Lessons Learned from Keith Rabois

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Whenever I come across a change maker whoโ€™s impacting my thinking, I put together a profile of all the lessons theyโ€™re teaching me. This Deep Dive Profile is on Keith Rabois. Keith is a legendary venture capitalist, entrepreneur, advisor and original member of the PayPal Mafia. Few people, if any, have the breadth of experience working for and alongside the legendary startup founders of today. Those include Peter Thiel, Jack Dorsey, Elon Musk, Vinod Khosla and many more. Over his career, Keith has distilled down the lessons heโ€™s learned from them and formulated his own. Iโ€™m going to cover the top 12 things Keith has taught me about startups, investing and discovering your comparative advantage.ย 

Failure Doesnโ€™t Need to be an Option Mindsetย 

Mindset will be an essential component in any challenging endeavor we face. Without the proper mindset you wonโ€™t have the fortitude to push through when everyone is betting against you. Keithโ€™s foundation is that โ€œanything is possible unless proven impossible.โ€ This simple but profound thought has had a tremendous impact on my thinking. The second you begin to look through this lens, you open up an endless array of possibilities. When you believe anything is possible, you donโ€™t limit your thinking to what is already known but youโ€™re willing to search the undiscovered and reveal new ways of doing things. โ€œIs there a reason why this absolutely cannot work? Point me to something that makes this impossible.โ€ Keith adds: โ€œIf they canโ€™t give me a specific answer, Iโ€™m totally convinced itโ€™s doable.โ€ Unless someone proves it impossible, donโ€™t let it stop you. Donโ€™t allow a failure mindset to get in your way of taking on what seems like the impossible.ย 

Confront Problems Earlyย 

Keith believes that the right people combined with the right situations will produce solutions almost every time. This is why facing the harsh realities as early as possible becomes essential. The key is early identification of problems. Entrepreneurs often avoid facing difficult challenges or having hard conversations but the earlier you can identify a potential problem, the more options youโ€™ll have to reach a resolution. โ€œAs you wait, your set of options gets reduced. The earlier you identify a potential issue, the greater the menu of options and levers you have at your disposalโ€ฆ A lot of problem-solving is being two steps ahead of the curve, so you have the entire gamete of options at your disposal.โ€ When given the choice between two options select the harder one.ย 

The Team you Build is the Company you Build

If you were building a skyscraper without a strong foundation youโ€™d soon find a pile of rubble. The same is true for a startup and this was advice Keith learned from Vinod Khosla. Most startups have a 90% failure rate but Keith believes with the right people in place, odds of success are more like 30-40%. Not having the proper people in place early can lead to unfixable outcomes or a toxic culture. It would be better to hire slow and make sure those hires can be A+ performers.ย 

Keith has a differing opinion from many founders and investors that industry expertise is not an essential component of an early employee. When they started PayPal, only 3 people knew about financial services. Elon Musk knew nothing about cars before starting Tesla and Keith knew nothing about real estate before starting Opendoor. With too much experience you stop asking the โ€œWhyโ€ questions. โ€œPeople who are experts tend to know what you canโ€™t do very well. Theyโ€™ve mastered the rules. They donโ€™t ask enough why questions; โ€˜Why canโ€™t this be done this way? Why not?โ€™ I like people who donโ€™t know what theyโ€™re tackling, but theyโ€™re fast learners, and they quickly find people who have the history and experience. Then, theyโ€™re able to extract the critical information out of them. Theyโ€™re not blind, theyโ€™re just good at figuring out what they need to learn really fast.โ€

When looking for cofounders Keith tries to identify the core risks to the company and then find world-class people who can tackle each of those problems. โ€œThe most important companies are usually founded by people who donโ€™t know much about what theyโ€™re getting themselves into.โ€ Donโ€™t limit yourself to industry experts when bringing on early employees but make sure they have the ability to be great. โ€œTo me, the best metaphor for creating a startup is like producing a movie.โ€ Someone has a vision for a movie, writes a script, casts it, finances the production, markets the film with a trailer, and then distributes it (and hopefully people come to see it). This is one of the best metaphors Iโ€™ve come across for what it looks like to build a company.ย 

