a16z founder: What is the most important thing for entrepreneurial success?

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The most important thing is not an excellent team or a solid product, but the market and PMF.

By Marc Andreessen

Compiled by: Geek Translator

Summary:This article is from a series of blogs written by a16z and Netscape Navigator founder Marc Andreessen in 2007, mainly focusing on topics related to entrepreneurs and VCs. In this blog post,Based on his own experience and what he has seen and heard, Marc Anderson pointed out that for a startup team, the most important factor for success is not the team and the product, but the market, or PMF (product-market fit).

Since Marc Anderson is a successful serial entrepreneur and has made outstanding achievements in the Internet and venture capital industries, we believe that his insights are quite convincing. Therefore, we have translated this blog into Chinese, hoping to bring some inspiration to entrepreneurs.

a16z 创始人:创业成功最需要的是什么?

text:This post is about the only thing that matters to a startup. But first, some theoretical foundations: If you look at a large number of startups, say 30 or 40 or more, and try to eliminate random chance and look for patterns, two things become apparent:

The first obvious fact:

There is a huge range of success among startups - some are incredibly successful, some are highly successful, many are just barely successful, and a significant number of them fail outright.

The second obvious fact:

The three core elements of a startup — team, product, and market — vary greatly in level and quality.

In any startup, the team members may be very good while others may have obvious flaws; some companies' products may be engineering masterpieces while others are barely usable; and the market in which the company is located may be a booming industry or a sunset industry.

So we started thinking:What factors are most relevant to entrepreneurial success - team, product, or market? Or more directly, what are the determining factors of success?For those who study startup failures, what is the most dangerous: a bad team, a weak product, or a suboptimal market?

Let's start by defining a few key terms:

  • The level of the team: How well-suited are the CEO, executives, engineers, and other key members to seize opportunities. When measuring a team, I focus more on execution rather than experience, because the history of the technology industry is full of examples of teams built by first-timers that have achieved great success.

  • Product quality: How attractive is the product to real users? Is the product easy to use? Is it feature-rich? Does it run smoothly? Is it easy to expand? How polished is it? Does it have defects?

  • Market size:Refers to the number of potential customers/users facing the product and its growth rate (assuming profitability is feasible after scale, that is, the cost of acquiring customers is lower than the revenue brought by the customers).

Some people might question my categorization: “How good can a product be if no one wants it?” In other words, isn’t the quality of a product determined by its appeal to many customers?

The answer is no.Product quality and market size are completely different concepts, the classic example of this is the many software applications that are developed for operating systems that almost no one uses. Ask any programmer who has developed for the BeOS, Amiga, OS/2, or NeXT application markets what the difference is between a "good product" and a "huge market."

Team, product, and market priorities

So if you ask entrepreneurs or VCs which is the most important thing for a startup: team, product, or market, many will say team. This is an obvious answer, in part because:In the early stages of a company, you know more about the background of its team and less about the product and market - because the product is not yet completed and the market is often not fully explored.

In addition, we have been taught since childhood that "people are the most important asset." At least in the United States, the concept of valuing people is deeply rooted in our culture, including self-esteem education programs in high schools and the "right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" mentioned in the Declaration of Independence. Therefore, the answer that "the team is the most important" sounds "very correct."

But if you ask some engineers, they may say that the product is the most important. For the technology industry, the product is indeed the center, and the mission of a startup is to invent products, and customers buy and use products. Apple and Google are the most successful companies in the industry today because they make the best products. Without products, there is no company. Imagine having a great team but no product, or having a huge potential market but no product, what will such a company become?

But personally, I hold the third view.I believe that the market is the most important factor in the success or failure of a startup. Why? Because in a large market - a market with a large number of real potential customers, the market will drive the product out of the startup.The market has demand, and the market will be satisfied as long as the first viable product appears. Such a product does not need to be excellent, it only needs to be basically usable. The market does not care how good the team is, as long as the team can deliver a basically usable product.

In other words, customers will come to you to buy products, and your main goal is to meet customer needs and deliver products. Even in a market with huge potential, the level of the team can be improved spontaneously. Specific examples can refer to search engines, online auction platforms and router markets.

Conversely, in a bad market, even if you have the best product in the world and an absolutely amazing team, you will still fail. You will waste years trying to find customers that don’t exist, your amazing team will eventually become demoralized and quit, and your startup will fail. Consider the markets for video conferencing, workflow software, and micropayments.

