’s irrepressible guide to the raw essentials of life in a young company. I wish we could post all this information on Sequoia Capital’s Web site because it would make our jobs much easier.”
—Michael Moritz, Sequoia Capital
 
“When God made the universe, He took Guy’s advice and started small and put his whole heart into it. Okay, not everything turned out perfect, but as The Art of the Start makes clear, there are no guarantees, only great opportunities. Read this book and then go do something wonderful.”
—Geoffrey Moore, author of Crossing the Chasm
 
“This is a delightful, complete, and consummately practical entrepreneur’s handbook—quintessential Kawasaki. Every person who wants to start a business should read it. And read the footnote on page eight. There’s more good stuff in here, but this alone is worth the price of the book.”
—Clayton Christensen, author of The Innovator’s Dilemma and The Innovator’s Solution
 
“I have built my business into an internationally famous brand, and yet after reading this book, I have this nearly uncontrollable urge to chuck my whole business and start all over again. Guy’s book revealed so many things I had never even suspected and shattered so many of my illusions, that it read like a novel. I would love to be the bank for the people who read this book.”
—Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the Guerrilla Marketing series of books
 
“As useful for the next great not-for-profit as for the next great VC-funded startup. Anyone trying to change the world should read The Art of the Start. I wish it had been around when I started Teach for America.”
—Wendy Kopp, president and founder of Teach for America

About the author

Guy Kawasaki is the managing director of Garage Technology Ventures, an early-stage venture capital firm for high-technology companies, and a columnist for Forbes. Previously, he was an Apple Fellow at Apple Computer, Inc. A noted speaker and the founder of various personal computer companies, Kawasaki was one of the individuals responsible for the success of the Macintosh computer. He is also the author of seven books, including Rules for Revolutionaries, How to Drive Your Competition Crazy, Selling the Dream, and The Macintosh Way. He has a BA from Stanford University and an MBA from UCLA as well as an honorary doctorate from Babson College.
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