Finding Undiscovered Talentย 

Keith learned the importance of this while on a jog around Stanfordโ€™s campus with Peter Theil during his first week at PayPal. โ€œHe basically had this point and observation that you couldnโ€™t scale a startup by competing for the same talent that all the large incumbents wanted. At the time, that would have been Yahoo, Microsoft, AOL, or eBay. You had to be able to find people that they didnโ€™t know how to process because otherwise, theyโ€™d be able to outbid you in terms of compensation, etc.โ€ In order to succeed as a startup you have to be able to find undiscovered talent and let them thrive. โ€œIf youโ€™re going to attract people with extremely high potential, the first thing you have to do is let them thrive. You have to give them the degrees of freedom to do both what they can do very well, and to some extent, allow them to make mistakes.โ€ This can be one of the hardest but most essential elements for a founder. Embrace giving up some control in order to let others thrive and grow.ย 

Countless organizations bring in the most talented people but they never reach their potential because they arenโ€™t provided the space to thrive. โ€œIf you try to constrain really talented people, youโ€™re only going to create a mirror of yourself with your same strengths and weaknesses. You HAVE to let people do stuff that you disagree with. You canโ€™t tell how good they are if theyโ€™re just replicating what youโ€™d have them do.โ€ This is a mistake Iโ€™ve made in the past but when I started giving people the slack, thatโ€™s when they produced their best work. Creating a culture that can foster talent will be a key differentiator. You need to give talented people enough rope to prove what they can be great at. If you bottle them up, they wonโ€™t thrive and show their true greatness.ย  Provide a process through which people can learn and wonโ€™t be afraid to make mistakes.ย 

Having a deep understanding of your hireโ€™s strengths and weaknesses is what separates average founders from exceptional founders. If you canโ€™t distill down those traits it will be difficult to provide the necessary structure for new hires to thrive. For me, Iโ€™ve taken countless personality assessments, received hard feedback from people I respect and have done a tremendous amount of deep thinking around how I work and what motivates me.ย  After taking in all that data I setup frameworks to maximize those. The same thought process should be done for hires. Having limited data on people can make hiring difficult but sometimes key hires can be found in the most unexpected places. Keith has hired people solely based on their tweets or their Quora answers. If youโ€™re in some random spot of the world but can show you have insights and can clearly communicate your thinking, this can become your comparative advantage. Peter Theil taught Keith: โ€œThe only way to have a competitive advantage in life, when youโ€™re building things from the ground up, is to get really adept and proficient at evaluating people, and evaluating them very early with very limited data and signals.โ€ This is a skill that can be developed when you focus on it.ย 

Manage People on Inputs, not Outputsย 

This was one of those ideas that smacked me right in the face. On the surface it seems fundamentally wrong but as I explored Keithโ€™s thinking, I discovered it is a genius concept. Keith learned this from former 49ers coach Bill Walsh in his book, The Score Takes Care of Itself. The premise is: โ€œWhen you focus on the inputs and get even the small things right, the output takes care of itself. Every single person in your organization should do everything precisely, accurately, and perfectly all the time (and if everyone does so consistently, success is imminent.)โ€ Too often we care solely about the results or the outcome which in many instances is short term thinking. What Keith is saying is that if we just judge people on their outputs we will trap our people into avoiding taking on risks. In order to experience success you must be willing to take on risk and fail. If you can create an incentive method where employees compete to take on extremely ambitious tasks, that will allow your people to have revolutionary breakthroughs. If you only provide simplistic KPIโ€™s, you will constrain your talent to staying in that box of mediocrity. Be more concerned with the creativity in their thinking and structure an environment conducive to that. If individuals have a sense of autonomy but are still focused on the collective goal, that is when you find radical breakout performance.ย 

Accumulating Advantagesย 

โ€œYou want to aim to build a business thatโ€™s so strong that over time, a bunch of people who are clearly only B-B+ can run the company with continued success.โ€ย  Over time adding more high quality people and systems create a company that could almost run itself without anyone noticing if anyone showed up for work. An example is Google where if everyone who works on Google as a search engine stopped showing up to work, it would probably take years for their monopoly on internet search to erode. This canโ€™t be done overnight and takes years of bringing on the best people in the world. This is something that very few companies on the planet will ever have but we should still strive for it.ย 

Accumulating advantages isnโ€™t something we should only focus on for our business but itโ€™s something we can do for our personal growth. This concept is similar to compound interest, or the compounding of knowledge, and thatโ€™s something Keith puts a tremendous amount of work into. Keith credits his success to the basics of maintaining health through intense exercise, having a high priority on sleep (minimum 8 hours) and reading for an hour a day. Keith understands that if heโ€™s able to sustain this overtime, you will be exponentially better off. Keith considers himself a voracious reader and his book recommendations can be found at the bottom. โ€œThereโ€™s nothing more valuable than reading high-quality materials. You can tap into the best thinking of all time and become an expert in many dimensions, and forge connections from different fields.โ€

