“The Journey from a Founder to a CEO” with Ravi Mhatre

The founding teams at Extreme Entrepreneurs got to hear from Ravi Mhatre, who has been in venture capital for 24 years as a founding partner at Lightspeed. Through multiple investments – Nutanix, App Dynamics, Mulesoft, Rubric, OYO to name a few – Ravi has very closely seen the transformation of founders as their companies scale. We discussed successful traits of founders, including tactical ways to figure out your own defining traits, and gathered takeaways from company-specific case studies.

Here are the key highlights from the session, hope you enjoy the read!

Constant need to reinvent yourself

The journey of building a great business is a hard one. Founders constantly need to reinvent themselves as the company scales. “As you grow from a founder to an entrepreneur to a CEO and then to a leader, the things that will be required of you will be radically different and each of these transitions will be nothing like the previous one.”

Early on in a startup, founders may partner with friends or former colleagues, as so the atmosphere is quite collegial. As a company scales, certain founders or early employees may not scale as managers, leaders. Not all founding CEOs make the transition to being able to have the hard conversation with a co-founder or early employee to have them move into other roles to make way for senior talent that can handle the scale better. It is super important for founders who want to scale to learn this ability and hold people accountable and have these hard conversations.

Founders can also learn to become better leaders and communicators through executive coaching and mentorship. They can work with their investors to identify good executive coaches.

Founder traits that are consistent from start-up to scale

As Ravi looked back, he observed three quintessential qualities amongst the founders who have walked through the fire. He uses these as filters while evaluating a founder to partner with. These traits are consistent across all stages of a startup.

  1. Hungry learners

People who tend to scale and be successful are hungry and adaptive learners. The mindset with which they approach things is- “I definitely don’t have all the answers but I’m not the person who thinks the answers have to be given.” These learners are consciously and constantly on a look out for as much new information as possible to inform their view through various avenues–their mentors, network, books or blogs.

  1. Unparalleled motivation

People who make it have extremely high motivation and drive to succeed. This is critical as entrepreneurship is a difficult journey where founders will be tested very frequently. Ravi shared that with some of the great companies he invested in, there were moments when the entire proposition was in question. But in moments like these, motivation elevates you and everybody around you, you’re willing to stick on to see all the way through. Aspirational goal setting is key, so that employees to perform at their full potential.

  1. Articulation of vision

The third quality might not be available in a single person but is present in the core DNA of the founding team- the ability to articulate the WHY in a clear and compelling way; why are you willing to take the risk of building the company, why you think the problem matters. For investors, this aspect is critical because if someone can do that well, then it is likely that he/she will be able to sell it to an experienced head of sales and or head of engineering while hiring. Founders need to articulate the story so well that they are able to attract followers even when no one has validated the future of company.

  1. Talent Magnets

A fourth must have quality is to hire talent better than you and not be fearful of doing that.

Patterns of Success Cluster Much More Tightly than Patterns of Failure

People around the world are not all that different from each other hence the way great founders think are also very similar. Thus, there are certain ways in which successful companies tend to operate. To name a couple of focus areas for such companies: is everyone in the company aligned to the vision, are there very clear standards of accountability, do the people leading various teams have the skills to fulfil their responsibilities, are you as a leader constantly assessing and re-assessing calibre of management team as the company grows.

On the other hand, points of failure are not clearly defined or timed. Failures can occur anywhere along the way and need not follow a pattern across companies. To give an example, anyone in engineering or sales or product can turn out to be incapable of fulfilling the role which could create failure scenario for the company.

History doesn’t repeat exactly, each company will have its own story. What is essential is to learn to recognize these patterns and not to act on blindly but adapt ways that are specific to your company.

Find your Superpower

Not everyone is great at everything but as you go through life, you realise there are certain qualities that you can fall back on in order to win. In order to identify these qualities or superpowers, it is essential to ask yourself who you are as a person, what are your superpowers, what has made you win in various situations you’ve faced till now.

Ravi also shared that for founders to identify their superpowers or development areas, soliciting feedback from investors is not the best way to identify these defining traits. It becomes difficult to let your guards down and be completely vulnerable in investor- founder relationships. The feedback that is most valuable is the one that is critical but constructive and is from people you trust and will not undermine you as a result of it. Identifying these traits requires founders to be on a journey of continuous self-assessment and to have a mindset that being vulnerable is absolutely okay.

We hope you found the takeaways useful. To stay updated, follow EE on twitter here and the official Lightspeed India handle here

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