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Stanford professor: Older founders don't need VCs

Jun 17, 2016, 05:12 IST

Professor Vivek WadhwaProfessor Vivek Wadhwa

A blue flame burns brightest and hottest.

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In the startup world, "blue flame" is a term used by venture capitalists to describe their ideal founders. VCs use the term as a critique of older founders, saying "they're not blue flame enough." What these investors want are founders in their twenties with no kids, and no personal life, willing to work all hours.

I first heard the term recently, in this Business Insider article. While the term may be new, the age bias that VCs display is not. In my research for my book Never Too Late to Startup, I interviewed dozens of founders in their late 30s, 40s, and 50s. Virtually all of them encountered this same type of bias.

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One entrepreneur, Sara Schaer had built a successful career in Silicon Valley before starting her new company, KangaDo. She was a senior product manager at Snapfish.com, both pre- and post-acquisition by HP, managing a large team on multiple continents.

Schaer and her cofounder bootstrapped their new company for almost a year. When she went out to raise money, she described her experience with investors this way:

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Pattern matching is lazy

VCs justify the bias by talking about "pattern matching." They claim to be looking for founders who "fit the pattern" of the most successful companies. In this case, their universe of the "most successful" can be anything they deem it to be, with no actual study.

Dave Duffield and Aneel BhusriWorkday

Anecdotally, the VCs could find plenty of successful "older" entrepreneurs as exemplars if they wanted to look. For every 20something, there is Aneel Bhusri and David Duffield, who were in their forties and sixties, respectively, when they founded software powerhouse Workday. There is Lew Cirne, founder of New Relic, or Robin Chase, founder of ZipCar.

But beyond the anecdotes, there is actually data that shows the high amount of entrepreneurial activity among older entrepreneurs, as well as their higher likelihood of success.

The Kauffman Foundation, one of the largest backers of research to support entrepreneurship, has completed multiple studies on the age of entrepreneurs. One such study found that the highest rate of entrepreneurial activity is occurring among the 55-64 age cohort. The group with the lowest activity? The 20-34 year old group.

You may be asking, 'That's fine for starting businesses, but what about producing successful companies?' Another Kauffman study, authored by Professor Vivek Wadhwa, showed that the average age of successful tech company founders was 39 when they started the business.

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Flickr/Apps for Europe

When I spoke with Professor Wadhwa, he was quite adamant that VCs were simply wrong in their approach:

So why are VCs getting it so wrong?

Insight is better than hustle

Somehow it has become a truism in startups that "hustle is everything" and that founders can hustle their way to success.

The Hustle

In a recent blog post, author and entrepreneur Tim Fargo exposes the hustle myth. He points out that his business growth has come from "solving a problem that lots of people care about. That insight has proven much more valuable than the myriad hours of work I put into my old business. Hustle gets [a] beating."

Don't get me wrong, hustle, hard work, and discipline are necessary to build a great company. But an inexperienced "hustler" chasing after the wrong market has a high likelihood of failure.

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Relentlessly pursuing a business with the wrong team, hired as a result of inexperience, isn't likely to produce a winning company either.

By focusing on the right customer with the right product, and building a company with the best team, entrepreneurs can build amazing companies and simultaneously create great lives for themselves and their employees.

Experience leads to efficiency

One of the best examples of working efficiently and effectively on a customer problem, rather than working all hours of the day and night comes from Lew Cirne, founder and CEO of New Relic.

New Relic founder and CEO Lew CirneScreenshot/YouTube

Cirne had founded and sold his previous company and was working on a new idea that ultimately became New Relic. He was in his late 30s and had a young child.

Lest anyone think that Lew Cirne was building a "lifestyle" business, New Relic is now a public company with a $1.4 billion market value and $200 million of annual revenue.

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Dave Mariani, CEO of AtScale, did raise his venture round by breaking through the "blue flame" nonsense. VCs were impressed that AtScale was generating real revenue, managing their cash, and built a team with great internal "chemistry."

"Wow, you have experience," VCs told him.

Imagine that.

Rob Kornblum is a startup consultant, a former venture capitalist and Kauffman Fellow and a former startup executive. Reprinted by permission.

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