Do Something Important Because the Painโ€™s Going to be the Sameย 

This is a mindset shift for many people because oftentimes weโ€™re led to believe bigger is harder, which isnโ€™t always the case.โ€œYou basically have this fixed cost of pain, so you might as well do something important because the painโ€™s going to be the same. You might as well get the outcome that offsets the pain.โ€ When assessing this framework, Keith looks for things that are super ambitious to the point that theyโ€™re almost ridiculous. He receives feedback from other VC friends to assess how ridiculous the ideas are. โ€œI want half of my VC friends to laugh at an investment I make. If half donโ€™t laugh, it means Iโ€™m not taking enough risk, and the project isnโ€™t ambitious enough.โ€ A billion dollar company may be exponentially more complex, but great founders are able to put people and systems in place to manage this complexity. Keith is saying that hard work and stress is capped so if weโ€™re going to be putting out the same amount of effort, we might as well put it into something big!ย 

ย Without Feedback, We Canโ€™t Learn ย 

Keith learned the art of feedback during his years as a lawyer and continually receives feedback from people he respects, and more importantly people who have differing opinions. Having people to poke holes in your reasoning can provide essential insights and allow you to discover new ways of doing something. Having intelligent people poke holes in my thinking is something I implement in all of my businesses. Iโ€™ve found it to be one of the highest leverage activities you can do. One of the best ways a founder can receive critical feedback is by being very selective with who they raise money from, as opposed to only being concerned with the amount they raise. What you need to realize is money is fungible but not all venture capitalist are the same. The knowledge, connection and advice provided by a lead investor can forever change the trajectory of your business. Iโ€™d much rather receive a check for $50,000 from Warren Buffett than a check for $250,000 from my distant cousin who never ran a business. Feedback is essential but quality feedback is even more important.

Feedback can come from all different places and people, but filtering the quality of the feedback is vital. โ€œBeing exposed to law, even if for only a year of law school, allows you to ask your council a lot of interesting and arresting follow up questions that lead to epiphanies.โ€ Great questions lead to great answers and those answers can be the essential ingredient in solving your complex problems. Lawyers are trained to identify problems and risks (everything that can go wrong), which isnโ€™t useful for building a business: โ€œThe real art in building a business is figuring out how to solve the problems, not identity them.โ€ Cultivate a group of people who ask hard questions, provide real feedback and will challenge your thinking.ย 

Discover Your Comparative Advantageย 

Everyone has something theyโ€™re better at than most which is their comparative advantage. With investing like in life knowing what your comparative advantage is becomes essential in having an edge. When you can identify your comparative advantage and leverage it is when you not only become better, but are able to create more value for those around you.ย  For Keith, itโ€™s โ€œBeing able to spot 19-28-year-old people with talent, who have yet to be discovered or experience success, and project their future potential (and then go on to mentor or invest in them).โ€ย  Comparative Advantages donโ€™t need to be limited to one and Keith has a few:

  • โ€œWhat Iโ€™ve been able to do very well is pair with very opinionated, strong-willed, visionary founders and be their complimentโ€ย 
  • โ€œThe last 4 or 5 years in my executive career, I was able to blend what might be called โ€˜design thinkingโ€™ with empirical analysis in an interesting wayโ€ย 
  • Keith expands: โ€œBeing able to work with first-rate designers as a quantitative empirical thinker with a business and marketing mindset is pretty rareโ€
  • Having intimate knowledge around law became a comparative advantage for Keith โ€“ โ€œI prefer to invest in areas that have a dose of legal or regulatory risk because I believe I have a comparative advantage versus other investors in assessing and calibrating that riskโ€ฆ Most investors, almost all other investors, have to actually outsource that analysis to a lawyer, and once you start outsourcing things, you revert to the middle of the bell curveโ€ฆ Youโ€™re deferring to other people who have a somewhat different risk profile, arenโ€™t incentivized the same, and really arenโ€™t motivated to probe at the edges.โ€

