Startup Boards. Brad Feld
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Название: Startup Boards

Автор: Brad Feld

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Зарубежная деловая литература

Серия:

isbn: 9781119859291

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      I was honored when Brad, Matt, and Mahendra asked me to write the Foreword for the second edition of Startup Boards. As the CEO of Him for Her, I've worked closely with Brad and Matt. They are iconic leaders who have done much to promote entrepreneurship. I also read the first edition of Startup Boards and found it to be a helpful outlay for venture-backed boards, so I responded with an enthusiastic “Yes!”

      The world has changed immensely since the first edition of the book came out in 2013. Today, boards deal with increasingly complicated issues, including remote work, the great resignation, pandemics, racial injustice, climate change, and social responsibility (Environmental, Social, and Governance, ESG). We now have more diversity in our board members, but not nearly enough.

      It was immediately apparent to me, others, and most importantly to Brad, Matt, and Mahendra that the book's first edition had a significant flaw. The stories were all told from a single voice—same race, same gender, same age and thus missing the richness that the best modern boards today reflect. With a good amount of humility, Brad admitted that the book in this state wasn't acceptable, nor was it an accurate representation of startup boards. And then, Brad did what he does so well: he worked hard to change the narrative by spending extra time learning, engaging in many new conversations to expand his network, and broadening the diversity of the people whose stories were in the book. It's not easy to operationalize the intention to make diversity a reality. Extending networks requires leaders to spend the time and energy to find resources outside what they already know and isn't something that can be delegated.

      I've often heard the phrase, “You can't be what you can't see.” While it's easy to think of the phrase as something applicable to role models for kids, it's equally valid for the world of business, professions, and academics. Nowhere in the corporate world are things more cloaked under a veil of secrecy than in the boardroom. Few people ever get the opportunity to “see” the inside of a boardroom or participate in a board meeting. And when conjuring up an image of a typical board member, most envision a 62-year-old White male who was previously a CEO or CFO or an investor who sits on many, perhaps too many, boards as part of an investment firm. While these are familiar images, they aren't the complete picture, and the landscape is changing. For example, you'll see a story from me in these pages. I'm a seasoned product executive who joined her first board in her forties.

      Startup Boards shines at demystifying the startup boardroom. It provides readers with an insider's account of board issues, dynamics, and challenges. By breaking down exactly what a board of directors does, what a board member is, what the job entails, and all the scenarios accompanying it, many executives—of all backgrounds—can start to see themselves in this role. In addition, a new section of the book provides the details of getting that first board seat, so readers who want to have a board role can benefit.

      The best companies and the most effective boards seek to gain a variety of perspectives. Guiding companies requires experiences and questions from board members representing various industries, business models, growth stages, ESG experience, customer segments, and functional expertise. One key challenge to building diverse boards is that these roles have traditionally been filled through personal networks, which are limited. Thankfully, many, including our team at Him for Her and Matt's team at Bolster (both of which Brad supports), are working to make it easier to extend networks and build better boards.

      Jocelyn Mangan

      Him for Her, founder/CEO

      February 2022

      The first time I saw the inside of a boardroom, I was the most junior executive at MovieFone, a public company I worked at from 1995–1999 as the “internet guy.” MovieFone was an interactive telephone/media company at the dawn of the commercial internet. The board consisted of the founders, the chairman/majority shareholder (the CEO's father and a formidable character I'd met a few times), one of the chair's business associates, and one independent director (the even more formidable Strauss Zelnick).

      I gave my “state of the department” presentation to that board. I found presenting to that board of directors similar to how a lawyer must experience arguing a case before the Supreme Court. You talk for two minutes, someone interrupts you with a question, and then you stand in the firing line until someone mercifully tells you that it's over. You slink out of the room, rethinking every word that just came out of your mouth, wishing you could have a do-over.

      While I worked there, I presented to the MovieFone board several times. Each session was uncomfortable, but I got a lot out of each one. I constantly confronted one question, “Why is your group losing so much money?” I responded each time with an unsatisfying combination of mumbled apologies, while pointing out that other internet businesses were losing much more money.

      Even though that wasn't a winning answer with the MovieFone board, it was a formative experience in my career. By the time I started my first company, Return Path, I felt like at least I had a running start on how to form, lead, and report to my board of directors.

      Our board started with two independent directors and me. It grew to a highly functioning board, including three great venture capitalists (Fred Wilson, Greg Sands, and Brad Feld, coauthor of this book) and two outstanding independent directors (Scott Petry and Jeff Epstein). Over two decades, we have had over 15 directors serve on the board. I learned how to build and run an effective board of directors from each of them.

      While I've made many mistakes, I've gotten a lot of things correct and have learned a lot. I realized the immense power of a strong board many times, but the most memorable was a board meeting when we were wrestling with several tough decisions since the business was going sideways. These decisions included whether to sell off two business units to focus on our most promising line of business, even though that meant shrinking the company by over 50%. We were also considering whether to expand internationally, and whether we should build an indirect sales channel. In a long and boisterous board meeting stretching from the boardroom to a dinner that included my senior management team, we charted a bold new course for the business that set us on a path we ended up following to a successful exit a dozen years later. A less functional board could have taken a more conservative approach. The business likely wouldn't have thrived and might not even have survived.

      Today, my new company, Bolster, helps startups, scaleups, and public companies find and recruit talented executive leaders, mentors, and coaches. We help CEOs build their boards and have helped dozens of CEOs think strategically about bringing in independent directors. We help CEOs determine the kind of executives they want to add to their boards. And, we help them find, hire, and compensate those directors.