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The
Struggle.
by Ben
Horowitz.
6.15.12
Don’t admit that your
faith is weak
Don’t say that you feel like dying
Life’s hard then it feels like diamonds
Your home’s just far too gone
Much too late to even feel like trying
Can’t understand what I’m saying
Can’t figure out what I’m implying
If you feel you don’t wanna be alive
You feel just how I am
— Lupe Fiasco, Beautiful Lasers
 |
| Ben Horowitz. |
Every entrepreneur starts
her company with a clear vision for success. You will create an amazing environment
and hire the smartest people to join you. Together you will build a beautiful
product that delights customers and makes the world just a little bit better.
It’s going to be absolutely awesome.
Then, after working night
and day to make your vision reality, you wake up to find that things did not
go as planned. Your company did not unfold like the Jack Dorsey keynote that
you listened to when you started. Your product has issues that will be very
hard to fix. The market isn’t quite where it was supposed to be. Your employees
are losing confidence and some of them have quit. Some of the ones that quit
were quite smart and have the remaining ones wondering if staying makes sense.
You are running low on cash and your venture capitalist tells you that it will
be difficult to raise money given the impending European catastrophe.
You lose a competitive
battle. You lose a loyal customer. You lose a great employee. The walls start
closing in. Where did you go wrong? Why didn’t your company perform as envisioned?
Are you good enough to do this? As your dreams turn into nightmares, you find
yourself in The Struggle.
About
The Struggle
"Life is struggle."
—Karl Marx
The Struggle is when you
wonder why you started the company in the first place.
The Struggle is when people
ask you why you don’t quit and you don’t know the answer.
The Struggle is when your
employees think you are lying and you think they may be right.
The Struggle is when food
loses its taste.
The Struggle is when you
don’t believe you should be CEO of your company. The Struggle is when you know
that you are in over your head and you know that you cannot be replaced. The
Struggle is when everybody thinks you are an idiot, but nobody will fire you.
The Struggle is where self-doubt becomes self-hatred.
The Struggle is when you
are having a conversation with someone and you can’t hear a word that they are
saying because all you can hear is The Struggle.
The Struggle is when you
want the pain to stop. The Struggle is unhappiness.
The Struggle is when you
go on vacation to feel better and you feel worse.
The Struggle is when you
are surrounded by people and you are all alone. The Struggle has no mercy.
The Struggle is the land
of broken promises and crushed dreams. The Struggle is a cold sweat. The Struggle
is where your guts boil so much that you feel like you are going to spit blood.
The Struggle is not failure,
but it causes failure. Especially if you are weak. Always if you are weak.
Most people are not strong
enough.
Every great entrepreneur
from Steve Jobs to Mark Zuckerberg went through The Struggle and struggle they
did, so you are not alone. But that does not mean that you will make it. You
may not make it. That is why it is The Struggle.
The Struggle is where greatness
comes from.
Some
stuff that may or may not help
There is no answer
to The Struggle, but here are some things that helped me:
- Don’t put it all
on your shoulders – It is easy to think that the things that bother you
will upset your people more. That’s not true. The opposite is true. Nobody
takes the losses harder than the person most responsible. Nobody feels it
more than you. You won’t be able to share every burden, but share every burden
that you can. Get the maximum number of brains on the problems even if the
problems represent existential threats. When I ran Opsware and we were
losing too many competitive deals, I called an all-hands and told the whole
company that we were getting our asses kicked, and if we didn’t stop the bleeding,
we were going to die. Nobody blinked. The team rallied, built a winning product
and saved my sorry ass.
- This is not checkers;
this is mutherf****n’ chess – Technology businesses tend to be extremely
complex. The underlying technology moves, the competition moves, the market
moves, the people move. As a result, like playing three-dimensional chess
on Star Trek, there is always a move. You think you have no moves?
How about taking your company public with $2M in trailing revenue and 340
employees, with a plan to do $75M in revenue the next year? I made that move.
I made it in 2001, widely regarded as the worst time ever for a technology
company to go public. I made it with six weeks of cash left. There is always
a move.
- Focus on the road
– When they teach you how to drive a racecar, they tell you to focus on
the road when you go around a turn. They tell you that because if you focus
on the wall, then you will drive straight into the wall. If you focus on how
you might fail, then you will fail. Even if you only have one bullet left
in the gun and you have to hit the target, focus on the target. You might
not hit it, but you definitely won’t hit if you focus on other things.
- Play long enough
and you might get lucky – In the technology game, tomorrow looks nothing
like today. If you survive long enough to see tomorrow, it may bring you the
answer that seems so impossible today.
- Don’t take it personally
– The predicament that you are in is probably all your fault. You hired the
people. You made the decisions. But you knew the job was dangerous when you
took it. Everybody makes mistakes. Every CEO makes thousands of mistakes.
Evaluating yourself and giving yourself an "F" doesn’t help.
- Remember that this is
what separates the women from the girls. If you want to be great, this is
the challenge. If you don’t want to be great, then you never should have started
a company.
The
end
When you are
in The Struggle, nothing is easy and nothing feels right. You have dropped into
the abyss and you may never get out. In my own experience, but for some unexpected
luck and help, I would have been lost.
So to all of you in it,
may you find strength and may you find peace.
About Ben Horowitz
Ben Horowitz
is the cofounder and General Partner (along with Marc
Andreessen) of the venture capital firm Andreessen
Horowitz based in Menlo Park, California. Ben was CEO of LoudCloud
(a cloud service provider), which became Opsware, and then sold to Hewlett-Packard
for $1.6 billion.