Discovering your comparative advantage oftentimes isnโ€™t easy but a few questions you can ask yourself to discover is: What do I enjoy doing that others deem as work? What unique skills do I have that when stacked together combine into a clear differentiator? What have I spent more time on than anyone else? Find your comparative advantage and capitalize on it.ย 

Learn through Osmosis and then Create Your Own โ€œCustom Brewโ€ย 

Weโ€™ve never lived in a time where learning through osmosis is more accessible to a large number of people. In the past you needed to be in close proximity with someone or have access to books, but today we can learn through remote coaches, youtube speeches/lessons, books, podcasts, masterclass and so many others. There is no excuse for not being able to take key lessons from the best in their field and apply them to your life. โ€œIโ€™m always watching and taking notes of things I find interesting, and trying to figure out which pieces of the puzzle I can use for my own custom brew.โ€ Itโ€™s essential to take the lessons from others across all different domains and apply them to your unique self.ย  โ€œI donโ€™t think you want to replicate someone elseโ€™s strategy or unique insights. You have to figure out which pieces of their success formula apply to your comparative advantages, and which ones you can leverage, and which ones you maybe even do better than them. Thatโ€™s where the art is. Iโ€™m borrowing lessons Iโ€™ve learned from a bunch of different people, from a bunch of different experiences, from a bunch of different companies, and packaging them together in my own Keith custom brew.โ€ Donโ€™t be afraid of extracting the key lessons from those who have come before you and then mold it into your unique circumstance.ย 

In a Startup Domain, Expertise is Less Importantย 

The history of startups and medicine include many examples of ideas that were initially ridiculed or rejected by the โ€œestablishment,โ€ but that later became widely adopted. โ€œPeople who are experts tend to know what you canโ€™t do very well. Theyโ€™ve mastered the rules. They donโ€™t ask enough why questions; โ€˜Why canโ€™t this be done this way? Why not?โ€™ I like people who donโ€™t know what theyโ€™re tackling, but theyโ€™re fast learners, and they quickly find people who have the history and experience. Then, theyโ€™re able to extract the critical information out of them. Theyโ€™re not blind, theyโ€™re just good at figuring out what they need to learn really fast.โ€ Instead of trying to identify the experts in a particular field he begins by identifying the core risks to the company and then finds world-class people who can tackle each one of those problems. โ€œThe most important companies are usually founded by people who donโ€™t know much about what theyโ€™re getting themselves into.โ€ย 

With too much experience you stop asking the โ€œWhyโ€ questions. Donโ€™t let lack of experience or expertise stop you from going after big goals.ย 

Your Energy is a Limited Resource, Maximize it

Keith knows you only have so much energy and therefore focuses on activities where a small injection of time can massively impact a large number of people. Many management leaders such as Andy Grove, Peter Drucker and Jim Collins have written about โ€œWhat is the one decision I can make that will remove hundreds of other decisions?โ€ This is an excellent framework to prioritize whatโ€™s important. Without this structure we will become bogged down by the non essentials that wonโ€™t move our business forward. Identify those key activities and use them as a force multiplier.ย 

Stay curious, never stop learning, and remember momentum breeds momentum.

Sean

Insights and quotes pulled fromย 

Invest Like The Best โ€“ Keith Rabois: If You Canโ€™t Sell Them, Compete With Them

Keith Rabois on How He Invests, Forming a Founding Team, and Funding โ€œRidiculous Ideasโ€ โ€“ Venture Stories, Hosted by Erik Torenberg

North Star Podcast โ€“ Keith Rabois on Accumulating Advantages

Startup Lessons from Peter Thiel and Jack Dorsey โ€“ Keith Rabois on Starting Greatness with Mike Maples, Jr.

Spotting Undiscovered Talent, Learning Through Osmosis, Favorite Books, and More โ€“ Keith Rabois on What Got You There with Sean DeLaney

Booksย 

Why We Sleep by Dr. Matthew Walker

The Winner Within by Pat Riley

The Upside of Stress by Kelly McGonigal

High Output Management by Andy Grove

Return to the Little Kingdom by Mike Moritz

The Score Takes Care of Itself by Bill Walsh

Zero to One by Peter Thiel

The Sovereign Individual by James Dale Davidson and William Rees-Mogg

7 Powers: The Foundations of Business Strategy by Hamilton Hemler

Creative Selection: Inside Appleโ€™s Design Process During the Golden Age of Steve Jobsย by Ken Kocienda

Who is Michael Ovitz?ย by Michael Ovitz

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