Thursday, November 21, 2019
The best advice Steve Case gives entrepreneurs
The best advice Steve Case gives entrepreneurs The best advice Steve Case gives entrepreneurs As the founding CEO of AOL, the first internet company to go public, Steve Case is an icon of the first wave of the internet. Case left AOL in 2005, and has since built a large portfolio of startups through his venture capital firm, Revolution.Heâs spent the past five years traveling the United States, often in a bright red or blue bus, investing in cities outside of the centers of American venture capital- Silicon Valley, New York City, and Boston - as part of Revolutionâs âRise of the Restâ initiative. Whether itâs a place like Louisville, Kentucky or Salt Lake City, Utah, Case and his team donât simply pass through for a day and drop off some money, but build long-term relationships with founders and local power brokers to ensure the startup scenes thrive.And as he told us in an episode of Business Insiderâs podcast âThis Is Success,â the best advice he gives is, âIt ultimately comes down to people and teams, that entrepreneurship is a team sport, itâs not about any one person.â He warns against the ego boost that can come from external expectations of the founder. âThe founding CEO tends to get most of the attention, but it really is a team effort,â he said.Case said heâs a fan of the proverb, âIf you want to go quickly, you can go alone. If you want to go far, you must go together,â because itâs a pithy expression he sees as capturing the importance of partnerships.In the interview, he explained that AOL became a massively successful company in the 1990s because of its founding team, even though being the face of the company could give the perception most of it rested on his actions. It was also, he said, the lack of strong relationships between AOLâs and Time Warnerâs teams was a major factor behind that $162 billion mega-mergerâs ultimate failure.Case believes that the US is at the start of the âthird waveâ of internet companies, ones that will turn âthe internet of thingsâ from a gimmick into the indus try-changing âinternet of everything,â and that success in this environment will make partnerships between startups and established companies, and with government regulators, far more important than they ever had been.Itâs why heâs built bipartisan relationships with politicians on both the federal and local levels, and why heâs built a diverse Rise of the Rest team that includes âHillbilly Elegyâ author and former Valley investor JD Vance and former Google for Entrepreneurs director Mary Grove.âIf you get the people right, almost anything is possible,â he said. âIf you donât get the people right, Iâd argue nothing is possible.âListen to the full episode and subscribe to âThis Is Successâ on Apple Podcasts or your favorite podcast app.This article first appeared on Business Insider.
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