Rachleff's Laws of Entrepreneurial Success

Andy Rachleff (formerly a partner at Benchmark Capital) once summarized the following view:

  1. When a great team meets a bad market, the market wins.

  2. When a bad team meets a great market, the market still wins.

  3. When an excellent team meets an excellent market, miracles happen.

The market is the decisive factor for the success of a startup.A bad market cannot be saved by a great team or a great product. You can screw up a great market—it has happened and it’s not uncommon—but assuming a competent team and a decent product, a great market often equals success and a bad market often equals failure. It’s the market that matters, and neither a great team nor a great product can save a bad market.

The question is, what should a startup team do? First, since the team is the factor you can control the most at the beginning, and everyone wants to have a good team, what can a good team actually bring you? Maybe a good team can bring you an okay product, and ideally, a great product. However, I can give you many examples of good teams screwing up their products.The truth is, great products are really hard to create.

Hopefully, a great team will also get you a great market - but I can also give you plenty of examples of great teams doing great in bad markets, only to fail. A non-existent market doesn't care how smart you are.

According to my experience,The most common combination of a great team and a bad product/bad market is second or third time entrepreneurs who had a huge success with their first startup, became arrogant, and then made mistakes one after another.Let’s say there’s a high-profile, very successful software entrepreneur who’s pouring about $80 million into his latest startup, but is accomplishing little beyond getting in the news or a few beta customers because there’s almost no market for what he’s building.

on the contrary,Many weaker teams have achieved great success due to the huge scale of their business in the market.Finally, let me quote Tim Shephard: “Given the same market and product conditions, excellent teams will always beat mediocre teams.”

Now let us ask the second question:Can't a great product create a huge new market? In some cases, yes, but it's rare.VMWare, for example, is the latest company to do this - VMWare's product was so profoundly transformative from the start that it catalyzed a whole new movement in operating system virtualization, which ultimately became a huge market.

Of course, in this case, it doesn't matter how good your team is, as long as the team can get the product to market with the basic quality that the market needs. I'm not saying that you shouldn't focus on team quality, or that VMWare's team is not strong, I'm saying that as long as you bring a product as revolutionary as VMWare to market, you will succeed, that's all. Beyond that, I wouldn't expect your product to create a new market from scratch.

Third question:As a startup founder, what should I do?Here is Rachleff’s corollary to entrepreneurial success:The only thing that matters is achieving product/market fit, or PMF.PMF means having a product that can meet the needs of the market under good market conditions.

When there’s product/market mismatch, customers aren’t getting enough value from the product, word of mouth isn’t spreading, usage isn’t growing very quickly, press reviews are a bit “boring,” sales cycles are too long, and many deals don’t close.

When product/market fit is achieved, customers are ordering as fast as you can build the product, and usage is growing as fast as you can add servers. Customer payments are piling up in your company account, and you're hiring salespeople as fast as you can. Reporters are calling because they heard about your hot product and want to talk to you. You start getting the Entrepreneur of the Year award from Harvard Business School, and VCs are watching outside your house, wanting to invest in your company.But in reality, many startups fail before product/market fit, and they fail because they never achieve PMF.

Going a step further, I believe that the life of any startup can be divided into two parts: before product/market fit (call it "BPMF") and after product/market fit ("APMF"). When you are BPMF, focus on achieving PMF and do whatever it takes to get product/market fit, including changing team members, reworking the product, entering different markets, trying to find users as much as possible, or raising more money - whatever you need.

When you are truly committed to the PMF process, you can ignore everything else.Whenever you see a successful startup, you see that it has achieved product/market fit — and along the way, it may have screwed up everything else, like its marketing plan, media relations, compensation policy, etc. But that doesn’t prevent the startup from being successful.

Instead, you'll see,Xiaobai NavigationMany well-run startups have perfect HR policies, excellent sales models, thorough marketing plans, excellent interview processes, delicious food, 30-inch monitors for all programmers, and top VCs on the board, but they fall off a cliff because they cannot find the PMF point.

The irony is that once a startup is successful, when you ask the founders what made the company successful, they will usually cite a variety of things that have nothing to do with success. People have a hard time understanding causality, but in almost all cases, the cause is actually PMF. What else could it be?

The article comes from the Internet:a16z founder: What is the most important thing for entrepreneurial success?

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