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  • I'm really excited to share with you

  • some findings that really surprise me

  • about what makes companies succeed the most,

  • what factors actually matter the most for startup success.

  • I believe that the startup organization

  • is one of the greatest forms to make the world a better place.

  • If you take a group of people with the right equity incentives

  • and organize them in a startup,

  • you can unlock human potential in a way never before possible.

  • You get them to achieve unbelievable things.

  • But if the startup organization is so great,

  • why do so many fail?

  • That's what I wanted to find out.

  • I wanted to find out what actually matters most

  • for startup success.

  • And I wanted to try to be systematic about it,

  • avoid some of my instincts and maybe misperceptions I have

  • from so many companies I've seen over the years.

  • I wanted to know this

  • because I've been starting businesses since I was 12 years old

  • when I sold candy at the bus stop in junior high school,

  • to high school, when I made solar energy devices,

  • to college, when I made loudspeakers.

  • And when I graduated from college, I started software companies.

  • And 20 years ago, I started Idealab,

  • and in the last 20 years, we started more than 100 companies,

  • many successes, and many big failures.

  • We learned a lot from those failures.

  • So I tried to look across what factors

  • accounted the most for company success and failure.

  • So I looked at these five.

  • First, the idea.

  • I used to think that the idea was everything.

  • I named my company Idealab for how much I worship

  • the "aha!" moment when you first come up with the idea.

  • But then over time,

  • I came to think that maybe the team, the execution, adaptability,

  • that mattered even more than the idea.

  • I never thought I'd be quoting boxer Mike Tyson on the TED stage,

  • but he once said,

  • "Everybody has a plan, until they get punched in the face." (Laughter)

  • And I think that's so true about business as well.

  • So much about a team's execution

  • is its ability to adapt to getting punched in the face by the customer.

  • The customer is the true reality.

  • And that's why I came to think

  • that the team maybe was the most important thing.

  • Then I started looking at the business model.

  • Does the company have a very clear path generating customer revenues?

  • That started rising to the top in my thinking

  • about maybe what mattered most for success.

  • Then I looked at the funding.

  • Sometimes companies received intense amounts of funding.

  • Maybe that's the most important thing?

  • And then of course, the timing.

  • Is the idea way too early and the world's not ready for it?

  • Is it early, as in, you're in advance and you have to educate the world?

  • Is it just right?

  • Or is it too late, and there's already too many competitors?

  • So I tried to look very carefully at these five factors

  • across many companies.

  • And I looked across all 100 Idealab companies,

  • and 100 non-Idealab companies

  • to try and come up with something scientific about it.

  • So first, on these Idealab companies,

  • the top five companies --

  • Citysearch, CarsDirect, GoTo, NetZero, Tickets.com --

  • those all became billion-dollar successes.

  • And the five companies on the bottom --

  • Z.com, Insider Pages, MyLife, Desktop Factory, Peoplelink --

  • we all had high hopes for, but didn't succeed.

  • So I tried to rank across all of those attributes

  • how I felt those companies scored on each of those dimensions.

  • And then for non-Idealab companies, I looked at wild successes,

  • like Airbnb and Instagram and Uber and Youtube and LinkedIn.

  • And some failures:

  • Webvan, Kozmo, Pets.com

  • Flooz and Friendster.

  • The bottom companies had intense funding,

  • they even had business models in some cases,

  • but they didn't succeed.

  • I tried to look at what factors actually accounted the most

  • for success and failure across all of these companies,

  • and the results really surprised me.

  • The number one thing was timing.

  • Timing accounted for 42 percent

  • of the difference between success and failure.

  • Team and execution came in second,

  • and the idea,

  • the differentiability of the idea, the uniqueness of the idea,

  • that actually came in third.

  • Now, this isn't absolutely definitive,

  • it's not to say that the idea isn't important,

  • but it very much surprised me that the idea wasn't the most important thing.

  • Sometimes it mattered more when it was actually timed.

  • The last two, business model and funding, made sense to me actually.

  • I think business model makes sense to be that low

  • because you can start out without a business model

  • and add one later if your customers are demanding what you're creating.

  • And funding, I think as well,

  • if you're underfunded at first but you're gaining traction,

  • especially in today's age,

  • it's very, very easy to get intense funding.

  • So now let me give you some specific examples about each of these.

  • So take a wild success like Airbnb that everybody knows about.

  • Well, that company was famously passed on by many smart investors

  • because people thought,

  • "No one's going to rent out a space in their home to a stranger."

  • Of course, people proved that wrong.

  • But one of the reasons it succeeded,

  • aside from a good business model, a good idea, great execution,

  • is the timing.

  • That company came out right during the height of the recession

  • when people really needed extra money,

  • and that maybe helped people overcome

  • their objection to renting out their own home to a stranger.

  • Same thing with Uber.

  • Uber came out,

  • incredible company, incredible business model,

  • great execution, too.

  • But the timing was so perfect

  • for their need to get drivers into the system.

  • Drivers were looking for extra money; it was very, very important.

  • Some of our early successes, Citysearch, came out when people needed web pages.

  • GoTo.com, which we announced actually at TED in 1998,

  • was when companies were looking for cost-effective ways to get traffic.

  • We thought the idea was so great,

  • but actually, the timing was probably maybe more important.

  • And then some of our failures.

  • We started a company called Z.com, it was an online entertainment company.

  • We were so excited about it --

  • we raised enough money, we had a great business model,

  • we even signed incredibly great Hollywood talent to join the company.

  • But broadband penetration was too low in 1999-2000.

  • It was too hard to watch video content online,

  • you had to put codecs in your browser and do all this stuff,

  • and the company eventually went out of business in 2003.

  • Just two years later,

  • when the codec problem was solved by Adobe Flash

  • and when broadband penetration crossed 50 percent in America,

  • YouTube was perfectly timed.

  • Great idea, but unbelievable timing.

  • In fact, YouTube didn't even have a business model when it first started.

  • It wasn't even certain that that would work out.

  • But that was beautifully, beautifully timed.

  • So what I would say, in summary,

  • is execution definitely matters a lot.

  • The idea matters a lot.

  • But timing might matter even more.

  • And the best way to really assess timing

  • is to really look at whether consumers are really ready

  • for what you have to offer them.

  • And to be really, really honest about it,

  • not be in denial about any results that you see,

  • because if you have something you love, you want to push it forward,

  • but you have to be very, very honest about that factor on timing.

  • As I said earlier,

  • I think startups can change the world and make the world a better place.

  • I hope some of these insights

  • can maybe help you have a slightly higher success ratio,

  • and thus make something great come to the world

  • that wouldn't have happened otherwise.

  • Thank you very much, you've been a great audience.

  • (Applause)

I'm really excited to share with you

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