How we build things, from products to teams. Founders Forum recap.

A big thank you to John Barnett, Co-founder of Supermoon, and David Siglin, Principal Design at Stitchfix, for their fantastic presentation at our Founders Forum event. With lively AI-generated graphics and anecdotes from Barnett’s time at Facebook and Instagram, they gave us a peek into their experiences building various projects – from apps to workflows and collaborative teams. Let’s dive into the highlights of their insightful talk!

Build the right team.

Optimize for passion and openness over raw talent and ability. Great the right team, not the dream team. (Who knows, they may become your dream team.)

  • Focus on building a web, not becoming a single hub. This creates trust horizontally, collaboration, and avoids one point of failure.
  • Know each team member’s starting point.
  • Be flexible about how your team is formed. (Flexibility was a thread pulled often over the talk.)
  • Strong opinions, loosely held. The idea of confidently expressing one’s beliefs with a willingness to adapt in the face of new evidence or perspectives.

Build the right collaboration

Be tight when defining success but loose with how it is actually achieved.

  • Be clear on what success means.
  • Constantly realign efforts and priorities. Ultimately, they should always point to the initial bullet: what does success mean?
  • Push information versus pull information. David shared how his team shares updates every Friday. It’s expected so people don’t feel that need to constantly ask for the information they know will be pushed out.
  • Have a healthy overlap, in knowledge and skills. This goes back to avoiding a single point of failure.

Build the right product.

Love the problem, trust your gut, explore hypotheses.

  • Once you understand the problem, learn to love it. Because, you’re working to solve it.
  • For hypotheses to test against, and find ways to get reactions and responses quickly even if it’s just on a whiteboard.
  • Build a minimum lovable product. It’s not just viable but people love it.

David and John also shared some additional resources:

  • The Speed of Trust, Stephen Covey
  • Competing Against Luck, Clayton Christenson
  • Double Diamond, problem framing and solving
  • A PM’s Guide to Working with Designers, by VP of Product at Figma

Thanks to those that attended – you got to see and hear some additional tidbits from behind the scenes at some pretty big companies – and if you missed it, we hope to see you at the next Founders Forum.

April Founders Forum: Profit First: Getting to Profitability with a Product/Service Quickly 
April 16th, 3:30pm at Village Launch

See you soon!

 

The Ville takes on the Valley, Silicon Valley, that is

Earlier this year, the City of Greenville was selected by the Hoover Institution at Stanford University as one of three cities to do a deep dive on in terms of how public policy impacts economic development. 

Last week, they flew Mayor Knox White, John Barnett (local founder with roots in Silicon Valley), and me out to Palo Alto to hear from students and research fellows as well as mix with our peer cities – Mesa, AZ, and Milwaukee, WI – to share best practices and make connections. 

Palo Alto area mayors + Knox White, Mayor of Greenville, SC

It was inspiring to be immersed in that epicenter of tech and innovation! Here’s a few things we picked up: 

Silicon Valley is like no place on Earth

      • Coffee shops packed with DOERS – s/o to the Mocha Tesoro at Philz Coffee.
      • Coworking spaces that rent by the hour ($4/hr) were full – Hanahaus.
      • A panel of mayors (Palo Alto, East Palo Alto, Mountain View, and Redwood City) shared that they’re facing their own issues so it’s not all rosy being such a tech hub: astronomic housing market, development costs, transportation, etc. 
      • Never say “the next Silicon Valley” – it’s such an impossible and maybe undesirable attainment – it’s truly the only place like it on the planet.
      • But to see Meta HQ (9-acre rooftop garden complete with wild foxes running around!) and Googleplex (looked like the world’s biggest circus tent) and drive down the famed Sand Hill Road (where venture capital got its start and a reason the Valley has 63 billionaires!) was impressive.

Stanford people are smart

    • Like off-the-charts pedigree – one young lady is getting her Harvard JD and Stanford MBA at the same time.
    • The Hoover Institution is a well-regarded think tank and provided exposure to a wide range of ‘things you should be thinking about’ – like remote talent (what keeps them in a place) and cybersecurity (deep fakes).
    • It’s tremendous that a city the size of Greenville punches above its weight and is now firmly on their radar.
    • We’ll be leveraging this connection and look forward to more projects coming down the pike.

Greenville is playing with a strategic advantage, but we have the chance to take things up a notch.

    • Greenville was a positive example cited in other pitches.
    • Most of the students’ research suggestions are doable/feasible and just require attention and leadership (we’re on it!).
    • We have an ideal combination of assets – a business-friendly ecosystem, wonderful remote working conditions, and decades of investment towards quality of life just now starting to bloom, literally.
    • Imagine luring just a handful of software engineers from an overcrowded (read: expensive) community to Greenville and build a business in a place they love to live – the impact will be dramatic.
    • We need to leverage our universities as talent magnets – not just founders, but also engineering and design teams; not just tech transfer, but also future founders. 
    • There is an opportunity for regional industries to be more connected and directly involved in the startup community.
    • Continue to cultivate angel and seed investors who are aligned with our objective to grow the community – actively recruit outside investors and bring more statewide money to the table.

Special thanks to John Barnett, Greenville-based founder and CEO of Supermoon, who was an exceptional tour guide. John spent almost a decade in the Valley working for the likes of Twitter and Instagram before it got bought by Facebook (Meta). If you’ve ever posted an IG Story or used Boomerang, you have John to thank! Walking through Meta with him was like being there with a celebrity: he’s still regarded as one of the best product managers and I wouldn’t have been shocked to see his keyboard and mouse hanging from the rafters like some NBA jersey.  Thanks, John – I’m so grateful you’re in #StartupGVL!

Also, thanks to the team at Hoover – Josh Rauh, Dean Ball, and Jillian Ludwig for making all of the arrangements. And thanks to the students on Team Greenville – Mike Arth, Gavin McGarry, and Marianne Aguilar for your insights and action items. Can’t wait for y’all to come to #StartupGVL and see what we’re implementing from your suggestions!